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Jedediah schultz actor dies

          The remarkable theatrical record of the murder of gay college student Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming, on October 12,

        1. The remarkable theatrical record of the murder of gay college student Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyoming, on October 12,
        2. 'Laramie Project' digs beneath surface of town scarred by hate crime Bradley Davis plays Jedadiah Schultz as actors portraying townspeople from Laramie, Wyo.
        3. He died peacefully at his home on Sunday, December 13, Jedidiah loved animals, nature, and the outdoors from an early age.
        4. Michael John Elphick (19 September – 7 September ) was an English film and television actor.
        5. This gay college student had lain tied to a wooden fence for 18 hours.
        6. He died peacefully at his home on Sunday, December 13, Jedidiah loved animals, nature, and the outdoors from an early age.!

          The Laramie Project

          Theater Reviews

          The Laramie Project

          July 27, 2001

          The Events of Oct.

          6, 1998 — when gay University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard was beaten and left tied to a fence to die — are powerfully examined in “The Laramie Project,” an extraordinary work of theatrical journalism now being produced by Salt Lake City’s Plan-B Theatre Company.

          Written by Moises Kaufman and his Tectonic Theatre Project participants, the stories told in the play by several dozen Laramie residents are the people’s own words. Kaufman and company conducted more than 200 interviews in the months following the murder, and those people are brought vividly to life by a company of eight actors.

          Jedediah Schultz, a young acting student from Laramie, portrays not only himself but also delivers a chilling portrayal of cold-blooded.

          Initially, the style is jarring. There is very little dialogue among the townspeople; mostly they speak directly to the audience, saying what they said to the interviewers. Many of these speeches, despite consisting of real words actually spoken at one point by