‘Laramie Project’ focuses on tragedy
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Tom Titus
In 1998, a gay University of Wyoming student, Matthew Shepard, was
kidnapped, tortured and murdered in one of America’s most bizarre --
and most publicized -- hate crimes.
The aftermath of this tragedy’s effect on the college town of
Laramie, Wyo., is chronicled in Moises Kaufman’s “The Laramie
Project,” which Orange Coast College will produce March 19-23.
In November 1998, four weeks after the murder, Kaufman and nine
members of the Tectonic Theater Project traveled to Laramie to
collect interviews that might become material for a play. The
resulting production opened in February 2000, at the Denver Center
Theater, then moved to the Union Square Theater in New York three
months later. In November 2000, it was staged in Laramie.
“This is currently the most widely produced play on college
campuses throughout the state of California,” said the play’s
director, John Ferzacca. “It is important and rich, and isn’t quickly
forgotten by people who see it.”
“The Laramie Project,” named by Time magazine as one of the 10
best plays of 2000, is an ensemble piece about the town of Laramie
during the year after the murder. More than 60 characters are
depicted, representing Laramie’s citizenry. The play offers little
reproach or condemnation, but depicts a town struggling to come to
grips with a horrifying incident.
Ferzacca labels it a “dramatic docu-drama.” OCC’s cast of 20 is
double and triple-teamed, representing these 60 people whose lives
were touched by the event.
“We’re enjoying a large influx of new talent in OCC’s Theater
Department, and that’s very exciting,” Ferzacca declares. “Thirteen
of the 20 cast members in this show are appearing on our stage for
the first time.
Major roles in the drama are taken by Jennifer Drake, Angel
Correa, Travis Woods and Vanessa Long. Drake, a graduate of UC Santa
Barbara, is appearing in her first OCC production, while Correa
headed the cast of the college’s “Side Man” and “Jack and Jill,”
among others. Woods starred in “Side Man” and “Epic Proportions” at
OCC. Long, a professional model and musician, is taking her first
acting turn at the college.
Other cast members include Julio Almanza, Sandra Barber, Drew
Budreau, Caroline Buss, Ralph Cardin, Olivia Catron, Ben Draper,
Jennifer Gelbert, Amanda Kukuk, Jessica Love, Isabella Melo, Adam
Navarro, David Reider, Shelly Schulz, Richard Thomas and Vincent
Torres.
“The Laramie Project” is ticketed for one week only at OCC’s Drama
Lab Theater. Curtain times are Wednesday through Friday at 8 p.m.,
Saturday at 2 and 8, and Sunday at 2 and 7 p.m.
Advance tickets are priced at $10 for adults and $7 for senior
citizens, students and children, while at-the-door prices are $12 and
$8. Reservations may be obtained by calling OCC at (714) 432-5880.
*
South Coast Repertory is feeling like a million these days. $1.05
million, to be exact.
SCR and six other nonprofit American theaters will receive a total
of $6.3 million in support through the Leading National Theaters
Program, funded by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
The Costa Mesa company will receive a $750,000 challenge grant
from Duke and $300,000 in program funds from Mellon. The LNTP funds
will establish an Emerging Artists Endowment to generate funding to
support new creative and diverse voices in the American theater
through artist residencies, readings, workshops and studio
productions.
“Participation in the LNTP comes at an opportune moment for SCR,”
said David Emmes, the company’s producing artistic director. “Once
the $750,000 matching grant is met, SCR will have a $1.5 million
restricted endowment to support grants to new artists and artists
from diverse cultural backgrounds.”
Over the past two years, SCR has doubled the number of commissions
given to emerging writers. The company now expects to expand its
support of new works by two or three additional annual commissions, a
two-week staged workshop, three one-week developmental workshops and
one studio production.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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