Rocky Mountain Why?

Teen actors re-enact a senseless killing in Wyoming.

Family Guy Presents: Blue Harvest Star Wars An Affair to Remember Cary Grant When Harry Met Sally . . . Meg Ryan Oswald's Ghost Kennedy assassination He Was a Quiet Man Christian Slater
The 14 teen actors in the Beck Center's youth-theater program get a taste of grown-up horror as they portray more than 70 roles in tonight's opening of The Laramie Project. While the Moisés Kaufman play underscores crimes against gays, it also makes the cast of kids dissect the 1998 murder of gay University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard. "With this age group, I'm trying to find something gravely challenging for them to do," says Dawn Youngs, the Beck Center's associate director of theater education. "We are trying to push the envelope for the kids."Culled from more than 400 police and witness interviews, the show graphically tells the story of how a couple of rednecks posed as gay men in a Laramie bar and lured Shepard to a field off campus. After they robbed and pistol-whipped the young man, they tied him to a fence post and left him to die. Shepard was found the next day by a bicyclist. He died five days later in the hospital.Since its New York premiere in 2002, the play has been performed in Canada, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and England. Its script exposes a college town's fear of all things gay and its hatred for the media circus in the days after Shepard's murder. The storyline, says Youngs, gives actors a well-balanced look at the hate-crimes debate. "I think we're a little too careful with our youth. We don't give them the tools to understand and change what is happening," says Youngs. "Theater is there to ask these questions of our society." The curtain rises at 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays, through Sunday, January 27, at the Beck Center, 17801 Detroit Avenue in Lakewood. Tickets are $10 to $12. Call 216-521-2540 or visit www.beckcenter.org.
Fridays, Saturdays, 7:30 p.m.; Sundays, 3 p.m. Starts: Jan. 18. Continues through Jan. 27, 2008
Like this story?
SCENE Supporters make it possible to tell the Cleveland stories you won’t find elsewhere.
Become a supporter today.

About The Author

Vince Grzegorek

Vince Grzegorek has been with Scene since 2007 and editor-in-chief since 2012. He previously worked at Discount Drug Mart and Texas Roadhouse.
Scroll to read more Things to Do articles

Newsletters

Join Cleveland Scene Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.