|| Theater ||

POST COMMENT(0)   MORE Theater Bookmark and Share EMAIL  PRINT 

RECOMMEND 1 reader has recommended this story.

Page 1 of 1

Hollywood Does Laramie, 10 Years Later

Zachary Quinto — fresh from helping to honor Coco Peru at the L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center's annual gala — Jim Parsons, Johnny Galecki, and more gather for Hollywood's reading of The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later: An Epilogue.


ZACHARY QUINTO PINK BACKGROUND X390 (GETTY) | ADVOCATE.COM

On Sunday afternoon, just steps away from Kodak Theatre and the bustle of the Hollywood Walk of Fame, a star-studded cast culled from Hollywood’s current “It List” gathered for an emotional and moving event that had little to do with Tinseltown and everything to do with the small town in Wyoming that served as the location for what would become a turning point in the gay rights movement.
 
The event, held at the Hollywood United Methodist Church, was a special all-star reading of The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later: An Epilogue that featured the likes of Zachary Quinto (Heroes, Star Trek), fresh off his evening at Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center’s 38th Anniversary Gala honoring Wanda Sykes; James Cromwell (Surrogates, Babe); Jim Parsons (The Big Bang Theory); Johnny Galecki (The Big Bang Theory); Julie Benz (Dexter); and Lisa Edelstein (House), among others.
 
The play followed up on the award-winning production The Laramie Project, which documented the aftermath of the gruesome, hate-motivated murder of 21-year-old gay college student Matthew Shepard in 1998 and the impact the event had on the residents of Laramie, Wyo.
 
The epilogue to the original production, which was adapted for film by HBO in 2002, revisits many of the subjects of the first play, only to find out that the town and many of those who still call it home have changed very little in the last 10 years. What had changed in this new production, however, was the inclusion for the first time of interviews with Judy Shepard, Matthew’s mother, as well as with Matthew’s killers, Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson. As read by Johnny Galecki (McKinney} and Zachary Quinto (Henderson), transcripts of conversations with the murderers, while simultaneously evoking painful and haunting memories, offered riveting insights into the psyches of the men behind the crime that stepped up the push for hate-crimes legislation across America.
 
The moment that perhaps brought the symbolic importance of the event to the fore occurred toward the end of the production when actress Helen Shaver (The 4400, The L Word) read the following words from Judy Shepard: “Ten years of change, but no progress.” It was, like the event itself, a powerful reminder that in the 11 years since Matthew Shepard’s brutal murder, there is still, as Mrs. Shepard has reminded us time and again, no gay-inclusive federal hate-crimes law, no end in sight to the military’s discriminatory “don't ask, don't tell” policy, and no movement on reversing the Defense of Marriage Act.
 
This week, however, at least one aspect of that could change, as the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, recently passed by Congress, heads to President Barack Obama’s desk, where it is expected to be signed into law. Over a decade after Matthew Shepard’s murder sent shock waves throughout the LGBT population, the new federal hate-crimes legislation not only represents the progress that Judy Shepard and countless others have fought for, but a fitting memorial to Matthew Shepard, whose life and horrific death reignited a movement.

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Facebook. Page 1 of 1

POST COMMENT(0)   MORE Theater Bookmark and Share EMAIL  PRINT 

RECOMMEND 1 reader has recommended this story.

Reader Comments

Be the first to comment on this story.



More Online Only
  • News View From Washington: 2009 and Obama

    While the Obama administration has taken some steps forward on LGBT rights in 2009, it has consistently shied away from pushing the nation closer to equal treatment for same-sex couples.

  • News
    The Five Worst Antigay Rants of the Year

    As antigay statements from national religious and political leaders go, 2009 was especially rich. Here's a recap of the year's worst in hysterics, threats, and thinly-veiled homophobic sentiments.

  • News Top 5 Gay Sports Moments of the Year

    A lesbian taking over the Cubs? A star rugby player coming out? Advocate.com associate editor Michelle Garcia ranks the biggest gay moments in athleticism this year.


  • Film Ten Truly Gay Movies for the Holidays

    Vanessa Williams as a Scrooge-like diva. Scott Wolf and Jay Mohr as lovers making a drug bust on Xmas. Judy Garland and a big trolley ride. Gay Christmas movies aren't conventional, but they sure are fun.

  • Commentary Hug an Evangelical This Christmas

    Presbyterian minister Janet Edwards suggests the fast track to achieving gay rights may mean you have to courageously reach across the aisle to change hearts and minds.

  • Television The Best TV of 2009

    Whether it's Adam Lambert, Rachel Maddow or The Situation, Dave White -- a man with impeccable taste and seriously glazed-over eyeballs -- chooses 2009's best television moments.

  • News Features Family Expert Jeff Sharlet on Uganda

    The author of The Family talks about one evangelical group’s connections with the so-called "kill the gays" bill in Uganda — and why President Obama should bow out of the upcoming National Prayer Breakfast.

  • Film Sigourney Weaver, Back to Her Roots

    She may be the sci-fi/action queen, but in Avatar — which reteams her with Aliens director James Cameron — Sigourney Weaver swears it's all about the story.

  • Art Marriage Equality Gets Remixed

    FAIR has teamed with deviantART to sponsor an art contest based on graphic remixes of Shepard Fairey’s renowned marriage equality poster “Defend Equality Love Unites."

  • DVDs Hot Sheet: Sing-Along Edition

    This week you can stay home and attempt to sing along with the Glee kids or go out to the theater and try to keep up with Fergie in Nine.

  • Film Nine District

    The December 15 premiere of Nine at New York’s Ziegfeld Theatre brought out the star-studded cast and invited celebrity guests. The Rob Marshall-directed musical will open in Los Angeles and New York December 18 and expand wide Christmas Day.

Most Popular Stories

1033/34 COVER X135 | ADVOCATE.COM