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Hope Theatre to Present "The Laramie Project"
Beginning Friday, Feb. 14
Posted February 5, 2003
HOLLAND -- Hope College Theatre will present "The
Laramie Project" on Friday-Saturday, Feb. 14-15, and
Wednesday-Saturday, Feb. 19-22, at 8 p.m. in the DeWitt
Center main theatre.
When 21-year-old openly gay college student
Matthew Shepard was brutally murdered on Oct. 7, 1998, the
nation refused to turn a blind eye. Within a matter of
days, the media descended upon Shepard's normally quiet
hometown of Laramie, Wyo., and changed it forever.
"The Laramie Project" is a pioneering play by the
Tectonic Theatre Project and its artistic director, Moises
Kaufman. After arriving in Laramie, they began what became
a year and a half's worth of work documenting, researching
and interviewing more than 200 people from the town. What
resulted was one of theatre's first docudramas. "The
Laramie Project" is a play that captures, through the
citizens' voices, the months following Shepard's premature
death.
Kaufman describes the play's origins following the
murder in his introduction to the published script.
"In its immediate aftermath, the nation launched
into a dialogue that brought to the surface how we think and
talk about homosexuality, sexual politics, education, class,
violence, privileges and rights, and the difference between
tolerance and acceptance," Kaufman wrote. "The idea for
'The Laramie Project' originated in my desire to learn more
about why Matthew Shepard was murdered; about what happened
that night; about the town of Laramie. The idea of
listening to the citizens talk really interested me. How is
Laramie different from the rest of the country and how is it
similar?"
The play was first performed at the Denver Center
Theater in February of 2000. It has gone on to hundreds of
productions--Off-Broadway, and at regional theatres,
colleges and high schools throughout the country.
The Hope production will feature eight actors, all
playing multiple roles. In melding the townspeople's
perspectives with the original observations of the
interviewing members of the Tectonic Theatre Project, they
present a window into a town that has had to come to terms
with itself as a community in the wake of a horrendous
tragedy.
Post-performance discussions with the audience
will be held after every performance. The discussions will
be led by a three- or four-person panel of faculty, staff
and students representing a broad spectrum of the Hope
community.
"The Task Force on Issues of Sexuality encouraged
our community to find educational and civil ways to discuss
sensitive topics of sexuality, tolerance and difference,"
said director Daina Robins, who is an associate professor of
theatre and chair of the department. "The theatre
department hopes to contribute to that conversation with
this production. The post-performance panel discussions
every evening of the play's run have been organized in
association with the Programming Committee on Issues of
Sexuality. I think they can play an important role in
fostering candid and respectful dialogue among differing
viewpoints."
The members of the acting ensemble, who will
portray both Laramie's townspeople and the outsiders
interviewing them, are: senior Peter Beck of Dolton, Ill.;
junior Michaun Burton of Columbus, Ohio; senior Rachel
Carrozziere of Rochester, N.Y.; freshman Emily Casey of
Wheaton, Ill.; junior Deanna DiFilippo of Flushing; junior
Tim Heck of Libertyville, Ill.; senior Patrick Kearney of
Clinton Township; and junior Erik Saxvik of Libertyville.
Other students involved in significant capacities
include: senior Kim Daelhousen of Sinking Spring, Pa.,
stage manager; sophomore Katie Seifert of Plymouth,
assistant stage manager; freshman Youngmee Sharon Kwon of
Ann Arbor, assistant stage manager; freshman Jessica Bodtke
of Grand Junction, assistant costume designer; and sophomore
Meaghan Elliott of Brighton, dramaturg.
In addition to Robins, members of the theatre
faculty involved include: Richard Smith, professor, scenic
and properties designer; Michelle Bombe, associate
professor, costume and make-up designer; and Perry Landes,
associate professor, lighting and sound designer.
Tickets are sale in the theatre lobby box office
in the DeWitt Center, and cost $7 for regular admission, and
$4 for senior citizens and students. The ticket office is
open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Saturday from noon to 5 p.m., and may be called at (616)
395-7890.
The DeWitt Center is located on Columbia Avenue at
12th Street.
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