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`The Laramie Project' stages a special reading in Wyoming on the 25th anniversary of Shepard murder

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 It has been 25 years since the body of Matthew Shepard was discovered in Laramie, Wyoming. The gay college student had been tied to a fence post, tortured and left to die.
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FILE - A cross constructed of rocks marks the spot along a buck fence east of Laramie, Wyo., on March 24, 1999, where, on Oct. 7, 1998, openly gay University of Wyoming college student Matthew Shepard was beaten and left for dead. The Tectonic Theater Project is marking the anniversary by gathering the original cast and creators of "The Laramie Project," and some of the people represented in the piece for a staged reading and conversation as part of the 2023 Shepard Symposium at the University of Wyoming. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 It has been 25 years since the body of was discovered in Laramie, Wyoming. The gay college student had been tied to a fence post, tortured and left to die.

The murder drew national attention to violence against gay people, and attracted the interest of theater director who turned the horror into art with 鈥淭he Laramie Project.鈥

This 25th anniversary has triggered deep sadness for Kaufman, founder and artistic director of the New York-based . He wonders about all the things Shepard could have become.

鈥淓very year around this time, it鈥檚 painful to remember, but this one has hit particularly hard,鈥 Kaufman tells the AP.

After Shepard's 1998 killing, Kaufman and members of Tectonic and wrote the play based on more than 200 interviews. 鈥淭he Laramie Project鈥 is a poignant mix of real news reports, and actors portraying friends, family, police officers, killers and other Laramie residents.

This week, Tectonic is marking the anniversary by gathering the original cast and creators, and some of the people represented in the piece as part of the 2023 Shepard Symposium at the University of Wyoming.

鈥淭he Laramie Project,鈥 one of the most frequently performed plays in the U.S., has been performed in more than 20 countries and translated into more than 13 languages. It is among the top 10 most licensed plays in America.

鈥淧recisely because it wasn鈥檛 about Matthew Shepard, precisely because it was about the town of Laramie is why it continues to resonate,鈥 says Kaufman.

"We were hoping that it wouldn鈥檛 be relevant anymore. But it is every day more relevant. Hate crimes all over our nation are at much higher rates than they were when Matthew Shepard was killed."

He points to an increase in since the pandemic began, and assaults on

In 2009, Kaufman was on hand as the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act was signed by then-President Barack Obama. The act expanded the 1969 federal hate-crime law to include crimes based on a victim鈥檚 sexual orientation, gender identity or disability.

鈥淭he Laramie Project鈥 has consistently been the subject of pushback by some conservative school districts, and this year faces banishment from

Elsewhere, theater creators across the nation say school censorship is getting worse, particularly around material with LGBTQ+ themes. Cardinal High School in Middlefield, Ohio, canceled a production of 鈥淭he 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee鈥 due to content issues.

Kaufman is also alarmed that the of 鈥淭he Laramie Project鈥 from the school curriculum.

鈥淭here has always been 鈥 since the inception 鈥 a couple of theaters every year where the board of the school says no. All right. But this last year was the first time that the book itself was banned from a classroom.鈥

Kaufman has always been cheered by the students who find a way to perform the play despite barriers, becoming what he calls artist-activists. 鈥淢y belief is that the best art occurs at the intersection of the personal and the political,鈥 he says.

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Mark Kennedy is at

Mark Kennedy, The Associated Press