 You need a financial advisor with the freedom to focus on your specific needs. Whatever your goals, Reeve Potter can create a game plan tailored to you. Call Reeve at 432-0777 at Pikeville, Kentucky to learn more. This month, the Appalachian Center for the Arts will premiere Driving Miss Daisy, a play adaptation of the 1989 classic film. Tuesday, Mountaintops spoke with executive director Robin Irwin about the show. Well, we're delighted. It's a play that won the Pulitzer in 1988. It was written by Alfred Urie, who is a prolific Southern playwright. And we're just delighted to be able to do theater again and bring it back for all the people to see. With performances by Robert King Jr. and Deborah Taylor, Driving Miss Daisy will tackle themes such as racism and prejudice. Irwin adds the play is also about friendship. Really, it's about friendship. It's really about their friendship evolving over 25 years. And that's what we say. It's like friendship happens in the most unexpected places. So it's really, it's lovely. It's darling. It's clean. It's a beautiful, tender play made incredibly famous by the movie with Morgan Freeman and Jessica Tandy live on stage. For tickets or for more information, you can visit theapparts.org. The play begins May 13th. For Mountaintop News, I'm Joel Chorjol.