Well, actually, it was two nights at the theater, but the title above is a play on a great Marx Brothers movie, so how can you pass that up?
Yes, twice in a seven day span, we took in a live theatrical performance, both of them straight plays.
The first show was part of the Broadway Pittsburgh series, "To Kill A Mockingham", Aaron Sorkin's adaptation of Harper Lee's landmark 1960 novel. Just about everyone is familiar with the story of "To Kill A Mockingbird" either because it was assigned reading in high school or because of the 1962 movie that starred Gregory Peck as southern lawyer Atticus Finch.
Sorkin's play was highly acclaimed when it opened on Broadway a few years back, and this touring production was terrific as well. The story and message of Lee's novel is timeless, and this adaptation is an excellent presentation of that story. I imagine that it won't be long until high schools will be performing this play as well.
One of the big hooks of this show was that Richard Thomas, young John-Boy Walton himself, starred as Atticus Finch. Thomas is now 70 years old. He looks at least 15 years younger, and was great in the role. However, as I scanned the Playbill prior to the opening curtain, the name of one actor listed far down in the billing caught my eye: Mary Badham. The name might be familiar to movie fans. Badham, who will turn 70 later this year, was nine years old when she earned an Academy Award nomination for playing the role of Scout Finch in the "To Kill A Mockingbird" movie in 1962. In this production, she played Mrs. Dubose, a crotchety old lady neighbor of the Finches.
Badham virtually retired from acting - IMDB shows only seven credits for her - after two single episode TV roles and two film roles after Mockingbird. After 1966, she virtually disappeared from the profession when she then appeared in a 2005 and a 2019 featured film, both of which you never heard of. What has she been doing all these years, what has prompted her to return to spotlight, and why wasn't her involvement in this production publicized in the press as the show came to town?
Four Stars from The Grandstander of this play.
- Hamilton
- To Kill A Mockingbird
- Summer, The Donna Summer Musical
- Pretty Woman
- Oklahoma
- The Band's Visit
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