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Chicano Theatre: El Festival de los Teatros Chicanos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2021

Extract

Teatro Chicano is perhaps one of the best kept secrets in North American theatre today.

Jorge A. Huerta, Teatro de la Esperanza, Santa Barbara, California

The fourth annual Festival de los Teatros Chicanos was held in San Jose, California, on June 15-24, 1973. It was a gathering of teatros from the many different regions in the United States where Chicanos—persons of Mexican-American descent—have settled. There also were several theatre groups from Mexico itself.

Chicano theatre has roots in the ancient culture of the Mayans, but its contemporary awakening dates from 1965, when Luis Valdez first organized El Teatro Campesino, a theatre based in San Juan Bautista, that played in the fields for the huelgistas (strikers) of the United Farm Workers in support of the strikes and boycotts against table grapes and, more recently, iceberg lettuce.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1973 The Drama Review

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Footnotes

David Copelin is presently on leave from the Dramatic Art department of the University of California, Davis. His new translation of Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi was published in September as Ubu Rex by Pulp Press in Vancouver, Canada

References

The title photograph of Teatro Campesino is by Marta Arruda of the Third World Photo Workshop. All photos with this article, unless otherwise specified, are by the Third World Photo Workshop.