Monday, July 26, 2010

Producing the Play

Production History


Producing Organization- Manhatten Theatre Club

Venue- City Center StageI

Location-Manhatten, New York

When-November 2004

Director- Doug Hughes

Set Designer-John Lee Beatty

Costume Designer- Catherine Zuber


Review Capsule

1)"The play's balance of conflicting viewpoints, its austere institutional setting and its sensational front-page subject at first bring to mind those tidy topical melodramas of truth and falsehood that were once so popular. Think ''The Children's Hour'' crossed with ''Agnes of God.'' Or, for that matter, ''Twelve Angry Men,'' Reginald Rose's compact courtroom drama from the 1950's, now on Broadway. And John Lee Beatty's photographically detailed school office and courtyard sets would seem to place ''Doubt'' comfortably in the same tradition." - Ny Times Ben Brantley





2) "Father Flynn and Sister Aloysius are strong personalities and their battle makes this a story with philosophical implications beyond the issue play genre. This nun and priest are at loggerheads even without the pedophile situation to ignite their differences into a confrontation that affects the whole community. Shanley wittily illustrates this when the Sister purses her lips disapprovingly at Father Flynn's suggestion to introduce some fun tunes like "It's Beginning To Look a Lot Like Christmas" into the Christmas pageant. The community is kept within the confines of the school which is in the working class Bronx neighborhood that has been the creative wellspring for so many Shanley plays." -Elyse Sommer




Producing Organization- The Peterborough Players


Venue-The Perterborough Players Theatre


Location- Peterborough, NH


When- September 2008


Director- Warren Hammack


Lighting Designer- Eric Larson


Sound Designer- Jose Docen


Review Capsule


1)"Year in and year out, Peterborough is unquestionably one of New Hampshire’s finest professional theatre companies.
They don’t miss the mark very often.
But their Doubt is mired in uninspired direction and unconvincing performances that fail to locate anything deeper than the surface of Shanley’s script.
Then again, for all its acclaim, it may be that Doubt: A Parable doesn’t run very deep in the first place. "-
Kevin Gardner


Producing Organization- Water Tower Theatre

Venue- Addison Theatre Center

Location- Addison, Tx

When- October 2008

Director- Terry Martin

Scenic Designer- John Hobbie

Costume Designer- Aaron Patrick Turner


Review Capsule

1)" Father Flynn, a charismatic young priest, is adored by his students; Sister Aloysius, an unbending principal, is pleased by the fear she invokes in them. When Father Flynn begins to take special interest in a new student, Sister Aloysius begins to think the unthinkable. But when a nun’s suspicion is weighed against the word of a priest, how does one determine the truth? The winner of 24 major awards, Doubt, a Parable is a gripping exploration of the question, “What do you do when you’re not sure?” - PegNews Wire



2)"Doubt is a delicately balanced play that can go wrong easily. Aloysius is sanctimonious and brittle, but she may be right; Fr. Flynn is a genial Noo Yawk priest — but is he also a predator? The performances, skilled all, don’t help you decide. Adair’s is so easy-going and non-threatening, you want to believe in his innocence, which makes the moral issues murkier. Is there such thing as a gentle pedophile? Sherrard doesn’t hesitate to be a bitch, making her the least sympathetic of detectives."-Arnold Wayne Jones



Producing Organization- Tricycle Theatre Company

Venue- The Tricycle Theatre

Location- Kilburn High Road, London

When- November 2007- January 2008
Director- Nocolas Kent

Artistic Designer- John Gunter

Lighting Designer- Rachael McCutcheon

Review Capsule

1) "Shanley's brief, aphorism-heavy four-hander is set in a Bronx Catholic school in 1964, when the golden age of certainty had passed away with JFK. Even the seemingly indestructible monolith of the Church is being assailed by modernisers. Intriguingly, Sister Aloysius, apparently the most hide-bound, is the one least willing to subscribe to the time-honoured notion that members of a religious order should close ranks to protect their own. Although she lacks evidence, "experience" tells her that Father Flynn (Pádraic Delaney) is behaving improperly and she wants him out. "-Fiona Mountford

