Georgina Escobaris a playwright/librettist director and arts educator. Her plays explore themes of fantasy, mythology, feminism and the breakdown of the family including sci-femme narratives, musicals, and frontera-futurity stories. She is a MacDowell Fellow, Djerassi Artist, Fornés & Clubbed Thumb Writing Group writer, & a La Mama Umbria Playwright. She is a recipient of the National Kennedy Center's Darrell Ayers Award and Outstanding Service to Women on the Border Award. Her work has been published in The Texas Review, Los Bárbaros, Routledge, McSweeney’s Press: "I Know What's Best For You", Climate Change Theatre Action's "Lighting The Way", New Passport Press, and IntiPress (UK). Her plays have been produced across the USA and internationally in México, UK, Italy, Denmark, and Sweden. As an arts educator she has taught at Kingsborough College NY, University of Texas El Paso, Princeton University and Dartmouth College.
Georgina Escobar | |
---|---|
Born | Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, México |
Occupation | Playwright |
Language | Spanish, English |
Citizenship | Mexico and United States |
Years active | 2003 - present |
Notable awards | Kennedy Center's Theatre for Young Audiences Playwriting Award |
Early life
editEscobar was born in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, México.[1][2] Being raised in a city on the border of the United States and Mexico, with dual citizenship, Escobar has stated that the idea of "borders" did not hold much significance to her. She regularly traveled between the two countries, mostly going to the United States side of the border with her mother for shopping.[3] Despite growing up in a community in Mexico that Escobar describes as a "machismo community of cattle ranchers and mine owners", she says the respect for women and the power they held within her family dynamic was very strong.[4] She has lived in many places throughout her life, including: Chihuahua City, Chihuahua, México; Zacatecas City, Zacatecas, México; San Diego, California; El Paso, Texas; Albuquerque, New Mexico, and New York City.[5]
Education and career
editAfter graduating from the University of Texas at El Paso in 2006 with a degree in humanities and philosophy,[6] Escobar began her career as a performer and studied acting at the Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York City.[2] However, a teacher at the school inadvertently inspired Escobar's eventual career shift to playwriting by encouraging her to try writing rather than acting.[4] Escobar went on to receive an MFA in dramatic writing at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, in 2011.[2]
She has been involved with the Latinx Theatre Commons throughout her career in multiple ways, from having a staged reading of her play Sweep at a festival in 2015 alongside the works of other Latinx playwrights,[7] to serving as the managing editor for an online publication for the LTC titled Café Onda,[8] to acting as the steering committee member for the LTC from 2013 to the present.[9] Aside from acting, writing, and editing, Escobar has also worked as an educator and translator.[6] She also does community-based youth outreach in the form of artistic workshops with grade school students. In April 2017, she participated in a playwriting workshop with students from a school district in Marfa, Texas, a small community in West Texas not far from her birthplace in Ciudad Juárez, México.[10]
Works
editThemes and inspiration
editEscobar's works include themes of fantasy, surrealism, feminism, family relationships, and modern twists on traditional mythology, among others.[4][9] She notes that her female family members served as inspiration for many of the strong female characters in her plays, especially because of the fantastical discussions she often engaged in with the women of her family.[4] She cites ancient philosophers as well as writers such as Jorge Luis Borges, Shel Silverstein, Lewis Caroll, Kurt Vonnegut, Christopher Moore, and Neil Gaiman as inspirational figures.[3]
Notable works
editAsh Tree
editAsh Tree follows the story of three sisters in the aftermath of the loss of their mother.[11] Escobar experienced the loss of her own mother before the idea for the play came to her in a dream.[3] The plot has its basis in themes relating to fantasy and mythology.[12] The play had its initial readings in Indiana in 2010, the ASSITEJ Festival of Denmark and Sweden in 2010, and the Kahootz Theatre in 2009.[11] In 2011, it was workshopped by Fourth Wall Productions, a company that Escobar founded in 2003.[11][9] Ash Tree premiered in New Mexico's Duke City Repertory Theatre in 2012 and was produced by Capital High School Theatre in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 2016.[11]
The Ruin
editThe Ruin explores themes of magic, witchcraft, mystery and ancient legends.[11] Like Ash Tree, Escobar claims she was inspired to write the story after the idea came to her in a dream.[13] It was put on in 2011 by the Manhattan Repertory Theatre and in the Words Afire Theatre Festival in New Mexico.
