Home Home Theater Systems TVs & HDTVs DVD Players & Recorders Satellite Radio GPS Units  
  What are you shopping for?  


 

Doubt: A Parable

Doubt: A Parable
MSRP: $7.50
Your Price: $7.50
Shipping: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Dramatist's Play Service
Buy Doubt: A Parable

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

Related Doubt: A Parable Products

Parable Doubt: A
A Doubt: Parable
Doubt: A Parable
A Parable Doubt:
Doubt: Parable A
 

Additional Doubt: A Parable Information

“A superb new drama written by John Patrick Shanley. It is an inspired study in moral uncertainty with the compellingly certain structure of an old-fashioned detective drama. Even as Doubt holds your conscious attention as an intelligently measured debate play, it sends off stealth charges that go deeper emotionally. One of the year’s ten best.”—Ben Brantley, The New York Times

“[The] #1 show of the year. How splendid it feels to be trusted with such passionate, exquisite ambiguity unlike anything we have seen from this prolific playwright so far. Blunt yet subtle, manipulative but full of empathy for all sides, the play is set in 1964 but could not be more timely. Doubt is a lean, potent drama . . . passionate, exquisite, important, and engrossing.”—Linda Winer, Newsday

Chosen as the best play of the year by over 10 newspapers and magazines, Doubt is set in a Bronx Catholic school in 1964, where a strong-minded woman wrestles with conscience and uncertainty as she is faced with concerns about one of her male colleagues. This new play by John Patrick Shanley—the Bronx-born-and-bred playwright and Academy Award-winning author of Moonstruck—dramatizes issues straight from today’s headlines within a world re-created with knowing detail and a judicious eye. After a stunning, sold-out production at Manhattan Theatre Club, the play has transferred to Broadway.

John Patrick Shanley is the author of numerous plays, including Danny and the Deep Blue Sea, Dirty Story, Four Dogs and a Bone, Psychopathia Sexualis, Sailor’s Song, Savage in Limbo, and Where’s My Money?. He has written extensively for TV and film, and his credits include the teleplay for Live from Baghdad and screenplays for Congo, Alive, Five Corners, Joe Versus the Volcano (which he also directed), and Moonstruck, for which he won an Academy Award for original screenplay.



 

What Customers Say About Doubt: A Parable:

You are left with DOUBT. You just don't know. Right.

There are only 4 spoken characters in the whole book - yet so much goes on in such a short story/play. Did he do it. What a powerful piece.

Was she wrong. I found that the ending was well suited for this piece and I highly recommend it. It is riveting and superbly written - considering it's only 60+ pages long.The play takes place in a 1960's Catholic Church School where a nun suspects the priest is molesting one of his students.

It's a story about doubt.

Read it for a life-enhancing experience. The dedication of the play to nuns is very sincere, touching and true. If the movie was excellent, the script is outstanding. The author sees life as one should struggle to.

Both of them try to recruit naïve young Sister James, manipulating her innocence to their own ends. This beautiful ambiguity could have burned audiences, but Shanley handles it with such aplomb that the tension between possibilities makes the play sing with life.Only a few years old, this brief, quick, powerful play is already recognized as a contemporary classic.

They voice our doubts, ask our questions, tremble with our fears. And no wonder, since its characters say the words many of us wish we could speak.

Sister Aloysius thinks Father Flynn is abusing a student at the parochial school. Any attempt to nail it down to a single meaning is destined to fail because the characters and their conflict are too slippery to admit of simple definitions.

Not just for theatre fans, Shanley's "Doubt" is a play that audiences and readers treasure and consume time and again. Father Flynn thinks Sister Aloysius impedes the redeeming work of the church.

When the fallout begins, no one knows who to believe; even the priest and the sisters lose sight of the truth.Shanley's most famous play is stunning in its evasiveness.

When trust is the order of the day, predators are free to plunder. The movie made the four lead characters more complex, richer in detail.The author in his introduction says, "We've got to learn to live with a full measure of uncertainty. Some, however, left with the uneasy feeling they had been taken for a ride, manipulated rather than enlightened. Mrs.

Reading it now after seeing the excellent movie version with a screenplay by the author and directed by him, the play seems claustrophobic and too condensed. Many left the theater with the feeling of doubt that the playwright wanted them to leave with. In April of 2005 I saw the play "Doubt" by John Patrick Shanley on Broadway with a cast consisting of Brian F. O'Byrne, Cherry Jones, Heather Goldenhersh, and Adriane Lenox. There is no last word."Sister Aloysius (Cherry Jones) is so certain of Father Flynn's guilt that she will not let doubt creep into her mind. There's nothing wrong with love." His second sermon, done with an Irish brogue at times, is on the subject of intolerance, and is aimed at the school principal.In the struggle Sister James has lost her peace of mind and cannot sleep.

And plunder they did.the hunters had a field day." It's a disturbing play. Muller (Adriane Lenox) fiercely defends her son and in a brilliant scene outmaneuvers the zealot-principal. Her conviction, her certitude make her less of a Christian. The little sheep lagging behind is the one the wolf goes for."The priest asks, "Where's your compassion." and the Mother Superior answers, "Nowhere you can get at it."It's interesting that Shanley, describing the Catholic Church in 1964 said, "We had, like many animals, flocked together.we were terribly vulnerable to anyone who chose to hunt us. She is bent on destroying the priest. Of the black student, Donald Muller, Sister Aloysius says, "He's isolated. It's a short play with no intermission.

A person's nature is of no interest to the principal; she's only concerned with actions. Don't believe it. The movie opened up the action, made it more dynamic with other characters and exterior scenes. She says, "I'll bring you down." Flynn says "It's an old tactic of cruel people to kill kindness in the name of virtue.

Excellent customer service by the vendor. The item arrived promptly and was in excellent condition, like new.

Buy Doubt: A Parable
© 2006 - 2010 TopRankProducts.com - Home Theater Store : Privacy Policy