The real Philomena Lee finds Hollywood ending to adoption story
Spoiler alert: Do not read if you are planning to see the Academy Award-nominated film Philomena, currently in theaters in the United States, and wish to avoid major plot elements.
From Anne Midgette of The Washington Post:
[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-real-philomena-lee-finds-hollywood-ending-to-adoption-story/2014/02/04/a907b510-8db7-11e3-95dd-36ff657a4dae_story.html[/url]
Even today, theres a lingering stigma about women who choose to place their children for adoption. Unnatural, people say, and jump to conclusions about the womans lifestyle, character and state of mind. If times have changed, its only in that the stigma used to attach unilaterally to unwed mothers. And that stigma was strong enough to keep Philomena Lee silent for 50 years. ¶ The world now knows about Philomena Lee. In 2009, journalist Martin Sixsmith published a book about her and the son whom she bore in an Irish convent, and whom the nuns tore from her when he was 3 years old and sent off to America with a new set of adoptive parents. In 2013, the book became the basis for a film starring Judi Dench, who has been nominated for a best-actress Oscar for playing the role of Philomena more or less.