Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Login

Login

Please fill in your credentials to login.

Don't have an account? Register Sign up now.

Entertainment

To Kill a Mockingbird heading to Broadway

Harper Lee's classic novel To Kill a Mockingbird and its now-somewhat sullied hero Atticus Finch are heading to Broadway in a new adaptation written by Aaron Sorkin.

Aaron Sorkin, Oscar-winning screenwriter of The Social Network, will adapt the novel

Gregory Peck, foreground left, and Brock Peters, right, in a scene from the 1962 film To Kill a Mockingbird. The novel that inspired the film is being adapted for the Broadway stage. (Universal Studios Home Entertainment/Associated Press)

Harper Lee's classic novel To Kill a Mockingbird and its now-somewhat sullied hero Atticus Finch are heading to Broadway in a new adaptation written by Aaron Sorkin.

Producer Scott Rudin said Wednesday the play will land during the 2017-2018 season under the direction of Tony Award winner Bartlett Sher, who is represented on Broadway now with the brilliant revivals of The King and Iand Fiddler on the Roof.No casting was revealed.

Sorkin's plays include A Few Good Menand The Farnsworth Invention.He won an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for his screenplay for The Social Network,which Rudin produced, along with Sorkin's other films Steve Jobsand Moneyball.

Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird has become standard reading in schools and has sold 40 million copies worldwide. (The Associated Press)

The book has been made the leap to the stage before, including a 1991 adaptation by Christopher Sergel which premiered at New Jersey's Paper Mill Playhouse. There also was a production in 2013 that had a run at London's Barbican Theatre with Robert Sean Leonard in the role of Finch, the noble widower and lawyer called upon to defend a black man accused of raping a white woman in Depression-era Alabama. This new version will mark the story's Broadway debut.

To Kill a Mockingbird,published in 1960, introduced Finch, Scout, Boo Radley and other beloved literary characters. The book was adapted into an Oscar-winning movie starring Gregory Peck as Atticus and has become standard reading in schools and other reading programs, with worldwide sales topping 40 million copies.

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1961, and widely praised as a sensitive portrait of racial tension as seen through the eyes of a child in 1930s Alabama, it also has been criticized as sentimental and paternalistic.

Last year saw the publication of Lee's recently discovered manuscript, Go Set a Watchman,described as a first draft of the story that evolved into Mockingbird.Critics and readers were startled to find the heroic Atticus of Mockingbirddisparaging blacks and condemning the Supreme Court's decision to outlaw segregation in public schools.

Oscar and Emmy-winning screenwriter Aaron Sorkin's previous plays include A Few Good Men and The Farnsworth Invention. (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)