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“Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” by Blanco & Garcia

“Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” by Blanco & Garcia

From left, Elizabeth Price as Georgie, Melissa Ann Hubicsak as Beatriz, and JL Rey as Tio Eme in “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” by Richard Blanco and Vanessa Garcia opening at Actors’ Playhouse in Coral Gables in previews Wednesday, Nov. 8, and opening Friday, Nov. 9 through Sunday, Dec. 3. (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

 

By Christine Dolen

for ArtburstMiami.com

 

Home. It’s just a four-letter word, but one that encompasses so many emotions: joy, sorrow, warmth, longing, loss. Home is part of our essence, an ache if it’s lost, a quest for deep connection that so many in Miami’s exile communities know as well as anyone.

Celebrated Cuban-American poet Richard Blanco, whose literary life vaulted to another level in 2013 after President Barack Obama made him the fifth Presidential Inaugural Poet in the country’s history, says, “Home is not just a place. It’s a state of mind.”

EDITIORS NOTE:  ArtSpeak published a video conversation with Richard Blanco in 2015.  Here is a link.

 

From left, Barbara Bonilla’s Marilyn talks to JL Rey as her brother Tio Eme in Richard Blanco and Vanessa Garcia’s “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas.” (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

Cuban-American playwright Vanessa Garcia, whose immersive “The Amparo Experience” made her a higher-profile artist with its months-long Miami run in 2019, likewise has devoted much of her writing to the longing for home and the exploration of roots.

The two Miami writers had never met when Blanco went to an “Amparo” performance and asked Garcia to chat over martinis at Tap 42 afterwards.

Blanco had been living in Maine, where he moved “on a whim.”

He says: “I had been searching for home, a place, belonging – the essential question of my work.”

Blanco was commissioned by Maine’s Portland Stage to write a play – the offer came after an onstage conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winning Miami playwright Nilo Cruz – but he wasn’t happy with his early draft.

He was intrigued by the site-specific “Amparo,” Garcia’s deeply impactful immersive story of the family behind Havana Club Rum, the Fidel Castro-led Cuban Revolution, and the diaspora that followed. The poet and the playwright talked, met again and talked some more, and Blanco says that eventually, they decided to collaborate on the piece for Portland Stage.

 

From left, Conor Walton, Melissa Ann Hubicsak, Elizabeth Price, Michael Gioia and JL Rey (seated) celebrate Beatriz’s Maine family in “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” at Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre. (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

“Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” was the result. The play about a Cuban American baker named Beatriz who has moved from Miami to Maine had its world premiere run Jan. 25 to Feb. 12, 2023.  Now “Sweet Goats” has come south to Miami for a major second production by Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre in Coral Gables. Set in Maine but thoroughly infused with Cuban culture (and food), it explores the complexities of home as well as the estrangement of Beatriz and her unhappy mother Marilyn.  “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” will preview Wednesday, Nov. 8, and Thursday, Nov. 9, with opening night on Friday, Nov. 10.  The play runs through Sunday, Dec. 3.

“I am trying to find plays that speak to the community,” says artistic director David Arisco, who chose “Sweet Goats” to kick off the company’s 36th season.  “So many theaters do world premieres, but a lot of plays don’t get a second production. I thought it would also be exciting for the playwrights to have it seen on their home turf….It was written for Maine, but its roots are in Miami.”

“Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” pulses with spirit and symbolism, tradition and the act of finding family in friendships.  With the exception of JL Rey, a Tampa actor reprising his world premiere role as Beatriz’s Tio Eme, the South Florida-based cast is new, with several making their Actors’ Playhouse debuts.

Melissa Ann Hubicsak plays Beatriz (or Bea), who invents the two Cuban-style pastries that give the play its title: Sweet Goats are pastelitos with Maine-made goat cheese and guava, Blueberry Señoritas a flaky pastry filled with Maine blueberries and custard.

