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May 7, 2015

It’s not every man who can flee a chain gang while shackled in two sets of leg irons, but Luke Jackson isn’t just anyone. A hero, an outlaw and an iconoclast, immortalized by Paul Newman in the 1967 film based on the Donn Pearce novel, Luke has returned to us courtesy of Godlight Theater Company at 59E59 Theaters. A former war hero played by Lawrence Jansen, Luke spends a night sawing the heads off parking meters and gets slapped with a two-year stint on a Florida chain gang, presided over by a sadistic guard, Boss Godfrey (Nick Paglino). Troubled by his past but undaunted by the cruelty of his captors, Luke makes several breakout attempts until he finds the ultimate escape in death. You could see “Cool Hand Luke” as a companion piece to Godlight’s last show, “Deliverance,” another, somewhat sillier tale of men trying to evade senseless brutality. Stories of guys imperiled and sometimes emasculated seem to fascinate this company, which has also staged adaptations of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” “1984,” “Fahrenheit 451,” “In the Heat of the Night,” “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “A Clockwork Orange” — the syllabus for a course on midcentury masculinity and its discontents.

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