Play examines Shepard's death The murder of 21-year-old Matthew Shepard in 1998 and its aftermath are topics of The Laramie Project’ By Natasha Chilingerian Pulse Reporter Actors Cabaret of Eugene will present "The Laramie Project," a play portray ing the aftermath of the murder of an openly gay man, Friday and Saturday at Lane Community College Theater. The cast of 50 will represent the town of Laramie, Wyo., and depict in mono logue its reaction to the 1998 murder of 21 -year-old Matthew Shepard. Shep ard was violently beaten, tied to a fence and left to die because he was gay. Moises Kaufman and members of the TeTectonic Theater Project origi nally wrote the script for eight actors who take on several different per sonas, but director Joe Zingo said an unusually large cast gave more Eugene thespians a chance to perform. Cast member Carol Home said that be cause each actor focuses on one part, they can build stronger characters. "Everyone sinks their teeth into one color of the tapestry," Home said. “The Laramie Project" resulted from more than 200 interviews that Kauf man and TeTectonic Theater members conducted with the town of Laramie after Shepard, as Zingo puts it, was "crucified on a fence." The play begins with solo monologues and gradually adds more group scenes, but actors never interact with each other. Performers will give different per spectives of those who were involved with or affected by the crime. This in cludes the investigators, townspeople, die two young men accused of the murder and their girlfriends, and Shepard's teachers and parents. Home portrays lesbian University of Wyoming Professor Catherine Con nelly, who shares her feelings about the "homophobic" town of Laramie, her isolation as the only "out" homo sexual on the university staff, and her fears following the crime. Home said Shepard's murder gave Connelly a frightening reality check. "She realizes that she's living in the world,* Home said. Powerful scenes include mono logues from the man who found Shepard's body and an uninvited priest at Shepard's funeral who claims that the victim has gone to hell, Home said, adding the show cleverly stages scenes without actor-to-actor interac tion. For example, during a scene de picting the trial, a pool of light shines on Home, who introduces the judge's statements. The light illuminates the judge as he reads and returns to Home for her reaction. She never makes eye contact with the judge. Cast member Mark VanBeever, who introduces and ties together scenes as the narrator, said "The Laramie Pro ject" will be performed without a set in order to direct focus toward the sto ry. Actors provide their own costumes to add a personal touch. VanBeever said he felt the show sends a positive, hopeful message. "It shows that so much good can come out of so much evil," he said. "There is so much wonderful healing that came out of what happened. Right now, we can respect and tolerate Courtesy Director Joe Zingo (left foreground) talks to cast members of “The Laramie Project.” homosexuals, but acceptance is the next step. Hopefully, people can begin to accept them after seeing the show." Lane Community College Theater is located at 4000 E. 30th Ave. Tickets are available at the theater's box of fice, located at 996 Willamette St„ on line at http://www.aaorscabaret.org, or by calling 683-4368. Ticket prices are $12 for general admission and $10 for students and seniors. The show starts at 8 p.m. and runs two nights. Contact the Pulse reporter at natashachilingerian@dailyemerald.com. Duo continues family tradition of South Indian music A mother-daughter duo will play South Indian tunes for the second chapter of the World Music Series By Natasha Chilingerian Pulse Reporter An internationally acclaimed moth er-daughter duo will present an evening of South Indian music Friday at Beall Hall as the second installment of the School of Music's World Music Series. Rajeswari Padmanabhan and her daughter Sreevidhya Chandramouli represent the ninth and tenth genera tions of professional vina (a large, plucked string instrument) players in their family. They will perform with mridangam (a double-sided drum) player Karthik Gopalaratnam. Assistant music Professor Mark Levy said a show featuring two female Indian musicians is unusual. "It is interesting that they are women," he said. "They are two prominent musicians in a very male dominated music scene." Levy said he chose to spotlight India for the second time this year because he is currently teaching an Indian music course, and Padmanabhan and Chandramouli both happened to be in town. This fall's World Music Series event featured North Indian music. Ihe performers' family tradition be gan in the 1700s in Southern India with the first seven generations of players be ing male, and the remaining generations following a female lineage. The family's personal vina style is called the Karaikudi Vina Tradition, which falls into the cate gory Tanjore, one of the four distinct styles of vina practice. Padmanabhan provided