News Scrapbook 1975-1977

Chicano Theaters Move Ahead They Have A New Style And A Will To Live By MILTON AVAGE Wh n the flvsh of a n w born svn II l,rst on Ed n '.s gtc n and gold, Our lather Adam sol vnder th Tr e and crotch d with a stick in the movld f val to teatros that had demon trated a dlsclplin d and skilled commitment to artistic competence. a re.-,11lt, the plays of this festival howed their audlenc s some of the m exciting th ater to be n In the United State . The the audiences; to conduct a week of workshops, cri- tiques, and classes; to feed, house, and care for nearly 150 artists, and to pay for it all - all this no small undertaking.

Witt Draws Last-Minute Competition

Members of the Teatro de la Gente of San Jose perform a scene from their pro- duction of "The Man Who Turned Into o Dog" at the Eighth Annual Chicano The- ater festival in San Diego. the Centro appeared before the Public Services and Safety Committee of the City of San Diego, chaired by Councilman Jess Haro, seeking support for the fes- tival, they offered the com- munity an opportunity to participate in an Interna- tionally important cultural event. After due deliberation, the committee voted its support of the festival. The City Council subsequently ratified the committee's recommendation and . tayor Wilson lent the weight of his office to the project with a letter of sup- po~ ----nie facilities at the Uni- versity of San Diego were another factor contributing to the success of the festi- val. Sister Sally Furay. vice president and provost of the university, and Thomas J. Cosgrove, associate dean of students, worked with the Centro's festival committee to supply, at reasonable cost, the Camino Theater for rehearsals and perfor- mances, accommodations and meals for all of the artists and working space for the nearly continuous workshops that are the most important internal function of the annual fes- tivals This year, the teatros were able to learn from one another with un- precedented continuity and intensity. The festival generated se- rious discussions about the future artistic directions of the teatros and their future responslbllt1es to their audi- ences. While the self-serving pretenSJons ur political and academic respectability of some nl"mber- of the Chl- ::M theater movement arc probabl. of little Ion • ,

Among the factors con- tributing to the success of the festival this year was the abillty of San Diego's Centro Cultural de la Raza, through its festival commit- tee, chaired by Marcos Con- treras of the local Teatro ~testJZO, to provide more organlza onal, admlnlstra- tive and financial support to the TE AZ teatro than has been available in the past. Working to a proposed budget of just over $20,000, a mall amount of money for an undertaking of this magnitude, the festival committee was able to gen- rate $4,000 from within the local Centro Cultural itseU. Festival registration fees paid by the individual art- ists of the teatros contribut- ed another $4,500. Home Federal Savings and Loan oclation donated $250. The remainder of the fes- tival budget was met by a contribution of $4,000 by COMBO (the Combined Arts and Education Council of San Diego County) and an appropriation of approx- imately $7,000 from the city's transient occupancy tax At least 4,000 San Diegans attended the festi- val. That works out to about $2.50 each per play, if you do not count the cornucopia of folk music the festival offered . When representatives or

ate, hoping that tJme will erase nustakes and an infe- rior record." Ordinarily, the city attor- ney is elected for a four-year term, but voters ln 1975 ap- proved a City Charter ~hange making the upcom- mg term a one-time only term of seven years. By the same ballot measure, voters approved a plan to elect the mayor for flve years in 1979. The ldea ls to have both terms end In 1984, and th r after have the mayor and the city attorney run for four-year terms at the same time as the presidential Icc- tions are held.

And the l,rst rud sketch that the world had seen was 1oy to h,.s mighty h art, Till th D v,I wh,sp r d b hind the I aves, 'Its pr tty, bvt 1s 11 Artr "Th Convndrvm of th Worhhops - Rudyard K1p/in9

. . . Th play.s of thi.s festival how d their audiences .some of the mo1t exciting theater to be .s en in th United States. The work ol these t atro.s points toward the potential velopment ol a theater of Int ,national significance.

