Aglet Presents An Unsung Hero

Henrietta Leavitt worked at the Harvard Observatory from 1895 until her death in 1921. She created a standard for the photographic measurement of stars, and she discovered a fundamental relationship of properties in a certain type of star that enabled — for the first time — the accurate measurement of distances in the cosmos. 

Other astronomers — male astronomers — made those measurements, because she wasn’t allowed to do the follow-up work that sprang from her discovery.

Lauren Gunderson’s 2015 play about Leavitt, “Silent Sky,” got a one-night staged reading by the Aglet Theatre Company on Saturday, April 22, at Dewey Memorial Hall in Sheffield, Mass. According to director Macey Levin, “Elements of the play are fictional, but the basic storyline is true.”

It’s also fascinating, and the play — which follows Leavitt, two of her compatriots who were also underappreciated geniuses, her homebody sister and a wholly fictitious male colleague — is delightful. 

The magnetic Caitlin Teeley delivered a stirring, sympathetic portrayal of Leavitt. This is her first outing with Aglet; let’s hope we see more of her in the future.

 

For more information on the Aglet Theatre Company, go to www.aglettheatre.net.

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