A school district in the conservative town of Sherman, Texas, made national headlines last week when it put a stop to a high school production of the musical “Oklahoma!” after a transgender student was cast in a lead role.
The district’s administrators decided, and communicated to parents, that the school would cast only students “born as females in female roles and students born as males in male roles.” Not only did several transgender and nonbinary students lose their parts, but so too did girls cast in male roles.
Publicly, the district said the problem was the profane and sexual content of the 1943 musical. At one point, the theater teacher, who objected to the decision, was escorted out of the school by the principal.
The set, a sturdy mock-up of a settler’s house that took students two months to build, was demolished. But then something even more unusual happened in Sherman, a rural college town that has been rapidly drawn into the expanding orbit of Dallas to its south.