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Archive for the ‘theatre’ Category

Tuesday Teatro : Brownsville Bred

7:43 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · New York City| theatre · No Comments

3 Nov 2009

photoIf you are in NYC on any Monday evening this month, stop by the Nuyorican Poet’s Cafe to see Elaine del Valle’s award winning one-woman show, Brownsville Bred.

The autobiographical show takes the audience through an “emotional rollercoaster” that is uplifting, heartbreaking and powerful as they witness Del Valle recreate life in the tough projects of 1980’s Brownsville, Brooklyn NY. Amongst eight other characters, Del Valle narrates as herself from ages 11 to 17. Del Valle’s loving father, another empathetic character, leaves the family of five as he falls from stature as a talented musician to a defeated heroine addict. Not unlike most impoverished families, Elaine’s mother emerges as the loveable spirit that holds the family together and guides them to a hopeful future. Crime, Drugs and Poverty mix with the Joys of Family, Hope, Salsa and the Birth of Rap, as Del Valle’s innocence recounts a journey to womanhood, a neighborhoods crack & crime epidemic, Salsa rumbas, and her love of Run DMC, which often times help her verbalize a unique struggle and triumph that has audiences cheering and laughing through their tears while swaying to urban rhythms.

poster_art.gifTonite is the NYC showing of a theatrical production about the struggles of fourteen Puerto Rican political prisoners who spent more than two decades in prisons for seditious conspiracy—two of whom are still incarcerated.

It’s important to support art that not only entertains, but teaches and can serve as a point for movement building.

Crime Against Humanity

A play by poet and activist Michael Anthony Reyes Benavides and former Puerto Rican Political Prisoner Luis Rosa, directed by Michael Anthony Reyes Benavides

A National Boricua Human Rights Network and Batey Urbano Production

Imagine 27 years of your life living in a space 6 feet by 9 feet. Imagine being confined in isolation with no human contact. Imagine the shakedowns, the strip searches and the complete disregard for your humanity. Crime Against Humanity is a play based on the real life experiences of fourteen Puerto Rican political prisoners who spent more than two decades in prisons for seditious conspiracy—two of whom are still incarcerated. Crime Against Humanity brings us into the U.S. prison system in a way no other play has, focusing on the politically motivated use of isolation, selective punishment, sensory deprivation and disproportionate sentences.

Written by poet and activist Michael Anthony Reyes Benavides and former Puerto Rican political prisoner Luis Rosa, the play confronts the physical and mental torture these prisoners endured for more than 27 years. We gaze into their cell and experience the loss of parents, the transition of children into adulthood and feel the physical brutality and torture of a government out to make an example of them. We see them as they refuse to be victimized and objectified, confronting their hardships and adversities while maintaining their dignity, and upholding their humanity.

Reyes Benavides spent hours interviewing the former Puerto Rican political prisoners, and through extensive written correspondence, the two remaining political prisoners Oscar López Rivera and Carlos Alberto Torres. Through the play, we hear from their own mouths, their own words, exactly what it means to be a political prisoner in the United States.

Crime Against Humanity is produced by the National Boricua Human Rights Network and Batey Urbano. These two organizations hope to use this performance piece to raise consciousness and gain support for the campaign to free the remaining Puerto Rican political prisoners.

“By using theater as a tool of resistance, we hope to reach out to those sectors that are often ignored by traditional activist outreach. We want our families, our brothers and sisters and our community to come out and see what these prisoners endured, many of them for almost 20 years, two of them for more than 27″ (author and director Reyes Benavides).

Crime Against Humanity will run from March 3rd, 2008 through March 3rd, 2009 as a part of the Puerto Rican Cultural Center’s”100 x 35″ campaign. This campaign will be celebrating the centennial of the birth of Puerto Rican national hero and poet Juan Antonio Corretjer and the 35th year of the founding of the Chicago-based Juan Antonio Corretjer Puerto Rican Cultural Center. As part of this celebration a national tour of the play will make stops in several U.S. cities: New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Hartford, Washington D.C., Boston, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. The production has plans to tour throughout Puerto Rico in the future as well.

Read more…

5to_encuentroafiche.jpgNeed a reason to come to NYC? In about two weeks, poets and other artists, predominantly Latino and Latin American, will descend upon three New York boroughs for the 5th Encuentro de Poetas en NY.

Yours truly, Maegan la Mala, is a featured poet at one of the events and will attend as many events as I can (Before I was Blogger, activist, and Mami, I was a poet).

Hope to see some of you there.

Opening Today : A Pandora’s Box of Postive Latina Queer Stories

10:00 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT| New York City| Women| theatre · Comments Off

2 Jul 2008

PandoraLogoGray.jpgStarting today through Sunday, July 6th, Sister Outsider presents Pandora’s : Ten Monologues Open the Box of Queer Latin@ Identities.

Pandora’s ten diverse monologues, seven short films woven
together with music to represent different queer identities from
diverse ethnic and identity backgrounds (bisexual, transgender,
lesbian, questioning, homeless, immigrant, etc.) Its debut marks a
breakthrough in visibility and expression in the Latin@ queer community.