 

From left, Conor Walton, Melissa Ann Hubicsak, Elizabeth Price, Michael Gioia and JL Rey (seated) celebrate Beatriz’s Maine family in “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” at Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre. (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

Georgie (Elizabeth Price) is her neighbor and closest friend, Maynard (Michael Gioia) a classic salt-of-the-earth Maine character, Blake (Conor Walton) a gay southerner who brings style and wit to the land of plaid flannel shirts, and Marilyn (Barbara Bonilla), Bea’s ailing and lonely mom in Miami.

For Hubicsak – whose heritage is Hungarian, German and Irish on her father’s side, Cuban on her mother’s – snagging the leading role of Beatriz in her first Actors’ Playhouse show is part of a personal and career renaissance.

The 2008 Florida International University grad developed such a deep fear of auditioning that she stepped back from acting for a while. Then, after she lost her relationship, her apartment and her day job around the same time, she found solace in seeing a lot of theater, falling in love with the art form again. She met playwright Garcia when she played a principal role in “The Amparo Experience,” which led her to explore her own Cuban family history.

“This play has a theme of forgiveness, of other people and oneself,” says Hubicsak. “I’m the first-generation daughter of immigrants. I started digging into history of my own family; there were people who were political prisoners, who were tortured, but they didn’t talk about it….I had been asking. I was older and wanted to know. Now I’m recording and documenting everything. Our family has fought and yelled and cried, all because of me.”

 

From left, Conor Walton, Melissa Ann Hubicsak, Elizabeth Price, Michael Gioia and JL Rey (seated) take in the symbolism of a red bird in “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas”at Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre. (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

The actor feels the commonalities between herself and the character of Beatriz deeply, from a long-absent father (Hubicksak’s dad has battled addiction and homelessness) to navigating the complexities of the mother-daughter relationship. She praises Blanco and Garcia for the way the two convey the interactions in a Cuban family.

“The play has very Miami things and very Cuban things. It captures the dynamics of how we speak to each other. Richard and Vanessa’s writing is very real. One second, you’re screaming. Then you laugh,” she says.

Born in Cuba, Rey moved to Manhattan’s Inwood neighborhood (where “In the Heights” is set) with his family in 1969, then to Tampa in the early ‘80s. He worked there for 25 years, then went back to New York, then post-pandemic went back to Tampa. But he has fallen in love with Miami (“I’m thinking of moving to this part of the state,” he says) and his second group of “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” castmates.

 

From left, Conor Walton as Blake and Michael Gioia as Maynard watch a red Cardinal fly away in “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas,” an Actors’ Playhouse production at the Miracle Theatre. (Photo courtesy of Alberto Romeu)

 

“I love the character. I get to tell the Cuban side of the story,” says Rey. “He’s trying to be a bridge between two people he loves. He’s attempting to be a peacekeeper, someone who reminds (his sister and niece) that they love each other.”

Rey appreciates Arisco’s take on the play – “this is being led by a very capable, open-minded and collaborative director,” he says – and the way Garcia and other collaborators are continuing to work on the play’s final scene. The ending involves the dance and music of a Cuban guaguancó, a distinct type of rumba, as well as a deeply-felt spiritual experience that “becomes more visceral for the audience,” he says.

“Obviously, the audience will know about these things – the Pedro Pan program, Freedom Flights, the wonders of Cuban food. It doesn’t have to feel as expositional. It can be more emotionally grounded,” adds Rey. “In many ways, this is a new play. It’s beautifully moving.”

Arisco agrees that the scenes between Beatriz and Tio Eme are likely to resonate more powerfully with Miami-Dade County’s Cuban population than they might have in Maine. But he hopes audiences at the Miracle’s more intimate Balcony Theatre will also have another thematic takeaway.

 

” Richard Blanco in La Carreta.” 2014. 40 x 60 inches. Mixed-media on canvas. Raymond Elman.

 

“It’s more about people understanding that you can make a new community, a new family. In Maine, Beatriz is home,” says the director.

