If it hadn't been for the issue of failing to obtain a work visa, Kate McGill might well be in the United States right now working with the Tectonic Theater Project on another of its verbatim theatre pieces.
However, chances are McGill, who worked with Tectonic in 2009, would have returned home to New Zealand at some point to stage the play she is now co-directing (with Daniel Williams), given how strongly she feels about the production.
Created by Tectonic, The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later (TPL:10) is an epilogue to its 2000 production The Laramie Project which involved interviewing more than 200 people in the Wyoming town of Laramie. It made headlines in 1998 as the place where gay student Matthew Shepard was kidnapped by Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson, severely beaten and left to die, tied to a fence on the dusty outskirts of the town. Shepard was just 21 and his death provoked an outcry about the lack of laws against hate crimes in the United States.
Tectonic started work on The Laramie Project just five weeks after Shepard's murder. Using words spoken by those who lived there, the aim was to chronicle what life in the town was like and how such a crime may have taken place there.
The play is now one of the most performed in America and, in 2002, was made into a film which opened that year's Sundance Film Festival and received four Emmy award nominations.