Zebra
was Best Boys' first full-length production and was staged at The Poor
Alex Theatre. After an initial staged reading, we were awarded the largest
Research and Development Grant ever given by The Theatre Centre.
The script
went on to win the 1992 Right to Privacy Award from Toronto's Lesbian and Gay Community Appeal, and the production itself was nominated for a Pink Trillium Award for Outstanding Achievement
in Gay Theatre in 1993.
Zebra is a fictional
account of the June 1985 gay-bashing murder of Toronto librarian, Kenneth
Zeller. The trial caused a furor at the time because four of the five accused
were considered upstanding young men with no previous record of violence.
All five were later convicted, but none served his full sentence.
Public reception to Zebra
was particularly stong, and it became our most popular success, with some
people telling us they came to see it as many as three times. Initially
slated for a two-week run in the fall, we were offered the theatre for
an extra week at cost by its owner, who said it was the best work he'd
seen there in years.
The title comes from a speech
given by young Kenneth at the outset. He comments on the dualistic appearance
of his favourite animal, the peaceful zebra, which can be seen as either
black or white -- a metaphor for invisible minority status. In contrast,
the zebra's natural predator, the leopard, is a metaphor for the brutal
side of human nature which can lurk beneath the surface of anyone.