Karen Zacarias

Karen Zacarías is a Latina playwright who was born in Mexico in 1969.[1] She is known for her play Mariela in the Desert. It was the winner of the National Latino Playwriting Award and a finalist for other prizes.[2] Mariela in the Desert was debuted at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago.[2] Zacarías is the founder of the Young Playwrights' Theater located in Washington, D.C.

Karen Zacarias
Born1969
Mexico
OccupationPlaywright
NationalityUnited States of America

Early life

Zacarías received her Bachelors in Arts from Stanford University in 1991 and then went on to pursue her Masters in Creative Writing at Boston University in 1995.[1] Zacarías comes from an artistic family from Mexico. Her grandfather, Miguel Zacarías, was a movie director and writer during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the 1930s and 1940s.[3] Zacarías initially resisted pursuing an artistic career. She said:

Ours was a wonderful, lively, enchanting artistic house, but it also demystified "art" for me. I saw firsthand how "artistic expression" could be misused as a justification for self-indulgent, self-important and destructive behavior, and consequently I resisted being an artist for many years. It wasn't until I was out of college, had worked a couple of years at a Latin American policy nonprofit and knew I could support myself without betraying others that I finally let myself really become a writer.[3]

Career

She was the first playwright-in-residence at the Arena Stage in Washington, DC.

She has written several plays like The Book Club Play, Legacy of Light, Mariela in the Desert, The Sins of Sor Juana, The Sun Also Rises and adaptations of plays like How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, Just Like Us and others.[1] Theaters that have showcased her plays include the Kennedy Center, Arena Stage, Goodman Theatre, Round House Theatre, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Alliance Theatre, Imagination Stage (Bethesda, Maryland), Oregon Shakespeare Festival, GALA Hispanic Theatre, Berkshire Theatre Festival, South Coast Repertory, La Jolla Playhouse, Cleveland Play House, San Jose Repertory Theatre,GEVA Theater, Horizon Theater, People's Light and Theatre, Walnut Street Theater, Arden Theater, Milagro Theater, Teatro Vista, and Aurora Theater.[1]

Zacarías was invited by the White House Historical Association and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to write a family play about the White House. She included young people in the process and her script was converted into a book published by Scholastic. It included a foreword by First Lady Michelle Obama.[4] The book was called Chasing George Washington and the musical premiered at The Kennedy Center for Performing Arts and proceeded to go on a National Tour.[1]

Zacarías established and founded the Young Playwrights' Theater in 1995.[2] She began by volunteering and teaching playwriting classes to children in DC classrooms, and they grew so popular that she turned it into a 501c3 nonprofit organization by 1997.[5] She is also the founder of the Latino Theatre Commons.[6]

She has been inspired by works from Maria Ines Fornes, Caryl Churchill, Sarah Ruhl, Lisa Loomer, Lisa Kron and Julia Cho.[7] Writing for young people is very important for Zacarías. It is a rewarding experience for Zacarías to write for young people. She says:

"I love writing for young people. You can't find a more honest and challenging audience on the planet. My strongest playwriting lessons have come in trying to create stories that will resonate with young people—it is a rewarding, hilarious and heartbreaking endeavor to create plays in which kids really see themselves on stage."[2]

Awards

The Sins of Sor Juana was the winner of the Charles MacArthur Award for outstanding new play at D.C.'s 2000 Helen Hayes Awards. This play has been widely produced, thus Zacarías translated it for a Spanish-language production in April at D.C.'s GALA Hispanic Theatre.

Young Playwrights' Theater won the 2010 National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award from the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. YPT received the Washington Post 2014 Award for Excellence in Nonprofit Management.[5]

Her other awards include:[1]

  • New Voices Award
  • 2010 Steinberg Citation-Best New Play
  • Paul Aneillo Award
  • Francesca Primus Prize for an Emerging Woman Theater Artist
  • National Latino Play Award
  • Finalist, Susan Blackburn
  • 2000 Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding New Play (Sins of Sor Juana)
  • 2018 Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Original Play or Musical Adaptation (Ella Enchanted)

Works

  • Destiny of Desire: A Brechtian Telenovela: In 2015, Destiny of Desire had its world Premiere at Arena Stage directed by Jose Luis Valenzuela and under his directorship went on to the Goodman Theatre and South Coast Repertory.
  • Native Gardens
  • Into the Beautiful North: In 2016, Karen Zacarías created a play, Into the Beautiful North, inspired by the book with the same title written by Luis Alberto Urrea seven years earlier. The playwright premiered in 2016 in the Miracle Theatre at Portland, Oregon and has been touring around the U.S. since, in locations such as Berkeley, San Diego, and Chicago.
  • The Book Club Play
  • Just Like Us (adapted from the book by Helen Thorpe)
  • Legacy of Light
  • Mariela in the Desert
  • The Sins of Sor Juana
  • How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents
  • Our War
  • The Copper Children, premiered in 2020 at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.[8]

TYA musicals

Zacarías' musicals with composer Deborah Wicks La Puma include:

  • OLIVÉRio: A Brazilian Twist (Kennedy Center)
  • Ella Enchanted (First Stage Milwaukee/Adventure Theatre MTC)
  • Jane of the Jungle (South Coast Repertory)
  • Frida Libre (La Jolla Playhouse)
  • Looking for Roberto Clemente (Imagination Stage)
  • Chasing George Washington: A White House Adventure (Kennedy Center)
  • Einstein is a Dummy (Alliance Theatre)
  • Cinderella Eats Rice and Beans (Imagination Stage)
  • Ferdinand the Bull (Imagination Stage)
  • The Magical Piñata (Imagination Stage)
gollark: So a third of the max power draw of my laptop's CPU.
gollark: So how many watts is, I don't know, knowledge of BF's commands?
gollark: So if knowledge is power, can we measure knowledge in watts?
gollark: Not sure how that works, but okay.
gollark: Energy is apparently mass times distance squared over time squared.

See also

  • Theater of the United States

She has three children: Maia, Nico, and Kati

References

  1. "Karen Zacarias Biography". Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  2. "American Theatre - January 06". www.tcg.org. Archived from the original on 2015-12-24. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
  3. Caridad, Svich (2006). "Main content area Karen Zacarias: An Interview with Caridad Svich". TheatreForum - International Theater Journal (Winter-Spring 2006): 9–11. ProQuest 2293025.
  4. "Chasing George Washington: - Young Playwrights' Theater". Retrieved 2015-12-21.
  5. "Our History". www.youngplaywrightstheater.org. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
  6. "Latina/o Theatre Commons". HowlRound. Retrieved 2015-12-22.
  7. "UpClose: Karen Zacarías, Women's Voices Theater Festival". dctheatrescene.com. Lorraine Treanor. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  8. https://osfashland.uscreen.io/programs/copper
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