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/theatre/review-23423275-not-doubtful-enough-by-half.do

2) "It’s an intense play that works because of the solid individuals at its centre - the modernising, tough-talking Bronx priest Father Flynn, the naïve, virginal Sister James, and Sister Aloyisius, the suspicious, world-weary, controlling elder of the community. Added to this is Nikki Amuka-Bird as the headstrong mother of the boy, who, as the audience’s advocate, voices our doubts about the accusations." -Jeremy Austinhttp://www.thestage.co.uk/reviews/review.php/19000/doubt-a-parable



Producing Organization- Syracuse Stage

Venue- Syracuse Stage

Location- Syracuse, NY.

When- February 2008

Director- M. Burke Walker


Review Capsule

1) "Much the way Shanley's characters are emblematic of degrees of guilt/innocence, flexibility/rigidity, and black/white/gray, so to is the drama itself as it forces us to grapple with various ambiguities to come to our own conclusion."- Tony Curulla



2) "When is it okay to lie? Sister Aloysius says to the idealistic Sister James in one scene that "When you take a step to address wrongdoing, you are taking a step away from God, but in his service." Is that so? Does the end justify the means?
Where should adults draw the line between being a friend and being an authority figure in their relationships with children? Is practical the same thing as easy? How does one strike a balance between morals, common sense, and idealism?" - Angela Newman



Producing Organization -Olney Theatre Company

Venue- Olney Theatre Center

Location- Olney, MD.

When- February-March 2008

Director- John Going

Scenic Designer- James Wolk

Costume Designer- Howard V. Kurtz

Review Capsule

1) "Olney presents an attractive production of the play. Scenic designer James Wolk creates an impressive set which smoothly changes from scene to scene and fully utilizes the handsome space. The various religious costumes are appropriate and Mrs. Muller’s outfit accurately evokes the era. The lighting design effectively highlights the action, especially when Father Flynn appears alone on stage, and a series of sound effects are balanced and credible. "- Steven McKnight


Producing The Play

Production Problems Posed by the Text
One if the problems that would need to be addressed by anyone interested in producing the play is the question of who’s the victim? Is there one? And also the doubt versus certainty dilemma. The characters of Father Flynn and Sister Aloysius are both strong protagonist. The way the script is written ;there is an equal balance of “doubt” on all sides of the proposed issue. Father Flynn has a very personable and likeable personality whereas Sister Aloysius runs the school with an iron fist, which one will come off more appealing to the audience? I think to make this show work that has to be a fine balance of both so that one does not appear to be “winning”. One of the other problems that would need to be discussed is the scenic design, the script does not call for many pieces so the designer could virtually do a number of things. When discussing the set I think it would be important to discuss beforehand how simple does it need to be to stay true to the setting and time. It is a Catholic Church in the Bronx so a very bright colorful set would not be accurate but rather something more subtle and stone like. Also another big issue is the fact that the play is almost all dialogue driven, with little action. The actors and the director would really need to dive into how they could make the conversations interesting and the audience captivated.

Production Problems Posed by Our Context:
If we were to produce this play at Sam Houston State University depending on which space used, we may encounter different problems. The first problem or issue that would have to be addressed, even before auditions or even choosing this play, is the age of the characters in this script. The young nun and possibly the mother may be fine but how could you address Sister Aloysius’ casting? Being produced in a college theatre this would be very important to address. If produced in the Showcase Theatre I think there needs to be a discussion of how comfortable the audience will feel when being close to the action, this could work for or against the production. On the other hand the Mainstage Theatre might make the audience feel too disconnected to the story.

