Anne García-Romero
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Anne García-Romero
Anne García-Romero is an American playwright, screenwriter, scholar, and professor. Early life Anne García-Romero was born to a mother of English, Irish and German descent and a father from Spain. Her hometown is Wellesley, Massachusetts, and she currently lives in South Bend, Indiana. Her work has been greatly influenced by her ethnic and cultural background, as many of her plays deal with issues affecting both Anglo and Latino communities. In her work, she tries to create bridges between these two communities. She has written many plays about Latin experiences, making complex Latin culture accessible to larger audiences. She also translates plays from Spanish to English, to make theatrical works from Spain and Latin America available to U.S. audiences. García-Romero received her B.A. in Theatre Arts at Occidental College and then went on to the Yale School of Drama, where she received her Masters in Fine Arts in Playwriting. She received her Ph.D. in Theatre Studies a ...
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Newton, Massachusetts
Newton is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It is located roughly west of Downtown Boston, and comprises a patchwork of thirteen villages. The city borders Boston to the northeast and southeast (via the neighborhoods of Brighton, Boston, Brighton and West Roxbury), Brookline, Massachusetts, Brookline to the east, Watertown, Massachusetts, Watertown and Waltham, Massachusetts, Waltham to the north, and Weston, Massachusetts, Weston, Wellesley, Massachusetts, Wellesley, and Needham, Massachusetts, Needham to the west. At the 2020 U.S. census, the population of Newton was 88,923. Newton is home to the Charles River, Crystal Lake (Newton, Massachusetts), Crystal Lake, and Heartbreak Hill (Boston Marathon), Heartbreak Hill, among other landmarks. It is served by several streets and highways (including Massachusetts Route 9, Route 9, Hammond Pond Parkway, and the Mass Pike), as well as the Green Line D branch run by the MBTA. Historically, the area that is now ...
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Octavio Solis
Octavio Solis (born 1958) is an American playwright and director whose plays have been produced at theaters and small companies across the United States. He has written over 25 plays, including his most famous works: ''Lydia'', ''Santos & Santos'' and ''Man of the Flesh''. His works have earned numerous awards and grants. Life and career Born in El Paso, Texas, to Mexican parents, Solis started his career in theater by joining his high school, Riverside High School's (El Paso, TX) theater group when he was fourteen. He received a BFA at Trinity University and went on to earn his MFA at Trinity University's off-campus program at the Dallas Theatre Center. After college, while acting in Eric Overmyer's ''Native Speech'' in Dallas, Solis was inspired to write his own plays rather than act in them. In between acting and writing, he taught high school students at Booker T. Washington School for the Performing and Visual Arts. He moved to San Francisco in 1989 to further his career, a ...
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Living People
Purpose: Because living persons may suffer personal harm from inappropriate information, we should watch their articles carefully. By adding an article to this category, it marks them with a notice about sources whenever someone tries to edit them, to remind them of WP:BLP (biographies of living persons) policy that these articles must maintain a neutral point of view, maintain factual accuracy, and be properly sourced. Recent changes to these articles are listed on Special:RecentChangesLinked/Living people. Organization: This category should not be sub-categorized. Entries are generally sorted by family name In many societies, a surname, family name, or last name is the mostly hereditary portion of one's personal name that indicates one's family. It is typically combined with a given name to form the full name of a person, although several give .... Maintenance: Individuals of advanced age (over 90), for whom there has been no new documentation in the last ten ...
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Carmelita Tropicana
Alina Troyano, more commonly known as Carmelita Tropicana, is a Cuban-American stage and film lesbian actress who lives and works in New York City. Career Troyano burst on New York's downtown performing arts scene in the 1980s with her alter ego, the spitfire Carmelita Tropicana and her counterpart, the irresistible archetypal Latin macho Pingalito Betancourt. She also has performed as Hernando Cortes's horse and la Cucaracha Martina from her childhood fairy tales in Cuba. In Tropicana's work, humor and fantasy become subversive tools to rewrite history. In 1999, she received an Obie Award for “sustained excellence in performance” ''El Diario La Prensa'', a daily Spanish-language newspaper, named Tropicana "One of the Most Notable Women of 1998". Tropicana is the sister of the independent film director Ela Troyano, who directed ''Carmelita Tropicana: Your Kunst Is Your Waffen''. Their collaboration on this film won them an award for best short film at the Berlin Film Festival ...
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Migdalia Cruz
Migdalia Cruz is a writer of plays, musical theatre and opera in the U.S. and has been translated into Spanish, French, Arabic, Greek, and Turkish. Her works have been produced in venues as diverse as Playwrights Horizons in New York City, the Old Red Lion Theatre in London, Miracle Theatre in Portland, Oregon, Ateneo Puertorriqueño in San Juan, the National Theatre of Greece in Athens, and Houston Grand Opera. Other venues around the world include: Mabou Mines, Classic Stage Company, INTAR, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Monarch Theater, En-Garde Arts, HOME, Shaliko Company, New York Shakespeare Festival's Festival Latino, Theatre For The New City, and the W.O.W. Cafe (New York); Ateneo Puertorriqueño (PR); National Theater of Greece (Athens); Foro Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz (Mexico City); Vancouver Players (Vancouver, B.C.); Latino Chicago Theater Company (Chicago); American Repertory Theatre (Cambridge); Cleveland Public Theatre (Cleveland); Frank Theatre (Minneapolis); Thé ...