The Unbearable Likeness of Jo, Semity, & Jones
editThe Unbearable Likeness of Jo, Semity, & Jones is a "A ridiculous investigation into memory, personal identity, and digiphrenia. Moments before her plane is about to crash, Jones deconstructs memory as a state of passage; from love, to Facebook, to her sexuality; all as related to one thing: present shock."[14] The play was read at Coffee and Whiskey Productions in Chicago, IL, in 2014, at The Flea Theater in New York City in 2015, and at The Movement Theatre Company in New York City in 2016. The play had a workshop production at Dixon Place in 2015.
Sweep
editSweep is described as a feminist play. The story follows two siblings who have the ability to travel through time. Much of the story has to do with biblical figures such as Adam and Eve, which Escobar attributes in part to her upbringing. She attended Catholic school and explored spirituality alongside her family members.[2] Sweep is a femme spec-evo story that follows two sisters and hit women of the splintered worlds whose initial snafu with Adam and Eve catches up with them lifetimes later. Fighting for the final chance to reset humanity's imperfect patterns, the women of Sweep hunt their targets from biblical times to modern-day in order to accelerate humanity's evolution.[15]
Sweep had readings at the Brooklyn Generator in New York City in 2014 and at the Latinx Theatre Commons Carnaval of New Latina/o Work in Chicago in 2015. It was also workshopped at the Lincoln Center Theater's Director's Lab in 2016.[14] The play was a finalist for the National Latino Playwriting Award. It was produced in 2017 at the Aurora Theater in Atlanta, Georgia.[11] The casting of the two main characters for the play is flexible, with no preference given to any particular ethnicity or gender identity for the actors. The Aurora Theater production of the play cast two black women for the roles of the main characters, and Escobar expressed support for this casting decision.[2]
The Circuz
editThe Circuz is a political satire and melodrama. Set in Ciudad Juarez at the height of genocide and murder, the narrative was "macabre farce that explores the discomfort of violence through exaggeration, faith through senses, and the cynicism of a land divided in two".[15]
Selected list of works
edit- Penny Pinball Presents: The Beacons
- Species:Human
- Monsters We Create (in collaboration with UTEP Playwrights)
- Screwgar
- Quixote: On the Conquest of Self (translation)
- All Strings Considered
- Albrijes
- El Muerto Vagabundo
- Sweep
- The Unbearable Likeness of Jones
- The Wayfoot Series
- Firerock The Musical
- Ash Tree
- The Ruin[9]
Awards
editEscobar received the Kennedy Center's Theatre for Young Audiences Playwriting Award in 2010.[16]
Personal life
editEscobar has been open about her sexuality and identifies as a bisexual.[16] Spanish is her first language, and she states that her "true self lives" in the writing of her native language.[16] Besides writing, Escobar has expressed her love for the outdoors and for the visual arts, saying that she often paints.[1]
When it comes to her identity as a Jewish Latina playwright, Escobar pushes back against the idea that Latinx playwrights must have some specifically Latinx quality to their work, stating: "As an artist and writer, all of my work was, is and will always be Mexican because that is what I am... Personally, I am more interested in being an artist than in defining my art."[16]
Notes
edit- ^ a b trevorboffone (2016-11-07). "Georgina Escobar". 50 Playwrights Project. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ a b c d e "Playwright Georgina Escobar breaks down her feminist fantasia "Sweep"". ArtsATL. 2017-02-08. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ a b c rebeccaideutsch (2014-05-04). "the april issue". new letters newsletter. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
- ^ a b c d "Cafecito: Georgina Escobar". HowlRound. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
- ^ "Georgina Escobar". HowlRound. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ a b "Resume and Arts Journ Samples". Georgina Escobar. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
- ^ Reid, Kerry (2015-07-28). "A Carnaval of Latino Writing in the Windy City". AMERICAN THEATRE. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
- ^ "Cafecito: The Roots and Work of Café Onda". HowlRound. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
- ^ a b c d "About". Georgina Escobar. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
- ^ "Marfa Live Arts". Marfa Live Arts. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
- ^ a b c d e f "Created". Georgina Escobar. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ "Talkin' Broadway Regional News & Reviews, Albuquerque - "Ash Tree" - 10/16/12". www.talkinbroadway.com. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ Olsson, Summer. "Theater: The 11th annual Words Afire Festival of New Plays at UNM". alibi. Retrieved 2017-04-08.
- ^ a b "Completed". Georgina Escobar. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ^ a b "Georgina Escobar | New Play Exchange". newplayexchange.org. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ^ a b c d "Ni de aquí, ni de allá / From neither here nor there". HowlRound. Retrieved 2017-04-26.