Other Productions’ Solutions:
For the issue of the two protagonist in the play, either the producing organizations nailed it or completely missed the mark, leaving the audience unpleased. One critic that viewed the production of “Doubt” that was produced by the Manhattan Theatre Club commented on the bare set saying “…Collins' lighting subtly bring brick walls with a stained glass window into focus. This becomes a permanent backdrop. The principal's office, a church garden between the nuns' and priests' quarters, and a gym locker room are rolled on and off stage without the slightest awkwardness or artificiality.” This would be a great way to approach the scenic design of the show and this production received great reviews by many. On the issue of the age, I was unable to find many reviews where this play was produced at a college level. Although I did find a information from the TCU performance that was recently produced it said little about the problem in casting. I was able to look at some of the pictures from the production and to my surprise they did not even use makeup or other effects to help with the age of the characters. The college students looked incredibly young in the pictures, especially Father Flynn who resembled more of a freshman in high school.

Critical Response:
The majority of the reviews I read the critics’ loved both the script and the production being viewed. Very few were displeased with it, and if they were the main reasons were due to conflicts with the acting and not so much the script itself. The production by the Manhattan Theatre Club, as mentioned above, probable received some of the best reviews. This script not to anyone’s surprise also one a Pulitzer Prize and Tony Awards in acting and for best play.


















































Monday, July 19, 2010

The World of the Play

Macro View

1) 1963-John F. Kennedy died , this is very important to the nations state at this time. Possibly distrust in the government.
2) 1964President Johnson is finishing the last year to what would have been J.F.K.'s term. He has declared the "War on Poverty" and such programs as Medicare are initiated. This tells us about what is going on throughout the country and the security of the people.
3) 1964-The death of three New York civil rights activist in Mississippi during the "Freedom Summer" made headliners. With Donald Muller being the first and only African American in the school, this really gives us a feel for the turmoil and stress him and his family might be involved in. It also could give us some insight into Mrs. Muller judgment and choices when she responded the way she did to the accusations.
4) 1964-Race Riots are breaking out in Harlem and other United States cities. Again the place and rights of African Americans are not at all secure.
5)1964- The wage of Blue Collar workers has increased 50 percent or more. This affects the current economic situation at this time.

6) 1964- Pope Paul VI met with Athenagoras in Jerusalem on Mount of Olives, it was the first time since 1439 that leaders of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox church's had met. This was an exciting time for the Catholic church, and would most definitely affect the Priest as well as the congregation.
7) 1964-There is a turmoil going on between the United States and Vietnam. President Lyndon B. Johnson has proposed a plan to pull out current troops in Vietnam and sending in his own troops to expand the war. With the new president coming in during the current situation the U.S. people are waiting to see how the new president will handle the times of trouble.

8) 1964-Nelson Mandela is arrested and imprisoned for apposing apartheid. Many African Americans, even in the U.S., admired Nelson Mandela's courage to fight against segregation. With everything that was going on in the U.S. I am sure many African Americans were influenced by Mandela.

9)1964-James H. Meredith, an African American and a former member of the U.S. air-force, begins his first degree at the University of Mississippi which was an all-white University. This is important to know about because Donald and his mother have hopes of him attending college and
college prep school in the following year.

10) 1964- The Beatles are widespread in the media in the U.S. This is a time where experimental drugs are being used and the youth of this time are being influenced by ideas of experimentation and change. With the country in a time of despair many people turned to different types of outlets. This would definitely effect the members of the church and the families of the community.
Micro View
1) 1963- The Cross Bronx Expressway is finalized during this year. It had a tremendous impact on the decline of the Bronx during this time.

2) 1964- The Bronx is considered for one of the first anit-poverty funding. In relation to the world the Bronx was one of the more poverty stricken and economically depressed areas.

3) 1964- Freedomland park is one of the main forms of entertainment during this year.

4) 1964- An article from the New York Times read that a half-million whites left the Bronx between 1960-1964. These are incredible numbers and show how many people especially white people felt about the Bronx.

5) 1963- Fordham University considers enrolling "girls" in the new college. This was a tough time even for women and womens rights'.

