Find a restaurant
Find an event
Connect to share what you're reading and see friend activity. (?)

Yo Solo at Teatro Vista and Collaboraction | Theater review

An impressive collection of solo performances spans a wide range of Latino life.

By Kris Vire
Published: August 2, 2012

Yo Solo 2012
Sandra Delgado in para Graciela
Rey Andujar in Antipoda
Lisandra Tena in Guera
KJ Sanchez in Highway 47
Febronio Zatarain in La Risa de Dios
Juan Francisco Villa in Empanada for a Dream
  • Sandra Delgado in para Graciela

    Sandra Delgado in para Graciela

    Photo: Anna Sodziak388.th.th.sw.YoSolo.jpgSandra Delgado in para Graciela155511361
  • Rey Andujar in Antipoda

    Rey Andujar in Antipoda

    Photo: Saverio Truglia388.th.th.rv.YoSolo.Antipoda.jpgRey Andujar in Antipoda155517012
  • Lisandra Tena in Guera

    Lisandra Tena in Guera

    Photo: Saverio Truglia388.th.th.rv.YoSolo.Guera.jpgLisandra Tena in Guera155517063
  • KJ Sanchez in Highway 47

    KJ Sanchez in Highway 47

    Photo: Anna Sodziak388.th.th.rv.YoSolo.Highway47.jpgKJ Sanchez in Highway 47155517114
  • Febronio Zatarain in La Risa de Dios

    Febronio Zatarain in La Risa de Dios

    Photo: Saverio Truglia388.th.th.rv.YoSolo.LaRisa.jpgFebronio Zatarain in La Risa de Dios155517165
  • Juan Francisco Villa in Empanada for a Dream

    Juan Francisco Villa in Empanada for a Dream

    Photo: Saverio Truglia388.th.th.YoSolo.Empanada.jpgJuan Francisco Villa in Empanada for a Dream155517216

Sandra Delgado in para Graciela

Photo: Anna Sodziak

The first of an annual series, Yo Solo offers an impressively variegated slate of works by Latino solo performers. Even among the stories drawn from the performers’ lives, there’s variation: Empanada for a Dream, Juan Francisco Villa’s forceful tale of growing up Colombian-American on New York’s Lower East Side and coming to learn of his family’s dark side, recalls similar solo works by John Leguizamo and Chazz Palminteri, while KJ Sanchez’s Highway 47, an engrossing recollection of her family’s involvement in an ugly New Mexico land-grant war, feels closer to the docu-theater style of the Civilians (where the New York–based Sanchez is an artistic associate).

The pieces are presented in varying ratios of English and Spanish. Febronio Zatarain’s La Risa de Dios lays out a thoughtful view of Chicago immigrants’ relationships with God entirely in Spanish, with English supertitles (which can be hard to keep up with while keeping an eye on Zatarain’s performance). It’s presented in Program A with Lisandra Tena’s Guera, an acerbically humorous mishmash of short scenes offered as selections on a menu, from which Tena’s waitress allows audience members to choose; her careful transformations and arch attitude left me wanting to see the four pieces my audience didn’t order.

Sandra Delgado’s para Graciela, the briefest work here, is part of a larger play in development. But her moving portrait of a young woman who’s helped through grief by sense memory, in English with sprinkles of Spanish and presented with Sanchez’s piece as Program B, feels complete on its own.

The Beat-like collision of movement and poetry in Antipoda, paired with Empanada as Program C, contains perhaps slightly more Spanish than English with no translation; Dominican-born performer Rey Andújar addresses this in a charming interlude about English as his second language. Yet his resonant voice and hypnotic physicality seem to get his meaning across even if you don’t follow every word. The collection is a vibrant reminder of the unchartable breadth of Latino experience.

3
Time Out Critic
 
Good For

Teatro Vista and Collaboraction. By various authors. Dirs. various. With Rey Andújar, Sandra Delgado, KJ Sanchez, Lisandra Tena, Juan Francisco Villa, Febronio Zatarain. Program A: 2hrs; one intermission. Program B: 1hr 50mins; one intermission. Program C: 2hrs 15mins; one intermission. 

Share with your network
Comment