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Greetings,
The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)
Department of Theatre will produce a staged reading of "The
Laramie Project: Ten Years Later, Epilogue" at 7 p.m. Monday,
Oct. 12 in the Alys Stephens Center Sirote Theatre, 1200 10th
Ave. South.
Tectonic Theater Project, the creators of the highly
acclaimed play "The Laramie Project," will premiere the
compelling, groundbreaking epilogue to the original piece in New
York at Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall. It will be performed
simultaneously in more than 100 theaters in all 50 states,
Canada, Great Britain, Spain, Hong Kong and Australia. The UAB
reading of the play will be its only performance in Alabama.
"The Laramie Project" examines the 1998 murder of University
of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wy., widely
considered to be a hate crime motivated by homophobia. The play
draws on hundreds of interviews with the town's citizens
conducted by Tectonic's members, the members' journal entries
and published news reports. Since 2000, it has been one of the
most performed plays in America.
The epilogue reveals the long-term effects of Shepard's
murder on Laramie. It explores ways in which the town has
changed and how the murder continues to reverberate in the
community. It also includes new interviews with Shepard's mother
and his murderer, who is serving two consecutive life sentences
in prison. Playwrights are Tectonic Theater Project members
Moisés Kaufman, Leigh Fondakowski, Greg Pierotti, Andy
Paris and Stephen Belber.
UAB Theatre is partnering with Tectonic Theatre Company to
present the event, and donations can be made at the door.
Associate Professor Dennis McLernon, M.F.A., will direct. UAB
Theatre performed "The Laramie Project" in 2008, directed by
student Luke Harlan. "Laramie" writer Moises Kaufman, a Tony-
and Emmy-nominated director, award-winning playwright and
Guggenheim Fellow, came to UAB to speak with students about the
play and hired Harlan to work for Tectonic.
The cast of the UAB reading features students Atom Bennett of
Decatur, Benoît Johnson of Huntsville, Hannah Hughes of
Birmingham, Brittney Williams of Birmingham, Jessica Walston of
Hoover, Stephen Webb of Madison/Huntsville and Sarah Hereford of
Huntsville, with UAB Theatre faculty Karla Koskinen, M.F.A.,
associate professor; Marlene Johnson, M.F.A., assistant
professor; and Jack Cannon, M.F.A., assistant professor.
After the reading, audience members will be able to tweet
questions to a panel of Tectonic members and the panel will
answer those questions. Their responses will be projected live
on a screen in the theater via the Internet. In tandem with the
premiere, an online interactive community will be launched at www.LaramieProject.org where play participants
can blog, upload video and photos and share their stories about
the play and their experiences in preparing and presenting the
epilogue in their communities. The members of Tectonic Theater
Project will be active participants in the online community,
offering participants feedback and encouragement.
About the UAB Department of Theatre
The UAB Department of Theatre has won the highest honors
awarded to university theaters, including best in region from
the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival (KCACTF).
In 2008, UAB's production of "In the Blood" was one of three
shows chosen by KCACTF from 300 in consideration nationwide.
Faculty members in the department continue to work
professionally in addition to teaching. UAB Theatre performances
are presented at the Alys Stephens Center, UAB's own world-class
performing arts center. Next year the department will celebrate
its 40th anniversary.
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