Cyn Cañel Rossi
Festival Director
Veronica Caicedo
Jesse Mojica
Alex Rossi
Producers
James Mojica
Associate Producer
Robert Dominguez
Advisory Board Member
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LATINO
PLAYWRIGHTS TAKE CENTER STAGE AT THE 4TH ANNUAL
SONGS FROM COCONUT HILL THEATER FESTIVAL |
New York City (February 10, 2005) Nine
playwrights with new works in tow will take center stage
at the SONGS FROM COCONUT HILL Latino Playwrights Festival,
which kicks off its fourth year March 7th in New York
City at Teatro La Tea.
Festival founders and producers Cyn Cañel Rossi
and Alex Rossi (Cynalex Productions), Veronica Caicedo
(Caicedo Productions) and Jesse Mojica again raise the
curtain at Teatro La Tea for a two-week run of new works
by Latin playwrights from across the country. As has
been the Festival tradition for the triumvirate of production
companies, the roster of plays explores universal themes
with that unique Latino sentiment and flavor.
The 2005 Festival line-up introduces the following full-length
plays: Snowmen, by Frank Algarin, a finalist in the
2004 Repertorio Español Metlife Nuestras Voces
Competition, explores three generations of Puerto Rican
father and son relationships; Faded, a new work by Daily
News columnist Robert Dominguez, is about a down and
out reporter who tries to revive her career at scandalous
supermarket tabloid; The Undoing of Berta, by Cyn Cañel
Rossi, is the story of an unstable, foul-mouthed New
York attorney who checks herself into Bellevue’s
Psychiatric Ward after suffering a manic episode; and
Frida Vice Versa, a one-woman show written by Marian
Licha and R. Dennis Green, flourishes on the conceit
that the audience might be among Frida Kahlo’s
first students at La Esmeralda School for Painting in
Mexico City. Also this year, Obie recipient Carmen Rivera
presents a staged reading of her newest work, Ghosts
in Brooklyn, which features actress Kelly Coffield (formerly
of In Living Color).
Additionally, the Festival will present a quartet of
provocative shorter works: SEMPER FIdel, by Fernando
Mañon, has Cuban dictator Fidel Castro disappearing
from a United Nations conference on poverty, only to
reappear at a bodega in Spanish Harlem; Yo, Moms!, by
writer-actor Danny Gonzalez, is a moving and humorous
account of a grown man facing the news that his devoted
mother has been diagnosed with the AIDS virus; Branches,
by A.B. Lugo, author of Banjee, explores what happens
when one is faced with temptations of street life and
the search for family unity; and The Teacher’s
Lounge, by Vincent Toro, is a dramedy about the realities
of teaching in the NYC public school system.
“My colleagues and I continue to have the opportunity
to work with wonderful writers who take tremendous risks
with their storytelling. Their work pushes the cultural
and dramatic boundaries of standard mainstream theater.
It’s exciting,” says Festival Director Cyn
Cañel Rossi. “We hope to continue growing
so that we may showcase more works in the years to come.”
The Songs From Coconut Hill Latino Playwrights Festival
will run from March 7th to March 20th @ La Tea Theater,
107 Suffolk Street, in New York City. Tickets available
through www.smarttix.com. For additional information,
call 212.591.0496 or visit www.songsfromcoconuthill.com
.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Cyn Cañel Rossi
917.548.5904
SONGS 2005 (212)207.4740 website: www.songsfromcoconuthill.com
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