ons of medieval England outnumbered their orman lords, so do the Anglo peo- ples of Aztlan outnumber their Spanlsh-speakrng companeros. And questions of who got here first aside, brute numbers count in the formation of new lan- guag . In the workshop discus• sions of the festival, anoth· er obstacle developed. The Chicano theater movement has not yet produced an ou tandtng playwright or critic. tany excellent Chi- cano 'writers are presently composmg poetry and f1c- t1on of high quality But they are not writing plays for the teatro ,. nor are they writing about them. The movement began as guerrilla theater, perform- ing acts and plays that were Intended to educate its audi- ences about the farmwork- ers' struggle and to enroll them into the "huelga," or strike. Useful agit-prop has little need for the rounded characters, invohed plots and realistically complex messages of more artist!• cally ambitious theaters. But 1n recent years th struggl for i;ocial justice ha become more intellec- tually demandmg, morally ambiguous,· and politically realistic As thE'y contmue the fight, many teatros will find that their hard-won po- litical insights will sharpen,

their knowledge of the in- terface between the Chica- no and Anglo worlds will deepen and thew nse of cultural identi will burn more clearly must their art. It has been an economic necessity that the players of hicano teatros work out collectively every ru pect of the r performances. They have had to invent their sets, costumes, acting styles, public relations, fi- nancing and pla. . But the dlsciplin of per• forming differs from the discipline of making. A good actor is seldom a skilled writer. The e is not enough time nor ergy in the press of production to practice both rts with equal power. ow the teatros of Aztl n need lhE' critical and literary skills of disciplined Chicano writer 1f they are to continue to explore and transform our hared labyrinth. H re's my wisda for yovr vse, as I learned 11 when the moose

importance, there was a re- alization among the festival participants that their teatros are beginning to command the skills. di.sci· pline and commitment needed to reach a more general audience. As a vital part of the Chicano cultural move- ment, Lie teatros o Aztlan are in the vanguard of the march for social justice in this country. There seems to be little danger that they 11 desert the Chicano community for the cheap thrills of commercial free- booting or rally under the limp banners of esthetic pu- rity and academic career- ism. But there are obstacles that must be overcome if the teatros mean to create honest, socially effective and artistically valid repre- sentations of Chicano reali- ty for a mixed audience that includes members of a society brought up on "Oklahoma!", ''How he West Was Won" and revi- vals of "Charley's Aunt." One such redoubt is lan- guage "Spanglish," the tongue of Aztlan, like the mixture of Anglo- axon and Latinate orman-French that preceded modern Eng• lish, has considerable l!ter- ary potential. There al- ready exists a worthwhile body of Spanglish poetry and fiction. Until recently, Chicano teatros have used Spanglish to address a mostly Span- ish-speaking audience. The language of their stages has been Spanish salted with English. If tl!e teatros in- tend to speak a larger mixed audience, t y will. need to use a version of Spanglish hat is more like English peppered with , panish As he Anglo-Sax-

RODNEY JONES • .. after Witt's Job

Jones would pre election condurl.(>d u~t• DJ!'"' ~v,\\i!J .IC a:.JA.ms 01 unnsu1 to have the next Ill are m;nn 10 J.~ew MO!! au1w.1aw(l or city attorney iun s1 aq 1nq olfat .1a1PUllS multaneously with the 1980 ·urrnsUJ resident I e Ption in d of the 19~ contest.-···· -·--...> UNION 7-,,,)v .. n San Diego O ·tuaries ading Antitrus Lyle L. Jones . 1es awyer At67 Lyle L. Jones, a nationally recognized author and lecturer In the field of antitrust law and founding partner of a law firm, died Friday in a San Diego hospital. He was 67. Mr. Jones, of 4319 Collwood Lane, was a native or Parkersburg, W. Va. and held a bachelor of laws degree from St. John's University and a master of law degree from Harvard University. n 1938 he served as assistant counsel for the Rural Electrification Administration in Washington, D.C., and a variety of posts with the U.S. Department of Justice from 1939 until 1954. Between 1954 and 1968 he served as chief of the San Francisco office of the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of·Justice. A member of the American and federal bar associa- tions, he was admitted to practice law before the U.S. Supreme Court and the California and New York state courts. He was a nationally recognized author and lecturer in the field of antitrust law and was a founding partner in the law firm of Sullivan, Jones & Archer, which maintains offices in San Diego, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Mr. Jones was listed in "Who's Who in the West" and was active in community affairs, having served on the board of the San Francisco Central YMCA and as a councilman for the City of Belmont. He had resided in San Diego the last nine years. Surviving are his wife Hope and three daughters, Mrs. Barbara Sturges of San Carlos, Mrs. Betsy Beeker of Miami Fla., and Mrs. Katherine Henninger of Manhat- tan B ch Calif. Funeral ices are pending. Humphrey's Chula Vista ottuacy is in charge of arrangements. The family suggests contributions to the Lyle L. Jones · guished Professorship Fund of the University of an Diego School of Law. ~ay, July 5, 1917 in three years qM Allnt tQ!d reporters he

teatros points toward th potential d vel- opm nt of a th atcr or ter• 11atlonal ignifi ance. In ad- dition to the Latin Ameri- can connection, rep nted by three group In thi year' f llval, Teatro CampeSlllo toured Europe in 1969, 1972 and 1976. To bring together 13 the- atE'r groups from such disparate places and points of vi was Seattle, VenNue- Ia, Indiana, &uador, Mexi- o and the southwestern United State. ; to pr sent a full ven evening ·of music and plays at no charge to