6) 1964- Hunts Point fruit and Produce market opens to families in the Bronx. This wholesale market was built to help with the overcrowding in grocery stores in the Bronx.

7)1963- Many Bronx and Queens slayings in this year connected to gang activity.

8) 1964- Supreme Court gets overrided on a ban proposed to end school prayer. Many fought, including a member of Congress Buckley Foe, to keep it as it was.

9) 1964- After a detailed study Democrats in the Bronx launched a nation wide effort to help with voter registration numbers. It linked the numbers to poor urban areas.

Statement

John Patrick Shanley’s drama “Doubt; A Parable” is set in the fall of 1964 in the Bronx, New York. The Bronx is one of the five boroughs that make up the state of New York. The others include; Queens, Harlem, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Staten Island. The Bronx is the northernmost borough of the five. Although the Bronx was settled by immigrants of Irish, Jewish, Germans, and Italian descents the African American’s became the majority after about 1945. This information tells a lot about the membesr in the church and their history with the town.
In 1963 the Cross Bronx Expressway was finalized by the boroughs’ president, Robert Moses. Almost immediately after this, the economic situation in the Bronx began to decline because of the destruction of the residential neighborhoods that were destroyed to give way for the new transportation. Btween 1960 and 1964 it was estimated that half-million whites left the area for surburban houses and towns.High rise living quarters and housing projects began to immerge because of the overpopulation and the quality of living was dropping. During this time President Lyndon B. Johnson declares the war and poverty and the Bronx is chosen for one of the first areas to receive funding and help from the government.
Parks such as Freedomland was open and very popular at this time. The locals could enjoy music and entertainment from their favorite performers and artist. Performers such as Marvin Gay and “The Spinners” performed in that year at Freedomland. Other forms of entertainment were the Bronx zoo and the World Fair in New York City.
During this year the fight for Civil Rights for African Americans was really going strong. That summer three New York Civil Rights activists that participated in “Freedom Summer” in Mississippi, made headlines when they were found murdered. Race Riots were exploding in the streets and towns across America. Many people, especially the African Americans, were following the fight against apartheid in South Africa and the imprisonment of Mandela. Also the fight for women’s rights is going on across the world.
In the Catholic Church issues were arising about the introduction of a new kind of secular mass. Many churches were split in two about whether to keep the old Latin vernacular mass or if they should switch to the new secular mass. This ia probably the case in this script.
Around the world people were also dealing with segregation and civil rights issues. John F. Kennedy had been assassinated the year before leaving people overhwlemed and unsure of the future. There is trouble between the United States and Vietnam as well and it is up to Lyndon B. Johnson to help the current economical and foreign affairs.
It is the years of "Beatlemania" and their tunes can be heard world wide. People enjoyed going to the theatre and theme parks that were sprouting up. During such a stressful time more kids were playing with experimental drugs and crime rates were high.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

The Facts of the Play

Doubt; A Parable
By John Patrick Shanley

Basic Facts

Author-John Patrick Shanley

Structure- Nine Scenes

Cast breakdown- 1M, 3W

Approximate Running Time- 90 min. without intermission

Genre- Drama

Biography of John Patrick Shanley-

"Born in 1950, Shanley grew up the youngest of five children in an Irish-Catholic family whose home was in the Bronx neighborhood of East Tremont. His father, a meatpacker, was an Irish immigrant, while Shanley's mother was herself the daughter of Irish immigrants. The East Tremont streets were home to similar working-class Irish and Italian families. "It was extremely anti-intellectual and extremely racist and none of this fit me," the play-wright revealed in an interview with Alex Witchel that appeared in the New York Times Magazine. He recalled being "in constant fistfights from the time I was six," though he asserted he rarely picked the fight himself. "People would look at me and become enraged at the sight of me," he explained. "I believe that the reason was they could see that I saw them." http://www.notablebiographies.com/newsmakers2/2006-Ra-Z/Shanley-John-Patrick.html

