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Alley’s return to the profound

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Times Staff Writer

Kirstie Alley’s recent efforts -- think “Veronica’s Closet” and those wince-making Pier 1 commercials -- tend to obscure the fact that she once earned critical acclaim for her acting chops in a finely tuned portrayal of Maggie the Cat in director Jose Quintero’s 1983 production of Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” at the Mark Taper Forum.

It’s that Kirstie Alley whose honest portrayal of a mentally disabled woman brings moving resonance to CBS’ sentiment-glazed, fact-based movie, “Profoundly Normal” (9 p.m. Sunday).

Alley, who is also one of the film’s executive producers, plays Donna Shelby, whose low-60s IQ led her to be institutionalized from childhood through her 20s, until the substandard home was closed by court order. While there, Shelby fell in love with another long-term patient, future Special Olympics athlete Ricardo Thornton. He is played by Delroy Lindo, in a sympathetic performance that is a far cry from his powerful, angry roles in “Cider House Rules” and “Romeo Must Die.”

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Defying the “normal” world’s expectations and authorities’ disapproval, the couple not only learned to live independently but also married, had a healthy child and became international advocates for people with mental disabilities. “60 Minutes” profiles in 1986 and 1990 gave the Thorntons a certain celebrity status; the reports also brought an outpouring of public response, some of it negative, sparked by the couple’s interracial marriage.

The narrow-focused pseudo-documentary, written by Paris Qualles and directed with restraint by Graeme Clifford, dramatizes on-camera interviews and flashbacks of the Thorntons’ lives. Secondary characters -- fellow patients, doctors, social workers -- have little dimension, although Rosemary Dunsmore’s supportive social worker, Catherine Fitch as Donna’s troubled roommate and Danielle Bouffard as a young Donna are effective.

Despite its limited dramatic layers, the film is warmed by what is revealed of the Thorntons as individuals, not cookie-cutter, inspirational icons, thanks to the appealing chemistry between Lindo and Alley, and by Alley’s flawless performance as the indomitable, feisty, big-hearted Donna.

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