And rhe reindeer roared where Pans raars to-ntght: There are nine and sixty ways of constwcting fr,ba/ lays, And-every sin9le-one-of- them-1s-right "In the Neoltlhtc Age'' -Rvdyord Kipling Chicano Festivai Stirs E u • 1enc SAVAGE '1 t,/77 By IL The exuberant gaiety that skull) entered the stage pie- marked the Sunday opening ture of the Eighth Annual Chica- This figure of a woman in no Theater Festival at the black, a rebozo wrapped University of San Diego's tightly around her bone- I Camino Theater turned back white death's head, is pure I upon itself Monday night and Chicano folk image. In one tied a tighter and more re- hand, La Calavera carried a flective knot of audience gunnysack, in the other, a reactions. rifle. Four or the travelers John Ray Rouse, singer- fell back in terror. Only the guitarist with the Teatro Vato Loco (street dude) em- :'vlovimiento Primavera of braced La Calavera. They • Los Angeles, set the mood. danced. He knew all along ,D Perched on a tall stool, his they would meet some day. - But on this occasion, La sang a set of poignant songs Calavera was not about her that summarized the shared usual business. She had longing, rage and sorrow of come to be the voice of her too many generations born peoele and to teach a history did Los in the American Southwest not adequately covered by and Mexico. the Freedom Train exhibits. run The singer ended his set If La Calavera's intentions ~eicome with a song from Puerto were didactic, her methods spokes- Rico that evoked a world were those of slapstick ~go Cen- burning with the fires of rev- farce. The actress portray- itro de la olution. When the audience ing La Calavera played with resented joined the final refrain, a sharp and gleeful energy , Convir- clappmg in unison and shout- that neatly matched the 'he M ing _the word ''.fue~o" (fire) character's mordant wit. )og ,,/n G AN remarkably like volleys of of Guadalupe Hidalgo nego- ollec!ve rs ~, Humor and social satire game of hopscotch-monopoly "Y by th e guitar across his lap, he agam and agam, it sounded In her version, the Treaty · . tiations took the form of a ~em

7H. C2P::,~ vV'-'f /4-, 19 7 7 New rel. ed. diploma course set "lntr !luct1on to Morality' " a new course udded to the Rclig1ou f Ju !Ion Diploma Pn>Kr m <:urrtl ulum. It 'A-a'\ either cours IS 70 for credit or 50 f r audit. Th diploma program rs ,pon,orcd J<>tntly by USO

pr ·p red nd will be taught by father Daniel Dillabough at Un1vers1ty of San Diego b ·ginning Aug. 15 I o to be oflcrcd at USO ocg111111ng Aug. i I "Mrn1,- try of the Word", to be taught liy I tcr Jo ephine Breen, 1hrec1nr of the dr• ploma prngram. Co,t, for

diocc,e. For

and

full

th

details ph ne. 297-7110.

1-13

'ay, July 3, 1977

TH SAN DIEGO UNI

BULLISH ON GROWTH USD School Of Business Con inues Expansion Plans

va 0 p ens

er Fest ·1

small but high-quality racul- Burns can count on enthusi- ty," said Hungate. ashc support from USO USD Is one of four Roman President Author Hughes cathollc un ver ty-connect- who himself has a PhD in ¢ busln schools in Cali- business administration and fornla - the others bemg who was a former dean of Loyola- arymount in Los Northern Ariwna Universi- ngele , the University of ty's business school. San Francisco the Univers1- Burns preaches pragmatic ty of Santa (,1ara. business education and he In Southern Callforn a, seems to know how to prac- USD competes with private tice what he preaches. "In schools Pepperdlne, USC, the last semester, 38 per Loyola-Marymount and cent of students in our un- Occ d ntal, as \\ell as tate- dergrad program were pported San Diego State women, and 19 per cent of Univ r ity and UCLA. our graduate students were In bullding his program, women. And 20 per cent of our !acuity are women," he beamed

