Showing posts with label Laramie Project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laramie Project. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

2013-2014 Theatre Season at Southwestern University

Southwestern University Sarofim Georgetown TX
(Southwestern University, 1001 E. University Blvd, Georgetown)


presents its 2013-2014 season:
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Packages Starting At $40!

   

The Laramie Project (tickets)

September 25-29, 2013

The chronicles of how the town of Laramie, Wyoming, comes to grips with the brutal murder of Matthew Shepard, a gay student at the University of Wyoming. (For mature audiences)

The film opened at the Sundance Film Festival in 2002 and was nominated for 4 Emmys.
   

Tartuffe (tickets)

November 15-17 & 21-24, 2013

Tartuffe is a self-righteous, mischievous, religious conman, who wins the confidence of wealthy but gullible Orgon. Tartuffe uses his influence over Orgon to infiltrate his household. Will Orgon realize the truth before it’s too late or will Tartuffe ruin them all?

A hilarious and delightful masterpiece by Moliere.

   

Gypsy (tickets)

March 26-30, 2014

The story of Rose, the original ruthless stage mother, who dreams of stardom for her youngest daughter June. When those dreams are dashed, Rose redirects her ambitions on her less talented daughter Louise, who becomes the famous 1930’s striptease artist, Gypsy Rose Lee!

Recognized as the greatest American musical of all time. The original production received 8 Tony Award nominations.

   

 

Bent (tickets)

April 10-13, 2014

Max and Rudy, two gay men in 1930's Berlin, are caught in a scandal that exposes their relationship.They desperately attempt to flee Berlin, but are caught and sent to a concentration camp. Max lies to the guards and tells them he is Jewish, believing he will receive better treatment. In a time of terror, love and hope are found. (For mature audiences)

Bent was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and a Tony Award in 1980.

“Powerful and Provocative” – New York Times

   

Dance Repertory Theatre (tickets)

April 24-25, 2014

Featuring the work of the Southwestern Dance program and its gifted choreographers. This production celebrates the enduring power of movement in visual and kinetic revelry. Experience a mosaic of vivid and imaginative dance works in varied styles.

Southwestern University, Sarofim School of Fine Arts

1001 E. University Avenue, Georgetown, TX 78626 | (512) 863-1504





(Click to go to the AustinLiveTheatre front page)

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Kirk R. Tuck on Capturing An Epic Moment in Zach's Laramie Project, Visual Science Lab blog, May 12


Jaston Williams in the Laramie Project, Zach Theatre, Austin Texas, 2012 (image: Kirk R. Tuck)


Austin-based photographer Kirk R. Tuck writes and illustrates an article at his blog The Visual Science Lab about capturing an epic moment in the Zach Theatre's March-May 2012 production of The Laramie Project by Moisés and the Tectonic Theatre Project:

An interesting job with mixed light sources. On the stage.

I had several assignments during the course of the day this past Friday but this set of images for Zachary Scott Theatre was the most interesting to photograph. There's a scene at the end of the play, The Laramie Project, where one of the actors (Jaston Williams, of Greater Tuna and Tuna Texas fame) stands on a square riser covered in grass and is pelted by rain as he stretches his hands out from his side.  In the context of the play it's a very powerful moment.

I saw the scene the first time ten years ago during a dress rehearsal shoot and we captured it on film.  The shot was okay but not quite what we wanted.  Then, ten years later, I shot the scene again, during a recent dress rehearsal.  Technical issues kept me from getting the shot the marketing director and I both wanted.  The spot light on the actor was too contrasty (for the camera...just right for the audience) and the letters across the back were not bright enough.  The slow shutter speed we needed in order to dig into the darkness meant that we didn't get any sort of frozen motion on the rain drops.  We knew we'd have to light the shot to get the image that we both could visualize in our heads.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Another Review: Thomas Jenkins on The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later, Zach Theatre, April 18 - May 13





Our colleague Thomas Jenkins at the San Antonio Current has written a powerful review of Zach's The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later, which AustinLiveTheatre.com is proud to republish here to complement the AustinLiveTheatre review of May 2:

San Antonio Current
San Antonio weekly





The Wicked Stage:
The Laramie Project Ten Years Later Zach Theatre
(image: www.zachtheatre.org)
The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later

by Thomas Jenkins, May 7, 2012

. . . last weekend, I headed up to Austin’s Zach Scott Theater to catch The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later, which also has yet to see a San Antonio production (although it would fit in nicely at, say, the Jump-Start).

I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect: reviews and previews sometimes described the play as a sequel or epilogue to the original Laramie Project, but neither moniker exactly inspired confidence in the evening’s artistic merits. (I mean, is there any term less exciting than “epilogue”? Appendix, maybe. Or Nachschrift.)  But it turns out that The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later is not only a fully-realized and intelligent work of theater, but that, in many ways, it’s a more substantial and rewarding piece than even the original play.

