CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Supporters defend Laramie Project playing at Vancouver café

Last Updated: Saturday, November 29, 2008 | 12:50 AM ET

Supporters gather outside a Vancouver café to back the staging of a play that tells the story of an American gay student murdered 10 years ago.Supporters gather outside a Vancouver café to back the staging of a play that tells the story of an American gay student murdered 10 years ago. (CBC)

Amid threats from a U.S. anti-gay group, dozens of people gathered outside a Vancouver café Friday night to support the staging of a play that tells the story of a murdered gay American student.

The Laramie Project was playing at the Havana Café on Commercial Drive in the city's east side. The Westboro Baptist Church had vowed to disrupt the play when it was being staged Friday night.

Café spokesman Peter Luke said the church, headed by Fred Phelps and based in Kansas, had notified the café that church members would be in Vancouver to protest the show.

Several officers from the Vancouver Police Department were on the scene to guard against any potential violence.

Havana Café spokesman Peter Luke says he thinks it is 'quite ridiculous' that people from the Kansas-based church would 'come all the way here to really protest against something that is a creative endeavour.'Havana Café spokesman Peter Luke says he thinks it is 'quite ridiculous' that people from the Kansas-based church would 'come all the way here to really protest against something that is a creative endeavour.' (CBC)

"I feel it's quite ridiculous that people in this day and age will still kind of hold that mindset, you know, and actively travel a good chunk of distance to come all the way here to really protest against something that is a creative endeavour," Luke said.

The Westboro Baptist Church, which openly spreads anti-gay messages, had vowed to disrupt the play when it was staged at various U.S. locations, but church members never followed through on their threats.

The Laramie Project is based on the death of 21-year-old Matthew Sheppard, a gay college student at the University of Wyoming, who was tied to a fence and left to die near Laramie in October 1998.

The church's threat to interfere with the play triggered a huge response from Vancouver's gay community, whose members showed up at the café Friday night to counter any protest by the church.

"It's really important that we take a stand but not a stand out of anger, a stand out of caring and kindness," said Jim Deva of Little Sister's bookstore, which sells gay and lesbian-related literature.

"I think you defy hatred by love. That's how you deal with hatred, and you open up the dialogue and you begin conversing and talking," Deva said.

The play at Havana Café began at 8 p.m. PT, but there was no sign of members of the Westboro church by 10 p.m.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Arts Headlines

Thai film tops TIFF list of decade's best
A Thai arthouse film is the most respected movie of the decade, according to a poll of film curators, historians and festival programmers.
Charlie Chaplin's Swiss home to become museum
A museum dedicated to screen legend Charlie Chaplin will open in 2011 in his former home on the shores of Lake Geneva in Switzerland.
Halifax filmmaker turns lens on child poverty
Halifax filmmaker Nance Ackerman is screening her most recent documentary, Four Feet Up, across Canada on Tuesday to mark the 20th anniversary of Canada's promise to end child poverty.
MSNBC to take over breaking news Twitter account
U.S. cable news station MSNBC will take over @BreakingNews, a news service based in the microblogging service Twitter, BNO News said Monday.
High School Musical going to China
Disney is adapting its High School Musical movie for the Chinese market.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Charges dropped against 4 in Creba killing Video
Manslaughter charges have been dismissed against four of those accused in the Boxing Day 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto.
Mother lost control in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
Accused WCB gunman gets psychiatric assessment
The man accused of taking nine people hostage at the Workers' Compensation Board building in Edmonton last month has been sent to Alberta Hospital for a psychiatric assessment.
Attacks on Afghan schools, students rise: report
Afghanistan teachers, students, educational personnel and schools were the targets of more than 1,100 violent attacks over a 2½ year period, forcing the closure of hundreds of schools across the country, a new report has found.
Sliding U.S. dollar pushes TSX higher
The U.S. dollar continued its slide Monday and gold touched another record high.