Born in Madrid to Cuban exile parents and raised in Miami, Blanco earned a Bachelor of Science degree in civil engineering and a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing at Florida International University.

While he notes “I’ve been a civil engineer for most of my adult life,” he adds that “once the White House called, it was a game changer.”

The inaugural poet tradition began with Robert Frost reading at President John F. Kennedy’s 1961 ceremony, and when he was chosen to read his “One Today,” Blanco was the first immigrant, first openly gay man and the then-youngest inaugural poet. (Amanda Gorman, the sixth inaugural poet, read “The Hill We Climb” at President Joe Biden’s 2021 ceremony and is three decades younger than Blanco.)

Now, Blanco says, his professional life is 100 percent devoted to writing.

His latest book of poems, “Homeland of My Body: New and Selected Poems” (Beacon Press, 216 pages), contains a mixture of previously published poems and new ones. He’ll discuss it with his former teacher and mentor, poet Campbell McGrath, on Sunday, Nov. 19, at 3:30 p.m. at the Miami Book Fair on Miami Dade College’s Wolfson Campus, Building 1, Auditorium 1261, 300 NE Second Ave., Miami.

Blanco has several other items on his artistic agenda, including an in-development TV pilot based on his memoir “The Prince of Los Cocuyos: A Miami Childhood” and a musical based on “Waiting for Snow in Havana” (playwright Karen Zacarias is writing the book, Benjamin Velez the music, and Velez and Blanco are co-lyricists).

 

Vanessa Garcia joined poet Richard Blanco in writing “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas,” which premiered in Maine and is getting its second production by Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre in Coral Gables. (Photo courtesy of Chris Headshots)

 

In working with Garcia on “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas,” he says he learned a great deal about the mechanics of writing a play, the collaborative nature of theater and trusting the “spareness” of a play’s dialogue in comparison to poetry. Would he try playwriting again?

“I’ve always liked theater, the communal nature of it. To see something you wrote come to life, in three dimensions, making people laugh and cry. That’s addictive,” he says.

As for Garcia, she hadn’t thought that the second production of “Sweet Goats” would happen in her hometown, but as she sits in on rehearsals, makes small changes and workshops the ending, she sees that it makes sense.

“This play roots from Miami. It is very much from here that the spirit of it comes. Like the bird in the play, it came south,” says Garcia.

Garcia has another world premiere in the works, “1,000 Miles.” It will be produced by Fort Lauderdale’s New City Players (www.newcityplayers.org) and co-produced by the Abre Camino Collective, the arts partnership of Garcia and director Victoria Collado.  Elizabeth Price – Georgie in “Sweet Goats” – will direct the play, which will run March 7-24, 2024, at the Island City Stage space in Wilton Manors.

Garcia enjoys collaboration with other writers – “Jenna and the Whale,” which she wrote with Miamian Jake Cline, had its world premiere in August at the Ground Floor Theatre in Austin, Texas – and she says working with Blanco was great all around.

“Apart from being an amazing writer, he’s an amazing person,” she says, adding in so many words that he’s an admirable role model when it comes to juggling a thriving career and staying true to himself: “God, please keep me that humble.”

WHAT: “Sweet Goats and Blueberry Señoritas” by Richard Blanco and Vanessa Garcia

WHERE: Actors’ Playhouse at the Miracle Theatre’s Balcony Theatre, 280 Miracle Mile, Coral Gables

WHEN: Previews 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 8, and Thursday, Nov. 9; opens at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 10; regular performances 8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday, through Dec. 3

COST: $40, $55, $65, $75, $85 (seniors 65 and over get 10 percent off weekdays only; students with valid student ID pay $15 for a rush ticket available 15 minutes before a weekday performance)

INFORMATION: 305-444-9293 or actorsplayhouse.org

 

Published with permission of ArtburstMiami.com, a nonprofit source of dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.