Publication info- Dramatist Play services

Licensing and Rights- Dramatist Play Service, 75$ per performance

Exegesis

1) incommunicable- impossible to be communicated

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/incommunicable

2) parable- a simple story illustrating a moral or religious lesson
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/parable

3) rectory- an official residence provided by a church for its parson or vicar or rector
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/rectory

4) Mother Seton- " Founder and first supereior of the Sister's of Charity in the United States; born in New York City, 28 Aug., 1774 of non-Catholic parents of high position..." http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13739a.htm

Before taking her vow , she was married and bore five children.

5) Monsignor-, pl. monsignori, is the form of address for those members of the clergy of the Roman Catholic Church holding certain Eccliestiastical honorrific titles. Monsignor is the apocopic form of the Italian monsignore, from the French mon seigneur, meaning "my lord". In English, it is abbreviated Msgr. or Mons. In French, it is abbreviated Mgr (without the period/full stop)
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/monsigner

6) St. Patrick- "Apostle of Ireland, born at Kilpatrick, near Dumbarton, in Scotland, in the year 387; died at Saul, Downpatrick, Ireland, 17 March, 461."



http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=89

7) St. Anthony -Founder of christian monoasticism ( devoting ones life to spiritual work and not wordly persuits; nuns and monks are example of this)

http://derdo.files.wordpress.com/2008/06/st-anthony2.jpg

St. Anthony and St. Patrick are of Italian and Irish descent which is probably the majority of this catholic congregation is as well. With the presence of the first African American student this could mean something to what and how the students and the church preceives him.

8) Altar boys- boys serving as an acolyte ( someone who assists a priest or minister in a liturgical service; a cleric ordained in the highest of the minor orders in the Roman Catholic Church but not in the Anglican Church)


http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Altar+Boys


9) St. Nicholas- The name of the Catholic church and school in the play. He was a Greek Bishop and is known for his charitable nature of giving to the less fortunate.

http://amostwonderfultime.ning.com/profiles/profile/show?id=Alexandria

10) scruples-An uneasy feeling arising from conscience or principle that tends to hinder action

