Minnesota
Indigenous theater company brings its feminist, story-weaving style to Minnesota
CLOQUET, MINN. – Francesca Pedersen, an ensemble member for Spiderwoman Theater, had a moment of recognition after a recent welcome feast. The cast and other guests who had come to meet members of the long-running Indigenous theater company, were sitting around, sharing stories, and she saw the connection between what she is performing and the community that built it.
“I was like ‘This is the piece!’ This is literally what we are going to be doing on stage in a couple of days,” she said. “Theater is just storytelling.”
This is how the New York City-based company’s productions are born: a layered style called “story-weaving,” where personal and traditional stories are told, then strung together with bursts of color and pop culture and various art forms.
Spiderwoman Theater is in the middle of a Midwest Tour that is currently settled in this city 20 miles southwest of Duluth and adjacent to the Fond du Lac Reservation. In recent days there have been meetings, workshops and a ceremony, and there are runs of its most recent original production, “Misdemeanor Dream” at 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday at Cloquet High School, where professional tech workers are mingling with local students to share tips and tricks. Tickets are $25.
The tour then moves on to Minneapolis, where there will be a story-weaving workshop for Native theater artists by invitation on March 6 and a fabric workshop open to the public on Thursday. Both are at the Jungle Theater.
Its leaders came here to meet with local Indigenous artists and offered a 4-hour master class in creating this style of theater. One of the founders, Muriel Miguel, asked her team to clear the stage and make a circle of chairs beneath the spotlights — then bumped anyone who wasn’t participating from the auditorium at Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College.
It went well, she said the next day.
“People were laughing and talking — and the way we put the stories together made them laugh,” she said. “I’m aching. I wound everyone up.”
Spiderwoman Theater was the mid-1970s invention of sisters Muriel and Gloria Miguel, who remain active with the company, and Lisa Mayo, who has since died. It was formed as a response to the current climate for Indigenous women.
It has also been shocking and edgy to mainstream audiences. Its first show, “Women in Violence,” in the 1970s, included racist and sexist jokes. If members of the audience laughed, the cast members gave the laughter a look, then blew a raspberry. They threw pies at each other on stage and threatened to do the same to the audience. Detractors said “this isn’t theater; you aren’t actors,” Muriel Miguel recalled.
More than 40 years later, it’s still going and is believed to be the longest-running company of its kind in the country, if not the world. Gloria Miguel, 96, has a role in its current show. She plays an elder.
Darylina Powderface, a Stoney Nakoda and Blackfoot artist, was well into college when she first learned about Spiderwoman Theater from an Indigenous teaching assistant. In “Misdemeanor Dream,” she has translated Blackfoot language and will sing.
“I feel, as someone who’s gone to an institution that’s predominantly white and colonial, Western perspective, I never really got the opportunity to bring in who I really am,” she said. “When I did, those spaces weren’t really meant for that.”
“Misdemeanor Dream” is loosely inspired by Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” with an eye toward emphasizing personal stories of little people and fairies. Muriel Miguel’s early contribution to this piece was a memory: How her mother always planted nasturtium in the backyard. Fairies, she said, like to sit on the leaves. The show grew from a series of similar stories, which includes several different Indigenous languages, and dancing, singing and video projections. It’s driven by its narratives, not by a linear plot.
“It’s the ingredients inside, it isn’t the show,” Muriel Miguel said. “It’s liver pâté. I can’t eat liver pâté by itself, I need something else. I need to put it on toast and make it something that I and other people can eat.”
Minnesota
Maddy Kimbrel Named Minnesota’s 2026 Ms. Hockey Winner
Maddy Kimbrel joined an illustrious group of players as Minnesota’s 2026 Ms. Hockey winner. The award is annually given to the best high school women’s hockey player in the state of Minnesota.
The Holy Family forward scored 37 goals and 57 points this season in only 26 games for her school.
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She was also an assistant captain for Team USA at the 2026 U-18 World Championships winning gold. It was her second time representing USA at the event.
Kimbrel spent four seasons playing for Orono High before moving to Holy Family this season.
The 17-year-old Mound, Minnesota product is headed to the University of Wisconsin next season.
The other four finalists for the award were Alaina Gentz (Centennial/SLP), Jasmine Hovda (Roseau), Lorelai Nelson (Edina), and Mia Miller (Northfield).
Past winners of the award include current PWHL players such as Taylor Heise (2018), Peyton Hemp (2021), Olivia Mobley (2020), Grace Zumwinkle (2017), and Hannah Brandt (2012), and 2024 Hockey Hall of Fame inductee Krissy Wendell-Pohl.
Minnesota
Bemidji declares March as Minnesota Food Share Month; hears Project Graduate report
BEMIDJI — The city of Bemidji declared March as Minnesota Food Share Month in partnership with the
Minnesota FoodShare March Campaign
during a
city council
meeting on Monday. This campaign is the largest grassroots food and fund drive in Minnesota.
“Food insecurity affects thousands of Minnesotans, including residents of Bemidji and the greater Beltrami County area, and access to nutritious food is fundamental to the health and dignity, and well-being of every community member,” the proclamation reads. “Local food shelves depend on the generosity of community donations to meet the growing needs of our neighbors, and every contribution — whether food, funds or time — makes a direct difference in the lives of Bemidji residents.
