Teatro Campesino
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El Teatro Campesino ("farmworkers' (campesino) theater"), is a theatrical troupe founded in 1965 as the cultural arm of the United Farm Workers. The original actors were all farmworkers, and El Teatro Campesino enacted events inspired by the lives of their audience. Early performances were on flat bed trucks in the middle of the fields in Delano, California.
The founder and initial director of the troupe was Luis Valdez, a Chicano from a migrant farmworker family, who attended San Jose State University, worked briefly with the San Francisco Mime Troupe and returned to Delano to found the troupe. Valdez later gained fame for his play Zoot Suit, which was produced on Broadway, and for directing the Ritchie Valens biopic La Bamba.
Teatro Campesino's early performances drew on varied traditions, such as commedia dell'arte, Spanish religious dramas adapted for teaching Mission Indians, Mexican folk humor, a century-old tradition of Mexican performances in California, and Aztec and Maya sacred ritual dramas.
Although the troupe began by entertaining the farmworkers, within a year of their founding they began to tour to raise funds for the striking farm workers. By 1967, their subject matter had expanded to include aspects of Chicano culture that went beyond the fields: education, the Vietnam War, indigenous roots, and racism.
In 1971, they moved their headquarters to San Juan Bautista and adapted traditional religious plays La Virgen del Tepeyac and La Pastorela for Christmas celebrations. As Chicano culture received unprecedented attention in the United States, Valdez received national attention, and taught drama at the University of California, Berkeley and Santa Cruz. In 1973 they worked with British theater director Peter Brook; in 1976 they toured the play La Carpa through Europe, sponsored by the State Department. The original troupe disbanded in 1980.
El Teatro Campesino is still housed in San Juan Bautista. The company continues their yearly Christmas pageants, alternating annually between La Virgen del Tepeyac and La Pastorela. They also did a revival of Zoot Suit in 2002 at their playhouse, as well as a Southwestern tour of the production in 2004.
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[edit] Notes
- ↑ Organizational history, UCSB site.
- ↑ Organizational history, UCSB site.
- ↑ Organizational history, UCSB site.
[edit] References
- "El Teatro Campesino: An Interview with Luis Valdez" by Carl Heyward
- Broyles-Gonzalez, Yolanda. Teatro Campesino: Theater in the Chicano Movement. Austin : University of Texas Press, 1994. ISBN 0-292-70801-7
- "Organizational history" from the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives
[edit] External links
- Official site
- "Guide to the El Teatro Campesino Archives 1964-1968" at the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives
[edit] See also
Topics related to Chicanos and Mexican-Americans | |
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Terms: Chicano · La Raza · Latino · Mexican-American · Hispanic | |
Pre-Chicano Movement: Mexican-American History · Mexican-American War · Sleepy Lagoon Trial · Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo · Zoot Suit Riots | |
Chicano Movement: Aztlán · Catolicos Por La Raza · Chicanismo · Chicano Blowouts · Chicano Moratorium · El Plan Espiritual de Aztlán · El Plan de Santa Bárbara · Farm Worker Rights Campaign · Land Grant Struggle · Colegio César Chávez | |
Supreme Court Cases: Hernandez v. Texas · Plyler v. Doe · Mendez v. Westminster | |
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