Copious Notes
The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture
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Jul14
First Look: SummerFest’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Filed under: SummerFest, Theater, slide shows; Tagged as: Adam Luckey, Arboretum, Bob Singleton, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Jacob Karnes, Jeffrey Hatcher, Jim Trujillo, Kim Dixon, Matt Seckman, Patti Heying, Pinelopi Williams, SummerFest, Susan Wigglesworth2 Comments
SummerFest presents Patti Heying’s production of Jeffrey Hatcher’s adaptation of Robert Lewis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde July 15-19, 2009, in the Arboretum on Alumni Drive. In this version, Jekyll is played by one actor (Bob Singleton) and Hyde is played by four different actors who interact with Jekyll. Photos by Rich Copley | staff. -
Nov30
UK students don’t ‘Doubt’ play’s greatness
Filed under: Film, Theater, UK; Tagged as: Amy Adams, Andrew Kimbrough, Ashley Smith, Courtney Collier, Doubt, Jim Trujillo, John Patrick Shanley, Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Pulitzer Prize, UK Theatre8 Comments
Ashley Smith who plays Sister James, left, worked through a scene with Courtney Collier, center, who plays Sister Aloysius, and Jim Trujillo, playing Father Flynn, during dress rehearsal of UK Theatre's production of "Doubt." Photos by Mark Cornelison | LexGo.
Click the play button to hear a podcast of our interview with the director and actors in UK Theatre’s Doubt:
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There are different ways to see Doubt, John Patrick Shanley’s Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning play about a scandal in a Catholic school.
You can say that literally in Lexington, this month.
The play will be presented by the University of Kentucky Theatre Dec. 4 to 7 in the Briggs Theatre in UK’s Fine Arts Building.
Later in the month, or possibly early next year (Lexington release dates are to be announced), the film version will hit theaters with Philip Seymour Hoffman playing Father Flynn and Meryl Streep playing Sister Aloysius, who accuses the priest of inappropriate conduct with a boy at the school.
Another couple of ways to see it are as a tidy mystery or a lingering question. Shanley and critics seemed to prefer the latter. New York Times critic Ben Brantley complained that when the cast for the Broadway production changed all doubt had been removed from Doubt.
UK theater professor and the play’s director, Andrew Kimbrough is certainly going for the less-certain interpretation.
“I don’t think Shanely wants the audience to reach a conclusion,” Kimbrough says. “I think he wants the process of investigating and formulating evidence and the difficulty of arriving at a conclusion to be at the forefront.“In the introduction to the play, he points out a very common human phenomenon, and that is that all of us tend to be opinionated people. And we tend to make up our minds about what’s right and what’s wrong and what’s inappropriate and what’s not and stick by those opinions, even when fact should convince us to the contrary.”
That tendency is embodied in Sister Aloyisus, who is certain popular Father Flynn has stepped out of line but cannot build an airtight case. In just four years, the characters have become highly sought after roles.