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/scruple

Fable

The play starts in St. Nicholas catholic school, a sermon from Father Flynn is done. Sister Aloysius is having a conversation with one of the new school teachers, Sister James. Sister James has come to see about a student that had left due to a nose bleed. Sister Aloysius begins by askingSister James about some of her current students. She ask questions about their academic progress and she is specifically interested in the new African American student that has began classes at the school. She makes remarks about how she should keep a close eye on him because some of the other students. Her reasoning is that they might not understand why he is there due to the majority of the churches congregation being of Italian and Irish descent. Sister James reassures her that he is doing fine, but Sister Aloysius seems not content with any of the answers Sister James is giving her. She pries into the situations and the classroom settings more trying to give her input on how everything should be ran. Her philosophy seems to be discipline more than knowledge. Sister Aloysius seems to have some suspicion about the new Priest and his interactions with the students. Sister James slowly reveals an event that happened between the Priest and the new student Donald Muller. She accounts that the priest brought him to his rectory to spend time and talk with him. She also reveals that his breath may have smelled like wine and he was acting a little strange. Sister Aloysius almost seems satisfied that her speculations were correct, she begins thinking about how she could approach the situation. She tells Sister James that she will have to be present when she confronts the Priest about the information. Sister James of course is not comfortable with confronting the Priest about such information and actually begins to try and question of her own accounts truth.
Later on they Sisters’ do in fact meet with the Priest, he thinks they are meeting about the yearly Christmas pageant. Coffee is offered to him by Sister Aloysius and she ask Sister James to poor it. When asked how much sugar he wanted his response was not approvable to Sister Aloysius. She was judging his self control and monitoring his every move. He begins by asking what if the performed a secular song this year for Christmas such as “Frosty the Snowman”. Again he meets the disapproval by Sister Aloysius. She then starts to pry into his relations with the student and more specifically Donald Muller. He than begins to question the truth of why he was asked to come in for the meeting. Sister James is then asked to re-count the story she had told before. Flynn denies anything more than having an innocent heart- to –heart with the new student after he found him drinking the church wine. He says he hoped it would not have to come to this because if anyone else found out Donald would be remover from his position as an alter boy. Immediately Sister James is relieved and believes the truth of his story. Sister Aloysius on the other hand is not convinced one bit and is not afraid to hide it. Flynn leaves in a rage.
The next sermon the priest give a Parable over gossip and how you are not able to take back the things that come out of your mouth even if what you say has no truth. He uses a story about a women who is asked to go to her house, stab her pillow, and bring the empty in casement back to the priest. When she finished what he has asked he asked her what happened when she performed this, she responded with how the feathers went everywhere. The priest told her to go back home and put every feather back inside the original encasement. She said this was impossible due to how many flew away and that she would never be able to collect everyone.
Sister James and the Priest run into each other and have a conversation about how she believes him and his glad that he has her trust in the matter. She assures him Sister Aloysius will not the matter go.
Sister Aloysius calls Donald Muller’s mother in for a conversation about the speculated situation . She begins by asking how her son had been acting, immediately she told of how he looked up to the priest and was so devastated that Donald had been removed from his position as an alter boy. Slowly Sister Aloysius unravels her beliefs of the inappropriate interaction between the priest and Donald. Mrs. Muller begins to talk about how grateful she was that Donald was able to attend school at the church because of the opportunities that it may give him. She said that he was graduating in a few months and he could stick out anything until that time. Sister Aloysius is of coursed alarmed at the response of the mother. She tells her something needs to be done about the situation but his mother refuses to give in. She admits that his father is not found of her son and thinks that he may be a homosexual. She says that any kind of attention that is given to Donald by the Priest is better than nothing. The mother leaves upset with the meeting. Just as she leaves the priest comes into Sister Aloysius office to see what was going on.
Sister Aloysius says she has contacted the other church that he was at before and asked why he had moved around so much in a such a short time. He tells her that she did not approach the situation in the correct manor. Slowly he starts to feel helpless and desperate asking her what will he do with his love for God and Priesthood if he leaves there. She tells him that he needs to leave the church if wants to protect him name. He does in fact leave the church.
All though the story was made up just to see if he would fall under pressure, her wish is fulfilled. Sister Aloysius meets with Sister James and gives her the news. Sister James is shocked and once again pulled back to the other side of the truth. But in the closing line Sister Aloysius still admits that she now has some DOUBT about what really happened.