“The city of Bemidji proudly recognizes the extraordinary contributions of the volunteers, donors and partner organizations whose compassion and dedication ensure that no neighbor goes without, and the city of Bemidji is committed to fostering a compassionate and caring community where all residents are supported and encouraged to look out for one another in times of need.”
Ward 2 Councilor Josh Peterson read the proclamation as Mayor Jorge Prince attended the meeting virtually. Peterson attempted to award the proclamation to a Bemidji Community Food Shelf representative, but no one was available to receive it.
John Eggers,
a former educator, gave a presentation to the council regarding his Project Graduate initiative, which promotes 100% graduation rates within Beltrami County during Monday’s meeting.
“It’s not an easy task to do, but we can do it,” Eggers remarked.
Eggers shared personal efforts to promote a 100% graduation rate within Beltrami County, such as promoting graduation as a teacher at Red Lake High School recently. He hopes to do more work in Red Lake in the future.
Eggers also formed an alliance of local Bemidji businesses to promote Project Graduate. Each business will find a unique way to promote higher graduation rates while working with the alliance. Additionally, Eggers has spent the last several years forming an advocacy program that has now spread to 12 states and five countries worldwide.
He then shared ideas for the council to follow to promote the initiative. This included joining the alliance, displaying posters, “relentlessly” promoting high graduation rates, starting a PSA campaign, adding the initiative to the city’s website or newsletter and signing a proclamation.
He noted that in 2025, the city signed a proclamation and other Beltrami County cities followed suit, meaning Bemidji could once again set the trend to promote higher graduation rates.
Ward 1 Councilor Gwenia Fiskevold Gould asked how the initiative addresses underlying issues that affect
declining graduation rates
within Beltrami County, such as housing instability and food insecurity.
Eggers did not have a direct answer, but noted that graduation often helps young people climb out of bad situations. He believes that all people deal with adversity and that graduation is an important tool to help improve their quality of life.
He also pointed out that graduation rates among white students have remained steady when compared to statewide trends, but that students of color and Indigenous students’ graduation rates are lower than the state average, something that needs to be addressed to help these communities.
Finally, Eggers noted that the initiative’s drop-out prevention hotline was recently discontinued, but that students or parents can reach out to Eggers directly to receive the help needed to stay in school.
Overall, council members thanked Eggers for his Project Graduate presentation. His contact information can be found on his website,
johnrogereggers.com.
The council will next meet at 6 p.m. on Monday, March 16, at City Hall for a regular meeting. Meetings can be viewed on
the city’s website.
Minnesota
Minnesota sues to block Trump administration’s withholding of Medicaid funds
Minnesota on Monday sued President Donald Trump’s administration in an attempt to stop it from withholding $243 million in Medicaid spending, warning it may have to cut health care for low-income families if the funding is held back.
The lawsuit asked a U.S. court in Minneapolis to issue a temporary restraining order to block the withholding for Medicaid, which is the health care safety net for low-income Americans.
The move came after Vice President JD Vance said last week the administration would “temporarily halt” some Medicaid funding to Minnesota over fraud concerns, as part of what he described as an aggressive crackdown on misuse of public funds.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said his office has a strong track record of fighting Medicaid fraud and has won more than 300 convictions and $80 million in judgments and restitutions during his time in office.
“Trump’s attempts to look like he’s fighting fraud only punish the people and families who most need the high-quality, affordable healthcare that all Minnesotans deserve,” Ellison said in a statement. “As long as I am attorney general, I will do everything in my power to defend our tax dollars, both from fraudsters and from the Trump administration’s cruelty.”
The lawsuit names the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services as well as Dr. Mehmet Oz, in his official capacity as CMS administrator, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in his official capacity as HHS secretary.
The Department of Health and Human Services, which includes CMS, didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment late Monday.
The threatened cuts amount to roughly 7% of Minnesota’s quarterly Medicaid funding, Ellison’s office said in a news release. Minnesota could be required to significantly cut health care services for low-income families or other government services if the cuts take effect, it said.
Medicaid, which is known as Medical Assistance in Minnesota, provides health insurance to 1.2 million Minnesotans who would otherwise be unable to afford it. A family of four may qualify for Medical Assistance with an income at or under $42,759, the attorney general’s office said.
The lawsuit said the administration violated due process procedures because it was taking hundreds of millions of dollars without proving Minnesota’s noncompliance with Medicaid regulations through discovery and an evidentiary hearing.
It alleged the administration failed to provide Minnesota with details about its decision, in violation of federal law. It cited legal precedents, including one that said Congress may impose conditions on states’ acceptance of federal funds, but “’the conditions must be set out unambiguously.’”
Minnesota’s complaint further charged the administration violated the Constitution because the withholding imposed retroactive conditions on Minnesota’s Medicaid funding.
It said withholding the funds was arbitrary, capricious and part of a pattern of political punishment of Minnesota.
The administration said it would hold off on paying $259.5 million to Minnesota for Medicaid spending in the fourth quarter of 2025. Minnesota’s lawsuit challenges the withholding of $243 million of this money.
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