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  • Contact us
  • Who We Are
    • Our People >
      • Meet The Founder
      • Actors
      • Associate Directors
      • Production Crew
  • Support The Gate
    • Become A Member
    • Our Silver and Gold Members and Supporters
    • Become A Sponsor >
      • Our 2018-19 Season Sponsors
    • Advertise In Our Programs
    • Donate
    • Buy Tickets
  • Workshops
  • Subscribe
  • Past Shows
    • Harvey
    • An Inspector Calls
    • Fringe Festival 2019
    • Pirates of Chemotherapy
    • The Amen Corner
    • Almost Maine
    • Starry Messenger
    • Big Hunk O' Burning Love
    • Into the Light
    • The Exonerated
    • Land of Smiles
    • Christmas Choir
    • The Laramie Project
    • Steel Magnolias
    • A Comedy Showcase
    • Space
    • Blithe Spirit
    • Driving Miss Daisy
    • The Eight Reindeer Monologues
    • The Odd Couple
    • Three Takes
    • Strange Snow
    • The Gin Game
    • The Dodo Bird
  • Contact us

Driving Miss Daisy by Alfred Uhry

Picture

Driving Miss Daisy, Featuring Joyce Matchett and Stephan B. Turner
2012, 2014, 2015

The time: 1948, the place: Atlanta, Georgia. A crash is heard, and Daisy Werthan, age 72, is in her living room, with her son Boolie, age 40. They are Jewish, with Atlanta accents. She has crashed her car, and Boolie insists that she have a driver. Boolie is in his office and interviews Hoke Colburn who is a black man of around 60. He is unemployed. Over the next 25 years Hoke drives "Miss Daisy". They are initially wary of each other, and Hoke puts up with the somewhat crotchety Miss Daisy with dignity. She teaches Hoke to read when she learns that he cannot, which comes naturally to her, having been a teacher. Ultimately, over the years, they form a bond. In the final scene, Miss Daisy is in a nursing home for increasing memory loss; but is lucid enough to tell Hoke, who has come to visit her, that he is her best friend.

The play was inspired by Alfred Uhry's grandmother, Lena Fox, her chauffeur, Will Coleman, and his father. His grandmother, a Jewish woman who lived in Atlanta during the 1960s, had to give up driving after a car accident, and hired Coleman, who drove her for 25 years.[2]
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