
Grand Valley to perform unique Spanish Golden Age drama

An adventure/romance, filled with action and rollicking with humor
in the vein of “The Princess Bride” or “Xena Warrior Princess,” will
take the stage at Grand Valley State University. What may be
surprising is that the production is an English translation and stage
adaptation of the play “Antona Garcia,” written by Tirso de Molina in
1635, during the Spanish Golden Age.
Six performances of "Antona Garcia" will be featured
at
Grand Valley’s Performing Arts Center, Allendale Campus
March 30, 31, April 5 & 6 at 7:30 p.m.
April 1 and 7 at 2
p.m.
Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, GVSU faculty,
staff, and alumni,
and $6 for all students. Call the Louis
Armstrong Theatre Box Office at 331-2300.
“It’s an historic production about loyalty, patriotism and
feminism,” said director Karen Libman, professor of theater in Grand
Valley’s School of Communications. “But it is also a very fast-paced
and fun-filled performance.”
Written more than 150 years after Spain’s war against Portugal,
during the reign of Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, “Antona García”
is about a beautiful and legendary young heroine. The character is
undeterred by injury, imprisonment, the death of her husband, or
giving birth to twins, during her pivotal role in preventing Portugal
from taking the Spanish throne.
The English translation and stage adaptation was recently
developed by Grand Valley faculty members Jason Yancey, assistant
professor of Spanish in the Department of Modern Languages and
Literatures, and James Bell, assistant professor of theater in the
School of Communications.
Though the production will be performed in English, it features
traditional “entremeses” which are scenes performed in Spanish
interspersed throughout the performance, yet unrelated to the play.
They serve more as comic-relief intermissions and are also
distinguished by the use of masks worn by these performers. Other
authentic elements of the Spanish Golden Age included in the
production are the use of period music recorded from performance on
period instruments, and period dance, including the chaconne, which
was considered to be quite risque at the time because the dancers’
ankles are exposed.
The theater company from Grand Valley was invited by the U.S.
Department of the Interior, National Park Service, to perform the play
during the 2012 international Festival at the Chamizal National
Memorial in El Paso, TX, March 6-8. Grand Valley was the only U.S.
group selected to perform, joining others from Mexico and Spain.
The Memorial was established in 1963 to commemorate a treaty,
which resulted in the peaceful settlement of a century-long border
dispute between Mexico and the U.S. Since its start in 1976, the
Spanish Drama Festival at the memorial has attained an international
reputation for presenting quality performances by theatrical groups
from around the world.
Listen to WGVU interview here.
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