most of her daughter's instruc tion, which was based mostly on oral and aural learning techniques instead of musical composition on paper. Chan dramouli said South Indian music inte grates several aspects of Indian culture that steps outside of entertainment. "The languages, philosophy, mythology, religious and secular ideas of South India are woven into the mu sic," she said. "With this kind of arrangement, there is always room to grow and learn the culture in depth." Both North and South Indian mu sic employs the same "raga" (melody) and "tala" (rhythm) structures. Levy said North Indian music developed under Persian influences and therefore sounds more folksy and is ornamented with small, grace notes. University folklore graduate David Kosmatka, who wrote his master's the sis about the mother-daughter team, Turn to DUO, page 10 SUNDBERG continued from page 8 Y dwarfs the country, making up 72 million people born between 1977 and 1994. OK. I will continue. In a group or a party, I have never heard anyone who belongs to these cat egorized lives ever mention Generation X or Y as a description. We are not sub scribers. It is the entities, businesses, cor porations and media that use these ti tles. They sit at tables, passing our "name" around, sniffing it, tugging at it looking for clues. Wondering how they can put it to use. This empty phrase All the while we shrink back, deep er into ourselves, so that they cannot reach us. Growing more complex through resistance to the pesticide like mannerisms of their attack. We are immune. We are ironic. We are lazy. We are genius. We are a sleeping dragon and we are next in line. We are not a brand extension. We live between the borders, in cracks — shadows perhaps — clinging to both sides of how we've been defined. Mov ing in any direction poses a threat set ting off an alarm that announces our presence to the marketers, to the politi cians, to the media. We are now a target. A board for darts. Definition darts. For people with beady eyes and weak hearts to take their turn at the board: "Got the bull's-eye! I'm gonna call 'em Weekend Warriors! Sell 'em some hiking boots, catered to their sense of style!" So we remain in between things, away from the flying darts of definition, dinging to nothing rather than some thing. Because it seems by making any decision we are almost immediately marginalized by that dedsion, then de fined and sold to the highest bidder. Our favorite pastime turned into a perfume. Our favorite song is blaring from a car ad. Our slang is selling beer. Our poetry was mutated into a slogan. Our dreams became a Web site. Our friends, they're statues look ing into the distance with neat pants on. Our jokes turned into a sitcom. Our passion dammed into a pool. Now we remain silent, slowly wait ing for the opportunity to do some thing worthwhile. Something that won't be taken and sold to the mass es. Turned into another diche like the rest of everything that meant anything to us at some point. And all the while those in charge are demanding our support, our con stant approval of what they have told us, sold us, passed off as necessity and treating the sacred as a pie chart to be divided amongst the shareholders. We don't protest, we don't riot, we don't make a fuss. We calmly accept this temporary mold and wait for the right time to stretch out and soar, without the fear of marginalization, stereotyping or being capitalized on. It's not that we don't care what is go ing on. It's that there's not much any of us can really do about it anyway. The strongest thing we can say is noth ing. Our power lies in our secrets. In the meantime, we play games, disobey and frolic in what we know is worn out and tired because soon enough we will have our say. We will speak in volumes, in poetry, in code, in tongues, separate from those that turned us cold and rigid. There's hope but no desire to act just yet, as we edge our way into the future, complete with the debts, mis takes and missed attempts of the gen eration that made us this way. We inherit the broom of some bril liant party that just missed us, and we're standing around waiting to clean up the mess. Suhweet. Maybe by the time Generation Z comes around, things will be differ ent, maybe better for them. If nothing else, maybe they could at least pick their own names. Contact the Pulse columnist at carisundberg@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. ) EUGENE BATTLE OF THE BANDS ALL STYLES. ALL AGES. THE BEST LOCAL BANOS. YOUR VOTE COUNTS - SUPPORT YOUR FAVORltE. FRI 3.5.04 / 7:30PM / $5 / EUGENE VET'S CLUB. OETAILS & ENTRY INFO: WWW.EUGENEBATTLE.COM presented by the UOregon Cultural Forum / 346.4376 1 UO School of Music World Music Series presents South India Rajeswari Padmanabhan & Sreevidhya Chandramouli, vina Karthik Gopalaratnam, mridangam Friday, Feb. 27 8 p.m., BEALL HALL UO School of Music $10 General Admission, $8 students & seniors, available only at the door. Free lecture-demo o at 2:00 p.m., EMU International Lounge UNIVERSITY OF OREGON