PANDORA’S TRAILER

For information on tickets check after the jump.

Read more…

In the Heights Earns 4 TONY Awards

11:38 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · New York City| theatre · Comments Off

16 Jun 2008

16tony.xlarge6.jpgA week ago, Lin-Manuel Miranda, the mind behind the Broadway musical In The Heights, was nervous as hell wondering what the TONY Awards would think of him. Turns out that they love him and his musical love song to Washington Heights. In the Heights won four TONY Awards, including Best Musical, Best Original Score for the Theater, Best Choreography and Best Orchestrations. While the musical didn’t win 13 awards to go with it’s 13 nominations, it won some of the most important ones.

Felicidades to Lin-Manuel and the entire cast and crew (now if anyone would like to throw me some tickets so I could see the show…..)

Via / The Latin Americanist

Please Tell Me This is a Joke : Perez Hilton the Musical?

5:27 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs| Chismes| Internet| theatre · Comments Off

11 Jun 2008

perez-hilton-400ds0801.jpgI know there’s a scarcity of Latino themed theatrical productions, but do we need a Perez Hilton musical, really? No te parece mucho?

“In Touch” reports that Randy Blair, Timothy Michael Drucker and Zach Redler, all 24, have penned Perez Hilton Saves the Universe (or at Least the Greater Los Angeles Area): The Musical. The show will poke fun at celebrities like Britney Spears and Kathy Griffin — who is featured as a villain — and follows Perez as he saves L.A. from nuclear disaster.

Good luck with that. In the Heights it will not be.

Via / Guanabee

Image Via / Gawker

VivirLatino Goes Behind the Curtain With TimesTalks

9:32 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Events| New York City| theatre · Comments Off

10 Jun 2008

intheheights.jpgLast night I had the pleasure of going behind the curtain with the talento artistico of the theatre. TimesTalks (as in the New York Times) along with Teatro Stage Fest sponsored a panel discussion with Graciela Daniele, Eugenio Derbez, Bianca Marroquin, and Lin-Manuel Miranda. The talk was moderated by a dry Robin Pogrebin, a cultural reporter for the New York Times.

The talk was introduced by the director of Teatro Stage Fest, Susana Tubert, who said that the artists in the panel were “not Latino artist, rather artists who happened to be Latino” (a line that doesn’t sit well with me- as if one has nothing to do with the other or as if being Latino just happens to be with no wider implication).

Lin-Manuel Miranda, the mind behind the words and music to the Tony nominated In the Heights, garnered the most applause, while the mostly white theater going crowd seemed unfamiliar with Eugenio Derbez, who ironically enough had a few Mexican farandula cameras anxiously waiting outside.

Read more…

CROP%20Derbez.JPGCROP%20JLeguizamo.JPGNext Monday, June 9th, the New York Times is hosting back to back conversations with Latino theatrical talent as part of their Times Talk series.

The first talk at 6pm, invites us to go behind the curtain with Latino talent making inroads on the Great White Way. Participating are Tony Award-winning director and choreographer Graciela Daniele
(”Ragtime,” “Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life,” “Annie Get Your Gun”),
producer-director-actor Eugenio Derbez (”Latinologues”), actress Bianca Marroquín (”Chicago,” “The Pajama Game”) and composer-writer-performer Lin-Manuel Miranda (from the Tony nominated “In The Heights”)

Read more…

Ugly Betty The Musical

9:41 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Chismes| TV| theatre · Comments Off

28 May 2008


If the rumors are true that Ugly Betty, the ABC television show, may become a Broadway musical, I hope the musical numbers are better than the one above.

Michael Urie — who plays camp assistant Marc St. James — told a British radio station that this fantastic idea is turning into a reality.
“They do want to do an “Ugly Betty” musical, a full-on Broadway musical, but it’s all hush-hush. I think it would be great, and they should use the cast from the show. I think we would all do it, although we maybe don’t dance and sing as well as professional singers and dancers. I think it would be fun for us to do it for a while, and then they could get real people in. They definitely want to do an episode that is a musical one, but then they want to do a full stage show. I think it’s a great idea. It would definitely work.”

Via / You Tube,Jezebel, and Oh No They Didn’t

In The Heights Nominated for 13 TONY Awards

1:22 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Music| New York City| theatre · Comments Off

13 May 2008

Heights60.jpgI’ve been wanting to see the Broadway musical, In The Heights since it opened, but now with 13, count ‘em 13 TONY Award nominations, I want to see it even more.

“In the Heights,” a rap, hip-hop and salsa flavored musical about Latino families in Washington Heights, led the Tony nominations, which were announced on Tuesday morning, with 13 nods, including two for Lin-Manuel Miranda, the show’s 28-year-old creator and star.

The winners will be announced at the 62nd annual Tony awards ceremony on June 15 at Radio City Music Hall with Whoopi Goldberg hosting.

Via / NYT


Hola!

VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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