(Conti ued rr m Pa e B·9) tratlon) candidates and a faculty or 100 (80 full-time). "I'm v ry po tlv on what th y (USD) doing - w 're or cou proud that Jim Burns Is one of our gradual s," sald San D go State Univ r lty bu lne hool Dean Robert Hun- gate "They're bulldlng a quali- ty kind or operation - I've rv d on advt ry comm l- and as a mlcon.sul• tant I wou d xpect them to t th accreditation. It's a

Apair of mime-narrators Janie Fuentes and Nancy Mayorga, wearing denim boiler suits and whiteface transformed themselves as needed into convincing ma- chines and a dog house. Under the artistic director Adrian Vargas, the skilled and disciplined acting troupe, playing multiple roles, was able to conjure up with ease a kitchen, a state employment office, a Chica- no bar and an executive suite. Although the language of the play might fairly be calle~ "Spanglish," its meaning and humor were

easily grasped.

The last play scheduled for Sunday night's performance, "Al Final de Camino" ("At the End of the Road"), was canceled. A spokesman for the Centro said two actors of Teatro Libre de Argentina, which was to have presented the play, were refused exit visas by the government of Mexico, where they are in exile. In spite of the cancella- tion, the festival opened on a happy and promising note.

$ 100 000 ,

TO AID DJS BLrl rifle fire.

A Sl00,000 grant to tram Pf returned to the festival in with Davy Crockett, John Osvaldo volved in helping the handic, the company of the Teatro Wayne, and a figure . who 1 tells of as been awarded to the Schi Llbertad from Tucson with a rntroduced himself by ayed ~y E~ucalion at University of collectively composed play, announcing, "I am not a l, Wh? IS Diego. "El Vac11 de '76." crook," making up the rules racism The Bureau of Education fo This work tells of five Chi- or the game as they went ilfare to Handicapped, a division of tht canos riding the Bicentenni- along. a dead partment of Health, Educatlor al Freedom Train. After a Y yard. Welfare (HEW), is funding the I spirited group production of Milton Savage is a San I with a over a three-year period. The "I'm a Yankee Doodle Diego free-lance writer and machin- year $30,000 will be given to us Dandy," La Calavera (the poet. :lrop of The grant will provide fees, lumun . . ., . . . . . _ . o - .i1an-life and stipends for five traineeships in nence m_ .bilmgual-b1cul_tur- chainlmk fencing, topped by USD's program for Master of Edu- al _theatincal presentations a red. and gold banner an- cation in the area of aidmg th which can be appreciated by nouncmg the group's name severely handicapped e people from all ethnic set the scene. The actors Prof. DeForest L. Strunk, director backgrou_nds." . themselves handled the few of _special educl:,l, is The first ~venmg got pieces of stage furniture: proJect director. . under way at 7.22 when Los three low platforms, a card 7- I "' 1 . Alacranes ~oJados (the table and folding chair and - D- 1 Scorp10n Stmgs), a San two signs.

Later In the interview, he proved the old business- man's adage of knowing where one's bread is buttered. "I report to the university provost." Who happens to be Sister Sally Furay.

2 Are Appointed To USD Posts M. Susan Quinn, a Vassar College graduate who later received a law degree from the University _of San Diego, has been appomted dir~ctor of graduate career pro- grams for the university and the National Center for Par- alegal Training here. _Nancy M. Belford, a San Diego State University honor grad_uate, h~s been hired as adm1_mstrat1ve assistant. Qumn was employed in Vallejo and the Los Angeles area before comin~ to ~an Diego. S' :J). UNIDN 7-/0-77 --------

Diego group based in "bar- rio Logan," strolled onto the stage. The four musicians strapped on guitars of vari- ous sizes, and launched Immediately, themselves mto a corrido from Vera- cruz. the audience of about 300 , declaring itself to be out for a good time, responded with the usual encourage- ments, yips of joy, whistles and raucous shouts of "arriba!" The Alacranes played folk- , songs from Jalapa, Cuba, tropical Latin America. Lan- guage was no problem nor were the children and photo- graphers wandering the aisle. The hugh guitarton (bass guitar) beat like the summer sun on a central valley Jet- tu ce field. The crowd laughed, sang along, clappE"d with the music and generally

I

,, .eaple r-:u.y ,.,,, /917 . Sister ~ally Furay, provost and vtcc president of the University of San Diego, has been named to the legal services review panel of the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. -5,o iJ r /ll.R..v

Made with FlippingBook Online newsletter