Call Me By My Rightful Name is a 1961 American play by Michael Shurtleff which is based on the novel The Whipping Boy by S.F. Pfoutz.[1]
Synopsis
Set in the early 1960s, Call Me By My Rightful Name is a three-act play about two Columbia University roommates, one white and one black, caught in a love triangle over a white woman.
In July 1962, the Rockport, Massachusetts Board of Selectmen denied a production company, planning to stage Call Me By My Rightful Name and The Zoo Story, access to the city high school's auditorium. The plays were banned for being "quite sexy."[4]
Film
In 1972, Shurtleff wrote and directed a film version of the play. It starred Don Murray (who also worked on the screenplay with Shurtleff), Otis Young, Cathy Lee Crosby, Kent Smith, Edith Atwater, and Gary Clarke. Murray supposedly wanted Sidney Poitier to play opposite him in the film originally.[5][6] The film is extremely rare, but was shown at a few events in the 2010s by Murray himself.[5][7]
References
^Shurtleff, Michael (1961). Call me by my rightful name: a play. New York, N.Y.: Dramatists Play Service. p. 2. ISBN9780822201755. OCLC48367664.