Boston Herald
10/12/1996
BM19981015070063201
A&I Section
Paul ShermanMoira Kelly was ready to
quit movie acting - until the script for "Entertaining Angels:
The Dorothy Day Story" came along. "I went to my agent and
said, "I'm tired. I don't want to do this anymore. the
battles are too much for me. The movies they want to make
stink, and I want to go back to the theater,: said the young
actress, a familiar face from such movies as "Chaplin," "With
Honors" and "Little Odessa." "He told me to hold on and just
wait. And not a week later, 'Dorothy Day' came across his
desk." the story of Day (1897-1980) - the
intellectual-turned-Roman-Catholic-activist who lived among
the poor in the shelters she started - immediately appealed to
Kelly.
"I found minor similarities between her life
and my own, and I thought, 'Here's a real human character,' "
Kelly said. "An audience is going to be able to find a little
bit of Dorothy in themselves and relate to this woman.: roles
like Dorothy Day are so rare in Hollywood. Women don't get
the opportunity to play someone who's inspiring and strong and
so influential in the changes to the world. I think any
actress in Hollywood who read that script and turned it down
was foolish. It was an opportunity to really challenge
yourself and do a great story."
But many had turned down the offer from the
producer, The Rev. Ellwood "Bud" Kieser ("Romero"), to play
Day from ages 20 through 66, and headline the story that
includes the suffragette movement, relationship conflicts and,
ultimately, spirituality. Like "The Spitfire Grill,"
"Entertaining Angels" was financed by a religious group 0 in
this case, the Paulists - but Kelly was quick to point out
that it's not a religious movie.
"It's a human movie, a human story," said
Kelly, who'll next be seen opposite Gena Rowlands in "Unhook
the Stars."
"It's not telling you, 'Be Catholic.'
Dorothy is probably one of the greatest figures of the 20th
century, and we have to make ourselves aware of what she was
doing."
"We have a world that is searching for
answers, that is searching for a way back to spirituality. On
some level, though, we're not all asked to be Dorothy Day,
we're all asked to server. Dorothy could have done a lot of
things with her life. She chose not just to help the poor,
but live with them. How many of us can make that sacrifice?"
(Copyright 1996) |