Dottie_Rick_Egan_Tribune

Local radio personality Dottie Dixon is taking her message from the airwaves to the stage.

The 50-something Spanish Fork resident, a faithful member of The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is the proud mother of a
gay son and Relief Society member wants to share her testimony “by
bringing Mormons and gays back together through direct action and
creative casseroles.”

Sister Dottie is the creation of Charles Lynn Frost, who co-wrote
the one-character comedy, “The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon,”
which will be premiered May 1-May 17 by the Pygmalion Theatre Company.

“It’s a comedy. A parody. It focuses on a lot the topical issues
today that are facing the LGBT community and the Mormon church,” Frost
said. “She is working from the inside out trying to get change. “

Frost, who portrays Sister Dixon, developed the character for a
KRCL 90.9 F.M. weekly half hour show three years ago. The station asked
Frost to put together a comedic personality who would add commentary on
a variety of current events, from activism to politics.

The character was so successful with listeners that after that
radio spot ended, Sister Dixon was offered her own Friday show every
Friday, and her popularity continued to grow. Currently, Sister Dixon
has her own MySpace and Facebook pages, and some 2,000 friends.

Frost , and local activist Troy Williams, public affairs director of KRCL, wrote the character a play, in order to explore the struggles between Mormons and gays in a lighthearted way.

“Troy and I decided we needed to use comedy, humor and parody as a
way to tell this story, too,” Frost said. “Not everything that has to
do with GLBT life has to be so tragic and so dramatic. Not all has to
end up in sadness and death.”

Williams, who is gay, hopes the play will spark conversations. “The
Dottie character allows us, with humor and satire, to explore these
difficult issues,” Williams said. “I was ready for a new narrative.”

The authors describe Dixon as “the voice of courage” who realizes
she needs to stand up against authority to do what she feels is right.
Frost, who was raised in Spanish Fork, said the character was inspired
by his mother and her friends, and he’s planning to dedicate the first
performance to those women.

The play loosely follows the plotline of Joan of Arc’s life. The
audience watches as Sister Dottie grapples with her son, Donnie, as he
comes out of the proverbial closet.

When it came time to casting Dixon, there was never any question
that it would be played by Frost himself. Active in the arts most of
life, Frost belongs to the Actors Equity Association and the Screen
Actors Guild. One of his high-profile local roles was creating the
character of the father in Plan-B Production’s premiere of Carol Lynn
Pearson’s “Facing East.”

Playing Sister Dottie, however, in the premiere production directed
by Laurie Mecham, has been his most physically, emotional and mentally
demanding role. “I hope this show, as far as relevance, lets people
realize when it comes to making a person choose between their church
and child — there is no choice,” said Frost, who was a married Mormon
father when he came out as a gay man. “They have to pick their child.
They have to love their child and make sure that their child knows
that.”

Mecham hopes Mormons dealing with gay issues will find the play
healing. “When you laugh at the things that are painful, that is
healing and cathartic,” the director said.