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Milcha Sanchez-Scott
Milcha Sanchez-Scott (born 1953) is an American playwright of Indonesian, Chinese, Dutch, and Colombian heritage.Peterson, Jane T.; Bennett, Suzanne (1997)"Milcha Sanchez-Scott (1953-): Biography" ''Women Playwrights of Diversity: A Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook''. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 293-296. . She spent her early years in Colombia, Mexico, and London, attended Catholic school in La Jolla, California, and graduated from the University of San Diego, where she studied literature, philosophy, and theatre. When Sanchez-Scott moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career, she was discouraged by the paucity of roles portraying Hispanics and became a playwright. Her first play, ''Latina'' (1980), was based on her experiences working as a receptionist in a maids' agency in Beverly Hills. Sanchez-Scott's most produced play to date is ''Roosters'' (1987). In this work, the cast explores relationships in a rural Southwestern household through a style of magical realism ...
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Cherrie Moraga
Cherrie is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: *George Kruck Cherrie (1865–1948), American naturalist and explorer * Peter Cherrie (born 1983), Scottish football goalkeeper *Cherrie Ying (born 1983), actress *Cherrie (singer) (born 1991), Swedish R&B singer *Cherrie Ann Crichlow-Cockburn Cherrie Ann Crichlow-Cockburn is a Trinidad and Tobago politician from the People's National Movement. She was MP for Lopinot/Bon Air West in the House of Representatives from 2015 to 2020. She served as Minister of Social Development and Family S ..., Trinidad and Tobago politician See also * Cherrie, Michigan, a ghost town {{given name, type=both ...
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Latinidad
''Latinidad'' is a Spanish-language term that refers to the various attributes shared by Latin American people and their descendants without reducing those similarities to any single essential trait. It was first adopted within US Latino studies by the sociologist Felix Padilla in his 1985 study of Mexicans and Puerto Ricans in Chicago, and has since been used by a wide range of scholars as a way to speak of Latino communities and cultural practices outside a strictly Latin American context. As a social construct, ''latinidad'' references "a particular geopolitical experience but it also contains within it the complexities and contradictions of immigration, (post)(neo)colonialism, race, color, legal status, class, nation, language and the politics of location." As a theoretical concept, ''latinidad'' is a useful way to discuss amalgamations of Latin American cultures and communities outside of any singular national frame. ''Latinidad'' also names the result of forging a shared cult ...
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Quiara Alegría Hudes
Quiara Alegría Hudes (born January 1, 1977) is an American playwright, producer, lyricist and essayist. She is best known for writing the book for the musical '' In the Heights'' (2007), and screenplay for its film adaptation. Hudes' first play in her ''Elliot Trilogy'', '' Elliot, a Soldier's Fugue'' was a finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. She received the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for '' Water by the Spoonful'', her second play in that trilogy. Early life and education Hudes was born in 1977 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to a Jewish father and a Puerto Rican mother. They raised her in West Philadelphia, where she began writing and composing music as a child. She studied at the Mary Louise Curtis Branch of Settlement Music School, taking piano lessons with Dolly Krasnopolsky. Hudes has said that, although she is of "Puerto Rican and Jewish blood", she was "raised by two Puerto Rican parents." Her birth parents separated and her step-father was a Puerto Ri ...
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Cusi Cram
Cusi Cram (born September 22, 1967) is an American playwright, screenwriter, actress, model, director, educator, and advocate for women in the arts. Early life Cusi Cram was born in Manhattan, New York, on September 22, 1967, to Lady Jeanne Campbell, daughter of Ian Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll and Janet Gladys Aitken, and granddaughter of Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook; Lady Jeanne was married at the time to John Cram III, a descendant of railroad developer Jay Gould. Her biological father, however, was Bolivian and worked at the United Nations. She identifies as Latina and has written extensively about her Latin roots in her plays. Cram's first foray into the world of theater came at age six when she played the role of Moth in a production of ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'' at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Campbell had previously been married to Norman Mailer, with whom she remained friends after their divorce. Mailer's later wife Norris Church, a former actress and m ...
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Elaine Romero
Elaine Romero is a Latina playwright, who grew up close to the border in San Juan Capistrano, California and has lived in Tucson, Arizona for many years.Romero, Elaine. "I Interview Playwrights Part 280: Elaine Romero." Interview by Adam Szymkowicz. Adam Szymkowicz. 10 Nov. 2010. Web. 29 Nov. 2015. . She is now an associate professor at the University of Arizona, teaching playwriting, script writing, and dramaturgy. Childhood Romero has three brothers. Her mother was an educator and her father was a businessman. Her parents encouraged Romero and her siblings to be socially conscious and to be able to express their thoughts. As a result, her home was a home where “conversations about poverty, the death penalty, the prevalence of homelessness, presidential elections and warfare were commonplace, as were talks about the importance of community and charity”. This social consciousness is reflected in her plays, where characters that live in tragic and unfortunate situations are ex ...
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Karen Zacarías
Karen Zacarías is an American playwright. She is known for her play ''Mariela in the Desert''. It was the winner of the National Latino Playwriting Award and a finalist for other prizes. ''Mariela in the Desert'' was debuted at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago. Zacarías is the founder of the Young Playwrights' Theater located in Washington, D.C. Early life Zacarías received her Bachelors in Arts from Stanford University in 1991 and then went on to pursue her Masters in Creative Writing at Boston University in 1995. Zacarías comes from an artistic family from Mexico. Her grandfather, Miguel Zacarías, was a movie director and writer during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the 1930s and 1940s. Zacarías initially resisted pursuing an artistic career. She said: Career She was the first playwright-in-residence at the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. She has written several plays, including ''The Book Club Play'', ''Legacy of Light'', ''Mariela in the Desert'', ''The Sins ...
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