Arab Times

Schreiber dons collar in ‘Doubt’ revival

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NEW YORK, March 2, (AP): Liev Schreiber was in a reflective mood one recent Sunday when he got a call about possibly starring in the play “Doubt” on Broadway.

“I had just come out of Mass with my in-laws, which is odd for a Jewish boy from the Lower East Side,” the actor and new dad says with a laugh.

He was in Montauk, on the tip of Long Island, where Schreiber has been moved by watching townspeopl­e gather weekly for Catholic services at the local church.

“Maybe it’s my age or maybe it’s having another kid, but I’ve been thinking a lot about faith and its place in our society and culture,” says the 56-year-old Tony Award winner.

He has found the perfect place to chew on those ideas and more in a revival of John Patrick Shanley’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play that lands on Broadway during Lent. It opens March 7.

The play is set in 1964 in New York City, and Schreiber plays the charming, charismati­c and jovial Father Flynn, a new middle school teacher and basketball coach. His foil is the vinegary, steely-spined principal, Sister Aloysius, who forbids the kids to sing “Frosty the Snowman” and is suspicious of ballpoint pens.

The two figures butt heads over a hazy allegation that he may have sexually abused a 12-yearold male student, which he denies. The audience goes back and forth between the two, weighing the evidence but never sure - lost in doubt. “What do you do when you’re not sure?” Father Flynn asks the audience.

“There’s this conversati­on about doubt as a unifying concept that I really think is interestin­g in our deeply polarized society right now,” says Schreiber. “If we can just all agree that we don’t agree, we might make some progress instead of eviscerati­ng each other and canceling each other.”

Director Scott Ellis, interim artistic director of the Roundabout Theatre Company, said he had Schreiber - and only Schreiber - on his list of people to play Father Flynn. “Let me say, I had no doubt about it,” he says.

The Tony Award-winning “Doubt” - made into a 2008 movie starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Meryl Streep - was written in 2004 and clearly captures the nation’s Catholic sex abuse crisis. But it also echoes the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, when certainty was expressed about the presence of weapons of mass destructio­n.

Weaponizin­g doubt

“It’s not about him. It’s about doubt. It’s about what doubt does to us,” Schreiber says. “I think that’s a really interestin­g conversati­on right now about what doubt is doing to all of us, how we are using doubt, how we are weaponizin­g doubt.”

Ellis and Schreiber had long talks about the play, and both agreed they didn’t want to approach Father Flynn strictly in a did he-did he not paradigm.

“It was really a much larger picture of where we’re at in our society now. How do we look at this story through different eyes? It’s 20 years ago. We’re a different society. We’re in a different place, with such a divide,” Ellis says.

This isn’t the first time Schreiber’s work has touched sexual abuse within the Catholic Church. He played a man who had been abused by a priest in “Ray Donovan” and portrayed the Boston Globe editor who pressed his paper to fully investigat­e the cover-up in Boston in “Spotlight.”

“There’s just so much to talk about in this play, and I can feel it from the audiences. When we finish, they’re buzzing, which is such a treat to be in something like that,” he says after a recent two-preview Wednesday.

For “Doubt,” Schreiber watched the movie “I’m one of those actors who openly admit that acting is theft, so I watch everything,” he says - and talked with the playwright. He also visited the Mount Saint Vincent Convent in the Bronx and interviewe­d nuns and priests.

He says he was profoundly moved by the sense of service and mission the older men and women had before it was hit by the semi-truck of abuse litigation. “It kind of restored my faith in faith,” he says.

Schreiber - a lifelong New Yorker who won a Tony for “Glengarry Glen Ross” in 2005 grounds his performanc­e in the neighborho­od where Shanley lived, his accent and mannerisms very Bronx-forward.

“I think if you can get it right in a microcosm, then it becomes macro, if that makes any sense,” he says. “New York is very important to me as a person. It’s my home. I’ve been here all my life. If nothing else, it’s a petri dish for the world in this very compelling way. By that, I mean, a petri dish for conflict, diversity, resolution - culture.”

Preparing for the Broadway run was complicate­d by the late withdrawal of Tyne Daly, who experience­d an undisclose­d health-related issue. Amy Ryan replaced her as Sister Aloysius and quickly won Schreiber’s respect, calling her a “theater athlete” by being ready in just a week.

Ryan took “a risk that you just don’t see actors taking anymore,” he says. Ryan initially hid script pages around the set and had a monitor with the play until she was fully ready.

“I was just blown away by her commitment,” Schreiber says.

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