The Laramie Project and the Laramie Project: Ten Years Later
The Laramie Project and the Laramie Project: Ten Years Later
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Kaufman, Moises
Pierotti, Greg
Tectonic Theater Project (Corporate)
ISBN No.: 9780804170390
Pages: 224
Year: 201406
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.46
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Moment: A Definition narrator: On November fourteenth, nineteen ninety-eight, the members of Tectonic Theater Project traveled to Laramie, Wyoming, and conducted interviews with the ­people of the town. During the next year, we would return to Laramie several times and conduct over two hundred interviews. The play you are about to see is edited from those interviews, as well as from journal entries by members of the company and other found texts. Company member Greg Pierotti. greg pierotti: My first interview was with Detective Sergeant Hing of the Laramie Police Department. At the start of the interview he was sitting behind his desk, sitting something like this (he transforms into Sergeant Hing): I was born and raised here. My family is, uh, third generation. My grandparents moved here in the early nineteen hundreds.


We''ve had basically three, well, my daughter makes it fourth generation. Quite a while.It''s a good place to live. Good ­people-- lots of space. Now, all the towns in southern Wyoming are laid out and spaced because of the railroad came through. It was how far they ­could go before having to refuel and rewater. And, uh, Laramie was a major stopping point. That''s why the towns are spaced so far apart.


We''re one of the largest states in the country, and the least populated. rebecca hilliker: There''s so much space between ­people and towns here, so much time for reflection. narrator: Rebecca Hilliker, head of the theater department at the University of Wyoming. rebecca hilliker: You have an opportunity to be happy in your life here. I found that ­people here were nicer than in the Midwest, where I used to teach, because they were happy. They were glad the sun was shining. And it shines a lot here. sergeant hing: What you have is, you have your old-time ­traditional-type ranchers, ­they''ve been here forever--Laramie''s been the hub of where they come for their supplies and stuff like that.


eileen engen: Stewardship is one thing all our ancestors taught us. narrator: Eileen Engen, rancher. eileen engen: If you don''t take care of the land, then you ruin it and you lose your living. So you first of all have to take care of your land and do every­thing you can to improve it. doc o''connor: I love it here. narrator: Doc O''Connor, limousine driver. doc o''connor: You ­couldn''t put me back in that mess out there back east. Best thing about it is the climate.


The cold, the wind. They say the Wyoming wind''ll drive a man insane. But you know what? It don''t bother me. Well, some of the times it bothers me. But most of the time it don''t. sergeant hing: And then you got uh, the university population. philip dubois: I moved here after living in a couple of big cities. narrator: Philip Dubois, president of the University of Wyoming.


philip dubois: I loved it there. But you''d have to be out of your mind to let your kids out after dark. And here, in the summertime, my kids play out at night till eleven and I don''t think twice about it. sergeant hing: And then you have the ­people who live in Laramie, basically. zackie salmon: I moved here from rural Texas. narrator: Zackie Salmon, Laramie resident. zackie salmon: Now, in Laramie, if you don''t know a person, you will definitely know someone they know. So it can only be one degree removed at most.


And for me--I love it! I mean, I love to go to the grocery store ''cause I get to visit with four or five or six ­people ­every time I go. And I don''t ­really mind ­people knowing my business--''cause what''s my business? I mean, my business is basically good. doc o''connor: I like the trains, too. They don''t bother me. Well, some of the times they bother me, but most times they don''t. Even though one goes by ­every thirteen minutes out where I live. narrator: Doc actually lives up in Bossler. But ­everybody in Laramie knows him.


