Tony Garcia (playwright)
Anthony J. Garcia (born 1953), known as Tony Garcia, is a playwright and the current Executive Artistic Director of Su Teatro in Denver, Colorado.[1][2] He has written over 20 original plays and has served as Su Teatro's artistic director since 1989.[3]
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Garcia grew up in Denver, Colorado and has mentioned that his family lost their home as a result of the construction on Denver's Auraria Campus in the late 1960s.[4]
Education
[edit]Garcia began attending the University of Colorado at Boulder in the fall of 1973 and dropped out in the spring of 1974.[5] He later graduated from the University of Colorado at Denver with a Bachelor of Arts in Theater.[1]
Garcia has since completed several fellowships, including the Rockefeller Fellowship in Theater arts in 2006,[6] the United States Artists Fellowship in 2006,[1] and the Livingston Fellowship from the Bonfils Stanton Foundation in 2011.[7]
Career
[edit]Garcia started out as a musician for Su Teatro while still a student in 1972.[2] He later took on roles as an actor[2] until 1989, when he became Su Teatro's Executive Artistic Director. Since writing his first play in 1986, Garcia has written plays consistently, finishing one every three to four years.[8]
Garcia spearheaded Su Teatro's fundraising campaign to raise $4.5 million for the theater's move to its new facility in the Denver's Santa Fe Arts District in 2010.[9]
Garcia has also served as a faculty member for the National Association of Latino Art and CultureLeadership Institute.[1] He currently still does work as a peer trainer for the Colorado Creative Industries’ Peer Assistance Network, is a member of the Western States Arts Federation’s Board of Trustees, and is an adjunct professor at Metro State College in Denver.[1]
Awards
[edit]- Denver Post Theater Person of the Year (2010)[9]
- Artist residency at the Island Institute in Sitka, Alaska (2009)[6]
- University of California Irvine Chicano Literary Award (1989)[1]
Plays
[edit]In chronological order of first publication.[8]
- La Familia Sin Fabiano (1974)
- El Corrido Del Barrio (1976)
- Joaquin's Christmas (1976)
- Mrs. Quintana's Living Room (1978)
- Ludlow: El Grito De Las Minas (1980)
- Intro to Chicano History:101 (1982)
- Serafin Cantos y Lagrimas (1984)
- The Day Ricardo Falcon Died (1986)
- The Miracle at Tepeyac (1989)
- Lydia Mendoza: La Gloria De Tejas (1991)
- Obsidian Rain (1992)
- Little Hands Hold the Wind (1993)
- La Carpa Aztlan Presents I Don't Speak English Only (1994)
- The Return of the Barrio Moon (1996)
- Yerma (adaptation, 1998)
- Papi, Me and Cesar Chavez (2000)
- The Westside Oratorio (2004)
- El Sol Que Tu Eres (2005)
- When Pigs Fly and Men Have Babies (2006)
- To Colorado on a Christmas Night (2008)
- The Last Lamented Dance of the Rainbow Ballroom (2010)
- Enrique's Journey (2010)
- Chicanos Sing the Blues (2011)
- Amorcito Corazon (2013)
- Mestizo (adapted from the album by Daniel Valdez, 2013)
- El Rio: Las Lagrimas de la Llorona (2013)
- Cuarenta y Ocho (2014)
- La Tierra: El Corazon de mi Madre (2015)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Staff | Su Teatro Cultural and Performing Arts Center". suteatro.org. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ a b c "100 Colorado Creatives: Tony Garcia". Westword. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ Ramos, Manuel (2014-04-18). "La Bloga: The Tony Garcia Interview". La Bloga. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ "From Womb to Tomb... And Beyond". 2014. Retrieved 2015-12-12.
- ^ "Five Questions: 'Cuarenta y Ocho' director Tony Garcia". Colorado Public Radio. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ a b "Tony Garcia | Island Institute". www.iialaska.org. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ "Alumni Fellows - Bonfils-Stanton Foundation". Bonfils-Stanton Foundation. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ a b "Theater Season | Su Teatro Cultural and Performing Arts Center". suteatro.org. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
- ^ a b "Anthony Garcia: 2010 theater person of the year". www.denverpost.com. Retrieved 2015-12-03.