The Guthrie Theater's new production of "Mrs. Warren's Profession" forces audiences to consider issues like women's rights, religion, and prostitution. These topics were considered so racy when George Bernard Shaw wrote the play in 1893 that censors in London wouldn't allow it to be staged. When "Mrs. Warren's Profession" opened in New York in 1905, it was viewed as scandalous. I spoke with Catlin O'Conner who plays the title role in the Guthrie production. She says when Shaw penned the play, he was forbidden from even using the word prostitution.