Plot Summary
Act 1
The first act of Doubt consists of a sermon by Father Flynn. His theme is uncertainty, which he relates to the disorientation felt by most of the country the year before, when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. He points out how people came together spiritually and concludes that despair does not have to be an experience that isolates people, if they have faith. To make his point, Father Flynn tells a story about a sailor, lost at sea, who uses his memory of the stars to guide his navigation, even when the stars are covered by clouds for more than twenty nights. The sailor's faith in the truth he once knew is likened to the despairing person's faith in God.
Act 2
Sister Aloysius, the principal of St. Nicholas School, meets in her office with Sister James, who teaches eighth grade. She asks about a boy who has been sent home with a bleeding nose and warns that children sometimes inflict their own injuries as a way to leave school. During the conversation, Sister Aloysius reveals her dislike of teachers who act kind in order to hide their own weakness or laziness.
The talk turns to whether Sister James stays in the room when the "specialty" instructors — those in charge of teaching art, music, physical education, and similar subjects — come in. In particular, Sister Aloysius is interested in whether Sister James leaves the boys alone when Father Flynn teaches religion and physical education. She asks Sister James to be alert, but she cannot find it in herself to be more specific about what she suspects.
Act 3
Act 3 comprises another monologue by Father Flynn, addressing the boys during basketball. He tells them that they will be able to shoot better if they relax and quit thinking about how they might look. On the subject of personal hygiene, he tells an apocryphal story about a boy with whom he grew up, named Timmy Mathisson, who had dirty fingernails that he put in his nose and in his mouth, which resulted in his death from spinal meningitis.
Act 4
Sister Aloysius and Sister James meet in the garden. Sister James explains that the boys in her class are at a lecture, given by Father Flynn, on the subject of being a man. Sister James explains that the new African American boy in her class, Donald Muller, does not have to worry much about bullying from the other students, because Father Flynn has taken on a role as his special protector. Immediately, Sister Aloysius says that she thinks Father Flynn is planning inappropriate behavior with the vulnerable boy. Sister James recalls that Father Flynn took Donald for a private talk to the rectory and that, when he came back, Donald had alcohol on his breath.
Sister Aloysius explains that it would be difficult to have a priest removed, even if there was evidence that he had had sex with a student. Father Flynn would certainly deny any such allegation, and Monsignor Benedict would believe whatever Father Flynn said. The rules of the Church prohibit a nun from taking suspicions to any higher authority. The boy would not talk, intimidated by shame. Sister Aloysius tells Sister James that she is going to confront Father Flynn and will need Sister James there as a witness.
Act 5
Father Flynn arrives at the door of Sister Aloysius's office, but the rules forbid a priest and a nun to be in a room alone. When Sister James arrives, Sister Aloysius serves tea. Father Flynn thinks that the meeting is about the Christmas pageant. Sister Aloysius mentions Donald Muller, saying that she knows that he has given the boy "special attention" and that Donald behaved strangely when he returned to class. Father Flynn, feeling accused, starts to walk out when Sister Aloysius mentions the smell of alcohol on the boy's breath. He explains that Donald had been caught by the caretaker drinking altar wine and that he was trying to spare the boy exposure.
After Father Flynn leaves, Sister Aloysius explains to Sister James that she thinks he was lying. Sister James vigorously defends him, accusing Sister Aloysius of simply disliking him, but Sister Aloysius dismisses her defense as being grounded in youthful naïveté. Sister Aloysius phones the boy's parents and asks them to come to the school for a meeting.
Act 6
Father Flynn gives a sermon about intolerance. He tells the story of a woman who, while gossiping with a friend, sees a hand over her head. She goes to her priest, and he tells her that it is a sign of God's displeasure. He instructs her to go home, take a pillow onto the roof, slash it with a knife, and empty it out. When she returns, the priest tells her to go and gather up all of the feathers that came from the pillow. She explains that she cannot, that they scattered to the winds. The priest in Father Flynn's story explains that gossip, once it is out, cannot be recalled either.
Act 7
Father Flynn meets Sister James while she is praying in the same garden that was the setting of act 4. She has had trouble sleeping, feeling guilty about being a gossip, like the woman in Father Flynn's sermon. Father Flynn speaks comfortingly, telling her that she is free to make up her own mind about him and is not obliged to follow whatever Sister Aloysius thinks. When she asks, he tells her directly that Sister Aloysius's allegations are not true. Father Flynn contrasts his own philosophy, which emphasizes love and concern, with Sister Aloysius's philosophy of strictness and discipline. Before she leaves, Sister James tells him that she does not believe that he is guilty.
Act 8
Sister Aloysius has a conference with Donald's mother. Mrs. Muller explains that she and her husband expected Donald to have trouble at St. Nicholas, being the first black student there, and they were glad that Father Flynn was looking out for him. Mrs. Muller is focused on Donald's staying through the end of the school year, which will give him a chance at being accepted into a good high school. When Sister Aloysius expresses concern about Father Flynn, Mrs. Muller takes a defensive posture: she knows that, in the event of a public inquiry, Donald, not the priest, would be blamed. She decides that it would be better for the boy, even if Father Flynn is using him sexually, to stay at St. Nicholas until graduation.
When she leaves, Father Flynn comes in, furious. He ignores the rule that states that a priest and nun cannot be alone in a room and slams the door behind him, demanding to know why Donald Muller's mother was there. He goes through the evidence of his misbehavior and discredits each charge, until Sister Aloysius says that she has talked to a nun at his last parish. Father Flynn raises objections — that she should have gone through the parish pastor, that there is no evidence in his official record of inappropriate behavior, and so forth — but Sister Aloysius insists that she knows he has taken advantage of boys. When she starts to leave to report him to higher authorities, he stops her and listens to her demands to leave St. Nicholas. When she does leave, he phones the bishop to ask to be reassigned.
Act 9
Sister Aloysius and Sister James meet and talk in the garden. Father Flynn has been moved to another parish, but with a promotion to pastor. Sister Aloysius was unable to convince Monsignor Benedict of Father Flynn's inappropriate behavior, but she is sure of his guilt. She feels guilty herself, because, to get him to leave, she lied about having contacted someone at his previous parish, a bluff that evidently frightened him away.

