Seattle Rep
Through February 11, 2024
Octavio Solis’ play, Quixote Nuevo, is a treat for
both Spanish and English speakers when you can pick out the interplay of puns
and alliteration and literary references. In Quixote Nuevo, he mirrors
the well-known tale of Don Quixote, who loved Dulcinea and tried to
fight the powers-that-be.
He chooses a professor, Jose Quijano (played with elegance
and verve by Herbert Siguenza), of the author Cervantes, who wrote Don
Quixote. The professor is accelerating in his decline toward dementia and
his family feels he’d be safer in an assisted living facility. Jose becomes a “new”
Quixote, escapes his concerned family and townsfolk, and begins a search for
Dulcinea. But escaping also presents great danger, as his inability to see
where reality ends and fantasy starts could cause him to forget to eat or drink
out in the bleak desert on the border of Texas.
The tone of the play is often joyful, yet mixed with pain.
Large puppets are used to menace and to entrance. Tejano music is used
masterfully to demonstrate parts of the story and underscore moments of
emotional outbursts.
The actors, working as an ensemble, become friends, family, and
observers. Everyone except Quijano has at least two characters to play and everyone
inhabits their various roles expertly. The entire cast uses beautifully
rendered costumes and puppetry, throughout. (Cast: Raúl Cardona, Viviana
Garza, Laura Crotte, Sol Castillo, Maya Malan-Gonzalez,
Lakin Valdez, Alicia Coca, Ernie González, Jr., Costumes: Helen
Q. Huang)
Director Lisa Portes uses the stage fully – a craggy,
mountain/desert set (designer Efren Delgadillo, Jr.) with doors and
hiding places. Choreographer Marissa Herrera creates energetic dances
(mostly) for the puppet movement. David R. Molina is the composer of the
rousing Tejano music.
While Quijano’s wandering is enjoyable, Solis infuses Texas
border issues with menace and great sadness. U.S. border agents harass a bar,
and deep in the desert, Quijano meets a man whose family has been destroyed by
the attempt at a better life. A couple of jokes reference very current politics.
These infusions are an important part of the experience of the play.
Comedy is abundant and Ernie González, Jr. is wonderful as
the good-natured and slightly befuddled Manny, who gets dubbed Sancho Panza,
and dragged along on the journey. As Juana, Manny’s wife, Alicia Coca has great
comic timing as she anxiously screeches, “Manny!” in an absurd echo of Quijano’s desires
for Dulcinea.
There is so much to appreciate about this production. I’m
sure that Spanish-speakers appreciate the infusion of Spanish as roughly half
of the dialogue. I understand very little Spanish, and I had to trust that what
I could catch of the English was enough to carry the story for me.
The show is one that may draw in some new theatergoers,
which is terrific. Since I make an assumption that many of them might be
younger, I wonder if they will arrive already fully aware of the story of Don
Quixote and his side-kick Sancho Panza, and the elusive Dulcinea. Hopefully,
they’ll be able to follow the broad strokes of that story, and maybe it will
encourage them to seek out the original.
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Through February 11, 2024
A view of some costumes (Nate Watters) |
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