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Doctor Anonymous [Explicit - L, LI] - Sally

Monologues
By Donna Spector - Monologue
Duration: 1-2 minutes
$3.99
ADDED TO MY STUFF
ADD TO MY STUFF
ADD TO CART
ADDED TO CART
Includes 2 prints
Doctor Anonymous [Explicit - L, LI]
$3.99

ADDED TO MY STUFF
ADD TO MY STUFF
ADD TO CART
ADDED TO CART
Includes 2 prints
TITLE
Strip Talk on the Boulevard
Strip Talk on the Boulevard
PLAYWRIGHT
Donna Spector
Donna Spector
PLAY/BOOK
Strip Talk on the Boulevard
Strip Talk on the Boulevard
CHARACTER
Sally
Sally
LENGTH
1-2 minutes
1-2 minutes
GENDER
Female
Female
GENRE
Dramatic
Dramatic
AGE RANGE
Adults 30-40's
Adults 30-40's
SUB GENRE
Contemporary 1950-Present
Contemporary 1950-Present
More Info
"I am a homosexual. I am a psychiatrist."—John E. Fryer, M.D. Today this statement wouldn’t raise an eyebrow. But in 1972, when Fryer stepped up to the podium at the American Psychiatric Association, it was so dangerous to his career that he wore a mask and used a microphone to distort his voice. The following year, the APA deleted homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. In this fictionalized account of the events leading up to that historic speech, we visit the vanished world of 1970’s Philadelphia: the early years of gay activism, opera, and the police brutality of Frank Rizzo. Matthew, a young psychiatrist, is accepted for training in an elite program on the condition that he undergoes gay conversion therapy. Years pass; Matthew falls in love with Jake, a young gay activist. But when a patient, Dudek – a self-hating gay man – makes an accusation that threatens his career, Matthew is thrown back into the closet and forced to choose between his psychoanalyst and his lover. Called “powerful” and “spellbinding” by the critics, Doctor Anonymous examines the masks we wear while hiding the truth from ourselves, how we can shed them and come to grips with our identity. Inspired by a watershed moment in LGBT history, and written by a gay psychiatrist/playwright, this is a moving story, told with humor and sensitivitysee less
"I am a homosexual. I am a psychiatrist."—John E. Fryer, M.D. Today this statement wouldn’t raise an eyebrow. But in 1972, when Fryer stepped up to the podium at the American Psychiatric Association, it was so dangerous to his career that he wore a mask and used a microphone to distort his voice. The following year, the APA deleted homosexuality from its list of...see more
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