http://www.answers.com/topic/doubt-play-2

Characters



Father Brendan Flynn- Catholic Priest at St. Nicholas school and church. He is in his late thirties. He is fairly new to the priesthood and is very personable with the students and the congregation. He does not hold the same strict conservative values that older priest might hold on to and practice.



Sister Aloysius Beauvier- Catholic nun and St. Nicholas' schools principal, she is her fifties/ sixties. She is the head nun who keeps a close eye on the school and the relationships between the teachers. She is very intuitive and will stop at nothing to prove her suspicion of the priest.



Sister James- School teacher at the Catholic church, she is in her twenties and is very innocent. She can be preceived naive at times throughout the play and it is a constant tug- of- war between her beliefs in the priest and in Sister Aloysius.

Mrs. Muller- Mother of Donald Muller. She is an African American and is around thirty-eight. Her son is the first black student that has ever been admitted to the school and she will stop at nothing to try and keep him there til graduation, even if that means denying protection to her son.





Statement: "Characters and Casting"

For this play the non-traditional casting may be applied to the roles of the nuns and possibly father Flynn. Although the script does include last names of the nuns that could be used as a reference to their nationality, I do not believe that it is absolutely essential to have people of the European descent to play these roles. If I was casting for this particular script and not sure if I would be completely in to practice non-traditional casting only because of the historical time and my personal feeling of the play. I think the author had a very specific intent when writing the production and in order to be fair to that it would be tedious to cast non-traditionally. The possibility of Sister James being of Asian or Hispanic descent could be a possibility for this particular script. Since she is younger this leaves more possibilities of what race she could be. I think the only race that would take away from the message of the show would be African American casting in the roles of anyone else other than Mrs. Muller and Donald Muller. The older nun would be the more difficult of the two to use the practice of non traditional casting, because of her age and place in the church. In the Bronx during this time, the catholic church was majority Irish and I believe that this is historically important to the play but could be played with. For Father Flynn I think it would be a challenge to use non-traditional casting because of the history of the Catholic church . It is very important to the script that he be a younger priest so age would be important in the casting of Father Flynn. For the roles of Mrs. Muller and Donald Muller I do not think that the practice of non-traditional casting could possibly be applied to them. Since the script is very specific about the young boy and mother being African- American it would probably go against the authors intent to cast differently. Other aspects of non-traditional casting include the casting of people no matter if they are disabled or not. I think it could be a possibility to use any able person to play any of the four characters of the show no matter of a handicap or not. I think casting Sister Aloysius in wheel chair could be a possibility as well as a blind person. Since she is older in age all these things could potentially be a possibility and would not take away from the integrity of the show. For the other characters I think such possibilities could be explored as well. In my exploration of the casting I researched and read reviews of previous productions of “Doubt” and was unable to find the use of non-traditional casting in any of them. Maybe in time this will be explored more with this script, but for the current time it has not been as far as I can find.