Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Ohio High School Students Livid After Fall Play Canceled Due To Complaints Over Gay Character

Ohio High School Students Livid After Fall Play Canceled Due To Complaints Over Gay Character
Local 12/YouTube

Drama students at Hillsboro High School in Highland County, Ohio were furious after learning the school pulled the plug on their production of She Kills Monsters after weeks of rehearsals.

The reason for the cancellation was due to complaints about a possibly gay character in the play by a local pastor and conservative Evangelical Christian parents.


The school is a public, secular school, not a private parochial school.



Hillsboro City Schools Superintendent Tim Davis released a statement, saying:

"The fall play has been canceled this year because the play was not appropriate for our K-12 audience."

She Kills Monsters was written by playwright Qui Nguyen and has been regularly performed at high schools and colleges since it premiered in New York in 2011.

The play is about a high school senior in Athens, Ohio, who discovers his deceased sister's Dungeons & Dragons campaign, alluding to the fact she may have been gay and had a girlfriend.

Hillsboro High junior Chris Cronan, who had a major part in the play, said he was "beyond livid."

Cronan told local news station WKRC:

"We worked very hard on this play – we had a lot of people in that school who are in the LBGTQ community."

School administrators canceled production on the show after concerned parents confronted the directors of the play at a meeting. Local pastor Jeff Lyle from Good News Gathering was among those in attendance.

Lyle shared with the news station his protestations about the play.

"From a Biblical worldview this play is inappropriate for a number of reasons, e.g. sexual innuendo, implied sexual activity between unmarried persons, repeated use of foul language including taking the Lord's name in vain."






You can watch the news report, here.

youtu.be

Despite parents witnessing Lyle talking to school administrators after the meeting was over, he denied pressuring the faculty to cancel the play.









Hillsboro High graduate Jon Polstra had a daughter and son in the play and was frustrated over the cancellation after the students had dedicated so much time in rehearsals.

Said Polstra:

"It was inappropriate for them to do and it was a wrong thing for the school to have allowed that influence to cause them to make the decision to cancel the show."










The school's controversial decision caught the attention of Hillsboro Against Racism and Discrimination (HARD), who expressed concern about the damaging message it sends about tolerance in the community.

"An active choice was made to pander to homophobia," the group wrote in a Facebook post, demanding for the school to rethink and reverse their decision.

"This choice is harmful and offensive to the LGBTQ+ community at large, but especially harms the LGBTQ+ students at HHS."
"It shows these kids that their hard work doesn't matter, and creates an environment of fear."
"It shows them that if it comes down to protecting the feelings of homophobic people, or protecting them from discrimination, the school will choose the side of homophobia."





HARD further argued the version of the play was the Young Adventurers Edition, which had been performed in countless other high schools in the country for the past several years.




The group also added how other shows alluding to sexual themes haven't stopped HHS from performing them in the past.

"Notable examples include: Les Mis, which had sex workers; a bed scene in Light in the Piazza; Oklahoma! which included attempted rape and murder (both onstage), and premarital sex (offstage); Into the Woods which had extramarital sex, the beginnings of which were onstage; Oliver! which had sex workers."

Polstra's other son, Zeb Pickering-Polstra, has started a GoFundMe campaign to raise money to enable a community theatre production of She Kills Monsters next summer to preserve all the hard work already put in by the students involved.

"These kids, my siblings included, have poured their heart and soul into this show," said Pickering-Polstra.

"We want to see their aspirations realized. With your help, we can produce She Kills Monsters."

More from News/lgbtq

Donald Trump
Roberto Smith/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Roasted For Immediately Backtracking On Tariffs For U.S. Automakers After Backlash

The backlash against President Donald Trump is coming hard and fast after he quickly announced a one-month exemption for the auto industry following criticisms of his decision to earlier announce tariffs for imports from Canada and Mexico.

Trump is now offering a one-month exemption on the steep new tariffs on Mexican and Canadian imports for U.S. automakers, easing concerns that the freshly launched trade war could severely impact domestic manufacturing.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Jasmine Crockett
@Acyn/X

Jasmine Crockett Hilariously Shades Trump With Trolling Question About 'Immigrant Crime' During Hearing

Democratic Representative Jasmine Crockett of Texas went viral after she shamed President Donald Trump with a question she posed to mayors about immigration during a House hearing that mocked him for his felony convictions—without naming him at all.

In May last year, Trump became the first former president to be convicted of felony crimes. The jury found him guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels to illegally influence the 2016 election.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ben Stiller; Barack Obama
Leon Bennett/WireImage; Getty Images/Getty Images for EIF & XQ

Ben Stiller Reveals Barack Obama Turned Down Offer To Make A Key Cameo In 'Severance'

Actor and Severance executive producer Ben Stiller revealed in an interview on Jimmy Kimmel Live! that he once approached former President Barack Obama to narrate a pivotal video for the hit Apple TV+ show only for Obama to decline the offer in an email.

Stiller hoped to cast former President Barack Obama as the voice of the anthropomorphic Lumon office building in the “Lumon is Listening” propaganda video featured in the season 2 premiere. Though Obama declined the offer, he reportedly responded by email, expressing that he’s a “big fan” of the show.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Jennifer Hudson and Common at a Knicks game
@BleacherReport/X

Common's Quick Reflexes Save Jennifer Hudson From Taking A Basketball To The Face

EGOT-winning singer/actor Jennifer Hudson narrowly missed being hit square in the face by a basketball while watching Tuesday's New York Knicks playoff game against the Golden State Warriors from courtside seats.

Fortunately, her beau sitting beside her, rapper Common, diverted the ball's trajectory away from Hudson's face in the nick of time, her glasses taking most of the hit after Knicks’ point guard Miles McBride lost control of the ball.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Ben Stein as the teacher in "Ferris Beuller's Day Off"; Donald Trump
Paramount Pictures; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

'Ferris Bueller' Clip Explaining Tariff Disaster In 1930 Goes Viral Amid Trump's Tariff War

People are nodding their heads after a clip from the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off in which Ben Stein's teacher character explains the disastrous results of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in 1930 went viral after President Donald Trump's announced tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico.

The scene features a high school economics teacher, played by Ben Stein, lecturing his uninterested students about the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act—a real-life 1930 bill signed by President Herbert Hoover that raised tariffs on imported goods. The law, often blamed for exacerbating the Great Depression, has drawn comparisons to Trump’s recent trade policies.

Keep ReadingShow less