The first Laramie Project certainly had novelty going for it: most American audiences had never been exposed to the type of theater-as-sociology-experiment represented by Moisés Kaufman’s Tectonic Theater Company. (Happily, there’s now an off-shoot of that movement in SA, at the AtticRep’s Forum Theater Project.) Seeing a theater company descend on a town—microphones and videocams in tow—represented something new and exciting, as actors transformed the raw transcripts of their interviews into an affecting docudrama about the shocking murder of Matthew Shepherd: a young gay man brutally beaten and left for dead, shackled to a fence in Wyoming. The piece thus explored the intersection of homophobia, politics, and rural identity at the turn of the millennium.

At first, the sequel presents itself almost identically to the original play: troupe members return to Laramie, Wyoming—with the same sort of idiosyncratic self-narration that characterizes the first piece—and begin the long (and doubtless, tedious) process of field work. But then the piece takes a startling turn. In 1998, the Tectonic Theater Company was not only new to American audiences, but new to Laramie: the troupe’s other-ness helped to establish its credibility as a dispassionate recorder of human experience. By 2008, however, the observers had clearly affected the observed—and the observed are hopping mad. (“We’re a town, not a project,” the local paper objects.) And as the Tectonic Company discovers, there are darker undercurrents afoot: in the first play, it was obvious that Matthew Shepherd was the victim of anti-gay violence—indeed, the trial transcripts are conclusive on this point. By 2008, however, the town is well on its way towards re-inventing history: after an (odious) episode of TV’s “20/20,” much of Laramie is happy to think of the murder as merely a drug deal gone bad. (No homophobia here in Laramie, thank you much.) And that’s just the remembering; even worse is the forgetting, signified not only by literal excision of Shepherd’s fence, but by the clueless freshmen at the University of Wyoming who have only the vaguest idea of who Shepherd was, or why anybody should care.

The first Laramie Project was permeated by a sense of a single crime’s injustice: the second, by the inexorable and cruel suppression of the discourse of homosexuality within an entire system. The first looked at the plight of a solitary gay man at a single, terrible, instant in time; the second, at a pattern of injustice against gays that permeates all available media (newspapers, TV, theater) and that uses every postmodern trick in the book: re-writing, re-membering, re-presenting. Dave Steakley’s elegant and understated production employs the spare set design—a table and chairs—to good advantage; the ugliness of human nature plays out against the natural beauty of Wyoming, as illuminated in Colin Lowry’s subdued projections. The acting of the eight-person company is generally fine: it’s always a pleasure to see Jaston Williams (of “Greater Tuna” fame), though sweet-faced Frederic Winkler is somewhat miscast as neo-Nazi murderer Aaron McKinney. (That interview is still the most horrifying and gripping scene in the play, however.) The evening’s single intermission makes more dramatic sense than the original’s double intermission.  It’s a powerful evening of theater.

The Zach Scott is presenting both parts of The Laramie Project in repertory for another week, so if you haven’t seen the original, you can (and should, dammit) take in a twofer on Saturday. For unless one of the theaters in San Antonio programs it soon, Alamo City audiences will have to wait until The Laramie Project: Twenty Years Later.

-- Thomas “Bouquets” Jenkins, Current Theater Critic

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later, Zach Theatre, April 18 - May 13


Laramie Project Ten Years Later Zach Austin Texas


by Michael Meigs


You know these people; you're comfortable with them.  Most likely because you attended their portrayal in March and April of The Laramie Project, but possibly also because you recognize them as the Zach regulars who have appeared before you so many times.  The Laramie Project 10 Years Later has the reassuring buzz of a class reunion, which is something like the way it must have been for the Tectonic Theatre Project as they undertook the visits and research in 2008 that led to this text.

The Laramie Project featured the looming absence of gentle Matthew Shepard, the boy-man who was enticed by two men from a bar into a pickup and then driven out to be beaten almost to death, left tied to a fence in a remote and desolate location.  It was crafted to tell the horrific, inexorable story of that spectacular event, the investigation and the actions in response both of the justice system and the townspeople of Laramie, a town of fewer than 30,000 persons on I-80 just north of the Colorado border. The work had a necessary beginning in outrage, a middle of reflection and discussion and an end featuring retribution and mercy.

10 Years Later has Jaston Williams Laramie Project Zach Theatreno such clean plot line, although Moisés Kaufman and the credited collaborators of the Tectonic Theatre Project worked assiduously to give it one.  They discovered that the vivid accounts at the trial and in the newspapers were no longer a daily reality in Laramie but instead the story of Matthew Shepard had undergone transformation, partly due to the collective process of healing via forgetfulness and partly due to disinformation from a national investigative television program that claimed drug use and drug dealing lay behind the murder.  The theatre troupe's interviews and re-enactments battle those claims, trying to re-establish for their wider audience the picture of a despicable hate crime.  They also chart the successful emergence from the closet of a woman who won a seat in the legislature and the ideological combat there over a proposed amendment to the Wyoming constitution to define marriage as consisting solely of the union between a man and a woman.