He''s also not ­really a doctor. doc o''connor: They used to carry cattle.them trains. Now all they carry is diapers and cars. april silva: I grew up in Cody, Wyoming. narrator: April Silva, university student. april silva: Laramie is better than where I grew up. I''ll give it that.


sergeant hing: It''s a good place to live. Good ­people, lots of space. Now, when the incident happened with that boy, a lot of press ­people came here. And one time some of them followed me out to the crime scene. And uh, well, it was a beautiful day, absolutely gorgeous day, real clear and crisp and the sky was that blue that, uh.you know, you''ll never be able to paint, it''s just sky blue--it''s just gorgeous. And the mountains in the background and a little snow on ''em, and this one reporter, uh, lady.person, that was out there, she said.


reporter: Well, who found the boy, who was out here anyway? sergeant hing: And I said, "Well, this is a ­really popular area for ­people to run, and mountain biking''s ­really big out here, horseback riding, it''s just, well, it''s close to town." And she looked at me and she said: reporter: Who in the hell would want to run out here? sergeant hing: And I''m thinking, "Lady, you''re just missing the point." You know, all you got to do is turn around, see the mountains, smell the air, just take in what''s around you. And they were just--nothing but the story. I ­didn''t feel judged, I felt that they were stupid. They''re, ­they''re missing the point--­they''re just missing the whole point. jedadiah schultz: It''s hard to talk about Laramie now, to tell you what Laramie is, for us. narrator: Jedadiah Schultz, university student.


jedadiah schultz: If you would have asked me before, I would have told you Laramie is a beautiful town, secluded enough that you can have your own identity.A town with a strong sense of community--­everyone knows ­everyone. A town with a personality that most larger cities are stripped of. Now, after Matthew, I would say that Laramie is a town defined by an accident, a crime. We''ve become Waco, we''ve become Jasper. We''re a noun, a definition, a sign! Moment: Journal Entries narrator: Journal entries--members of the company. Andy Paris. andy paris: Moisés called saying he had an idea for his next ­theater project.


But there was a somberness to his voice, so I asked what it was all about and he told me he wanted to do a piece about what''s happening in Wyoming. narrator: Stephen Belber. stephen belber: Leigh told me the company was thinking of going out to Laramie to conduct interviews and that they wanted me to come. But I''m hesitant. I have no real interest in prying into a town''s unraveling. narrator: Amanda Gronich. amanda gronich: I''ve never done anything remotely like this in my life. How do you get ­people to talk to you? What do you ask? narrator: Moisés Kaufman.


moisés kaufman: The company has agreed that we should go to Laramie for a week and interview ­people. Am a bit afraid about taking ten ­people in a trip of this nature. Must make some safety rules. No one works alone. Everyone must carry a cell phone. Have made some preliminary contacts with Rebecca Hilliker, head of the theater department at the University of Wyoming. She is hosting a party for us our first night in Laramie and has promised to introduce us to possible interviewees. Moment: Rebecca Hilliker rebecca hilliker: I must tell you that when I first heard that you were thinking of coming here, when you first called me, I wanted to say you''ve just kicked me in the stomach.


Why are you doing this to me? But then I thought, That''s stupid, you''re not doing this to me. And more importantly, I thought about it and decided that we''ve had so much negative closure on this whole thing. And the students ­really need to talk. When this happened they started talking about it, and then the media descended and all dialogue stopped. You know, I ­really love my students because they are free thinkers. And you may not like what they have to say, and you may not like their opinions, because they can be very redneck, but they are honest and ­they''re truthful--so there''s an excitement here that I never had when I was in the Midwest or in North Dakota, because there, there was so much Puritanism that dictated how ­people looked at the world that a lot of times they ­didn''t have an opinion, you ­couldn''t get them to express an opinion. And, quite honestly, I''d rather have opinions that I don''t like--and have that dynamic in education. There''s a student I think you should talk to.


His name is Jedadiah Schultz. Moment: Angels in America jedadiah schultz: I''ve lived in Wyoming my whole life. The family has been in Wyoming well.for generations. Now when it came time to go to college, my parents can''t--­couldn''t afford to send me to college. I wanted to study theater. And I knew that if I was going to go to college I was going to have to get on a scholarship--and so uh they have this competition each year, this Wyoming state high school competition. And I knew that if I ­didn''t take first place in uh duets that I ­wasn''t gonna.



To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...