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Ms. De La Luz |
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“Aché”
A Wise
(cracking) Latina Makes Her Way
Onstage
NEW YORK CITY (By Larry Rohter,
NYT) July 22, 2009 —
In the lexicon of Santeria, “aché”
is the term applied to the life
force, or to vital energy and good
vibes. That word turns up in Caridad
De La Luz’s new Off Broadway
production, “Boogie Rican Blvd., the
Musical,” but in a larger sense Ms.
De La Luz herself seems to embody
and be guided by those qualities,
both onstage and off.
Certainly the impression she
transmits in person is one of
irrepressible, ebullient energy and
talent, perhaps a bit unruly at
times, as the Santeria gods
themselves are said to be. At 36,
Ms. De La Luz has already been a
community organizer, poet,
singer-songwriter, comedian and
actress, with a recent stint as a
model in a Levi jeans campaign
featuring “my derrière and my
poetry,” as she put it.
“When I first met Caridad, what I
noticed, right after her looks,
because she is quite beautiful, was
her charisma and very forceful
energy,” said Judith Escalona, a
director, writer and producer who
also teaches film and television at
City College. “She exemplifies in
many ways the Nuyorican woman of her
generation, someone who is proud of
her transnational heritage, which is
articulated in her performances and
work. Aché speaks through her.”
“Boogie Rican Blvd.,” at the Puerto
Rican Traveling Theater through July
26, is a showcase and vehicle for
all that and more. Ms. De La Luz not
only wrote the play, which offers an
often humorous look at the
complicated life of three
generations of a Puerto Rican family
in the Bronx, but also portrays
seven different characters. She
sings, raps and dances.
“There is a little bit of me” in
every character in the musical, Ms.
De La Luz said. “I am a boogie Rican
from the boogie-down Bronx.”
Two roles Ms. De La Luz plays in
this, her first venture into a
conventional theatrical production,
are male. Don José, dressed in baggy
shorts, sandals and a Roberto
Clemente baseball jersey, is a
bodega owner and patriarch of the
Pacheco family, while Pito is a
boastful would-be rapper and street
tough who has impregnated one of Don
José’s three daughters — all of whom
Ms. De La Luz also plays.
“That is a gigantic undertaking that
only the most skillful and
experienced actresses dare to do, so
I was flabbergasted when I saw her
performance,” Miriam Colón, a
doyenne of Latina actresses in New
York, said. “But then again, she
knows these characters very well and
evidently has spent a lot of time
observing their behavior and
attitudes, because she interprets
these very recognizable barrio types
with a lot of compassion and
tenderness.”
Ms. De La Luz was born and raised in
the Soundview section of the Bronx
and attended Murry Bergtraum High
School before studying literature
and theater arts at the State
University of New York, Binghamton.
She continues to live in her old
neighborhood, next door to her
parents, because, she explained, she
values her roots and the inspiration
they offer.
“I’ve written some of my best poems
on the 6 train,” she said.
Ms. De La Luz spoke as the Senate
was holding hearings on the Supreme
Court nomination of Judge Sonia
Sotomayor, who attended elementary
school in Soundview. Ms. De La Luz
expressed pride and admiration at
seeing a fellow Nuyorican rise so
high, saying, “She’s a boogie Rican
from the Bronx too, and it’s about
time someone born and raised where
I’m from” achieved that kind of
public prominence.
The trajectory that brought Ms. De
La Luz to the stage is unusual. From
1996 to 1998, she worked as a
community organizer in another Bronx
neighborhood, Hunts Point, focusing
on issues like drug abuse, dropout
prevention, teenage pregnancy and
AIDS, and it was during those years,
which she calls “extremely
influential,” that she began,
initially in poetic form, to develop
the characters who now populate her
work.
“I never thought of it as a career,”
she said of those first artistic
efforts. “It was just something that
made me feel good, that felt
natural, like a calling, but was
also a release, a healing.”
A decade ago she began performing at
the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in the East
Village, where she adopted the
persona of La Bruja — the Witch — a
nickname that has stuck. Initially
she recited her poems. Sometimes,
she did short comedic sketches and
songs in which she portrayed
characters like Marta, a gum-chewing
Puerto Rican princess from Long
Island who is conflicted about her
cultural identity.
“Caridad quickly showed herself to
have multitalented capabilities,
strong both on content and delivery,
in areas that don’t necessarily
coexist in every performer,” said
Daniel Gallant, the cafe’s executive
director.
Ms. De La Luz’s best-known poem is
probably “WTC,” which she wrote in
the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks
and performed on HBO’s “Def Poetry
Jam.” The poem consists entirely of
three-word phrases using words
beginning with those letters; it
starts with “What’s the cause/Work
to connect/Wish to change/Want to
cry” and incorporates the refrain
“Wish time could/Wash this clean.”
Even now, after roles in movies like
“Down to the Bone” and Spike Lee’s
“Bamboozled” and in programs for HBO
and the History Channel, Ms. De La
Luz refers to herself as a “poetician.”
“I love being silly,” she said, but
“Boogie Rican Blvd.” also contains
what she calls “a glaze” of serious
and pointed political and social
commentary.
“The media looks to have Latinas
talk about sexual things, which is a
very safe stereotype for them to
have,” she said. “The attitude is
‘That’s what Latinas should be
saying.’ But that’s not what I want
to do.”
The current version of “Boogie Rican
Blvd.,” which evolved from a
one-woman monologue Ms. De La Luz
first presented in 2002, “still
needs a lot of work,” she said. But
she and the musical’s director,
Nelson Vásquez, said that the recent
successes of “In the Heights” and
the revival of “West Side Story”
have persuaded them that with a
little bit of polishing and
revamping, it could also find a
place on Broadway.
In the meantime Ms. De La Luz is
finishing up a new CD, for release
on Halloween. Called “4 Witch It
Stands,” it will feature the same
mixture of hip-hop, reggaetón and
other Latin beats that were present
on her three previous discs.
In Spanish Caridad De La Luz means
“charity of the light.” That is her
real name, she said, not something
she chose for show business, and it
has given her a sense of mission,
convincing her that, no matter what
the art form she chooses, her role
in life is “giving light and love
and energy to people.”
“It’s all rooted in heart and soul
and aché,” she added. “Out of that
comes everything.”
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