[images by Kirk R. Tuck]

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Upcoming: The Laramie Project (March 22 - May 12) and The Laramie Project Ten Years Later (April 22 - May 13)


Zach Theatre Austin TX


Jaston Williams Laramie Project Zach Theatre


presents

THE LARAMIE PROJECT in two parts
Written by Moisés Kaufman, Leigh Fondakowski, Greg Pierotti, Andy Paris and Stephen Belber
Directed by Dave Steakley
Starring the original ZACH cast: Jaston Williams, Janelle Buchanan, Martin Burke, Meredith McCall, Robert Newell, Sarah Richardson and Jenny Larson, with Harvey Guion

A deeply moving story from the American heartland.


PART I: THE LARAMIE PROJECT
March 20 - May 12, 2012
An inspiring theatrical experience based on the events surrounding the Matthew Shepard story as seen through the eyes of the Wyoming townspeople who were both witnesses and participants.

PLUS A MAJOR NEW EVENT…

PART II: THE LARAMIE PROJECT 10 YEARS LATER
April 22 - May 13, 2012
A decade passed and we return to Laramie to see what has changed — and what hasn’t. The results are surprising, life-altering and unforgettable!

Click to view video of Meredith McCall and Martin Burke discussing The Laramie Project at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .


Monday, January 16, 2012

Upcoming: The Laramie Project 10 Years Later in repertory with Part 1, Zach Theatre, April 22 - May 13


Found on-line:


Zach logo

Laramie Project 10 Years Later Jaston Williams Zach Theatre





presents

April 22, 2012 - May 13, 2012

Written by MOISÉS KAUFMAN, LEIGH FONDAKOWSKI, GREG PIEROTTI, ANDY PARIS and STEPHEN BELBER

Directed by DAVE STEAKLEY | Starring the original ZACH cast: JASTON WILLIAMS,JANELLE BUCHANAN, MARTIN BURKE, MEREDITH MCCALL, ROBERT NEWELL, SARAH RICHARDSON and JENNY LARSON, with HARVEY GUION
Please arrive early for parking.

Student Tickets: $18 One Hour Before Showtime (with Valid ID)
Bar opens 1 hour before showtime. Drinks welcome inside the theatre.

Please note: THE LARAMIE PROJECT plays in repertory with THE LARAMIE PROJECT 10 YEARS LATER.
Part 1 will play in repertory with Part 2 on Saturdays April 18 – May 13. It will be possible to see both parts on the same day with a dinner break between. See our calendar for individual show times.

A decade passed and we return to Laramie to see what has changed — and what hasn’t. The results are surprising, life-altering and unforgettable!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Video: The Laramie Project, St Stephen's Episcopal School, November 4 - 6


Found on-line at the site of St. Stephen's Episcopal School:

St. Stephen's Episcopal School, Austin TX



presentsLaramie Project St. Stephen's School AUstin TX


originated by the Tectonic Theatre Project

directed by Heather Huggins

Fri, Nov 4th at 7:30 pm
Sat, Nov 5th at 7:30 pm
Sun, Nov 6th at 4:30 pm

Temple Family Theatre, Helm Fine Arts Center, St. Stephen's Episcopal School, 6500 St. Stephen's Drive (click for map)

Father Mike Wallens and Director Heather Huggins will moderate a talk-back between the audience, members of the cast, and the St. Stephen's GSA following each performance. A school counselor will also be in attendance at each production.

On October 6th of 1998, Matthew Shepard, a gay University of Wyoming student, was beaten and left to die tied to a fence in the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming. He died 6 days later. His torture and murder became a watershed historical moment in America that highlighted many of the fault lines in our culture.

[Apple users: can't see the video? Click to go to YouTube]

A month after the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, the members of Tectonic Theater Project traveled to Laramie and conducted interviews with the people of the town. From these interviews they wrote the play "The Laramie Project", which has become one of the most performed plays in America in the last decade. The company later made the play into a film for HBO. The play and the movie combined have been seen by more than 50 million people around the world.

Parent Advisory: As "The Laramie Project" deals with sensitive and mature issues, we want to caution parents to familarize themselves with the material prior to either sending or bringing younger, middle school aged children to the play. It is not actually recommended for a younger audience, and we want you to be aware of the content.


Click to go to AustinLiveTheatre.com to read more about the production at St. Stephen's Episcopal School, Austin . . . .