245 ACTS OF UNSPEAKABLE EVIL Wins 2018 Arizona Theatre Company Latino Playwriting Award

By: Dec. 28, 2018
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

245 ACTS OF UNSPEAKABLE EVIL Wins 2018 Arizona Theatre Company Latino Playwriting Award

245 Acts of Unspeakable Evil, a play by award-winning playwrights Paula Zelaya Cervantes and Ana Gonzlez Bello born out of their curiosity and anger as Mexicans and women who are powerless to change things in Americas current social and political situation, has won Arizona Theatre Companys 2018 National Latino Playwriting Award.With a unique, uproarious style,245 Acts of Unspeakable Evilis a spunky one-woman play about the powerless daughter of a powerful superhero.

Bello, whose radio playDiablo and Rominawon the 2014 Georgi Markov Award for the BBCs International Radio Playwriting Competition, and Cervantes, whose play,The Orbweaver, won the 2016 Vancouver Fringe Critics Choice Award for Best Play and recently was awarded Efiteatro, Mexicos Institute of Fine Arts most prestigious grant, will share the $1,000 top prize.

"We have reached a point in our careers where we've started to feel confident and comfortable as theatre makers within our community, and we wanted a challenge, a play that would demand a lot from us emotionally and creatively," Cervantes said. "245 Acts has been just that, a deeply personal and terrifying venture through which we have dealt with some of our country's most saddening aspects: the degree of corruption our government has been responsible for and our postcolonial feelings of 'smallness,' which prevent us from demanding justice."

Using comic book language and superhero movie conventions in a theatrical format specifically for young adult and teen audiences, 245 Acts of Unspeakable Evil tells the story of Andrea, a normal teen who has a remarkable legacy of superheroes in her family. The only drawback is that the superhero gene skips three generations or so, a fact that she discovered after jumping from a second floor without getting the expected results.

It is heartbreaking that we often choose to ignore the horrors that go in our city and our country and our world because we are powerless, Bello said.As playwrights who usually shy away from overly sentimental or cheesy topics, this play was also a way for us to relearn that sentimentality, our ability to not shut down our feelings and to care deeply to make ourselves vulnerable, is crucial.Only deeply caring and empathetic individuals can make up a society capable of enacting change.So, this play was born mostly out of our need to find reasons to believe that our individual choices do matter and that power can be found where we least expect it, even if youre young, Mexican and a girl.

Developed over 20 months, the play was selected as part of the 2017 United Solo Festival in New York where it was presented, nonprofessionally, as a work in progress directed by Cervantes and starring Bello.

245 Acts of Unspeakable Evil addresses critically important issues in a tone, style and approach that will appeal to, engage and inspire young people of every culture to be the catalyst for change, said ATC Playwright in Residence Elaine Romero.

ATC Artistic Director David Ivers said that plays like245 Acts of Unspeakable Evil leverage the power of live theater to deliver critical messages that explore issues, situations and unfairness in a context that is compelling, entertaining and inspiring.We are proud to be part of that effort through this remarkable work.

Previous winners of the National Latino Playwriting Award, which have recognized many notable playwrights early in their careers, have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize, featured at the Humana Festival and at regional theaters across the country.

Other past recipients include Matthew Paul Olmos, Kristoffer Diaz, Carlos Murillo, Luis Alfaro, Octavio Solis, Raul Garza and Karen Zacaras and Charise Castro Smith. Felix Pire's winning playThe Origins of Happiness in Latinwas previously produced by ATC and recent winner,The River Brideby Marisela Trevio Orta, was produced as part of ATCs 51st season.

The 2018 National Latino Playwriting Award is supported by an Art Works grant from the National Endowment of the Arts as part of the Voices of a New America company-wide initiative.

For more information about Arizona Theatre Company, visitwww.arizonatheatre.org.



Videos