Teaching and Learning Pages

Monday, July 21, 2008

Planetary Dance 2008: Making Peace with the Planet


Jorge Luis Morejon during the Earth Run.
28th Annual Planetary Dance - Santos Meadows, Mount Tamalpais.
California. Sunday, June 29th, 2008

Movement Ritual Practices are in tune with Jorge Luis Morejon's doctoral research focus, which is to investigate how the practice of Art Rituals can help violently displaced communities, without return, to integrate culturally with a new and unfamiliar environment.

As expressed by Jorge, "experiential learning is not readily available. One has to go out in the world and search for those rare opportunities where one can find it. Finding the Planetary Dance has given me the privilege of intenalizing the practice of an art ritual. The Planetary Dance was scored by teacher, choreographer, and community leader Anna Halprin. During the dance I was able to witness its healing and artistic potential.

“The Planetary Dance is an annual all-day ritual of healing and community renewal. It brings people of all ages and abilities together in a beautiful setting to “dance for a purpose.” As Anna Halprin has said: “it's going to take the willing commitment of enough people to say, we will heal this earth. Every step is a prayer, and we must pray together for the healing of the earth... The circle is an act of unity, and the four directions give it stability. It's the squared circle which is the archetypal mandala of harmony.”

"I say, concludes Jorge, that it is through the community’s practice of art rituals that displaced peoples would begin to heal their sense of otherness in order to reintegrate with the larger community. In the same way that “the Planetary Dance Community invites people all over the world to join in a dance for peace in their own communities, I think it would be wonderful if displaced communities join efforts in the practice of all inclussive Art Rituals in order to recover a new sense of belonging."

Resources:
- Anna Halprin, Moving Toward Life: Five Decades of Transformational Dance, p. 200, ©1995, Wesleyan University Press
-Planetary Dance. Wednesday, July 16th, 2008. <http://www.planetarydance.org/index.html>



Empowering Creativity Through Dance

Jorge Luis Morejon and fellow participants dancing during the Empowering Creativity through Dance Workshop. Closing Ceremony. Tamalpa Institute, Mountain Studio, Kentfield, California. June 26th, 2008
Jorge Luis Morejon and fellow participants dancing during the Empowering Creativity through Dance Workshop. Closing Ceremony. Tamalpa Institute, Mountain Studio, Kentfield, California. June 26th, 2008
At age 87, Anna Halprin( center) still enjoys teaching and dancing. Empowering Creativity through Dance Workshop.
Closing Ceremony. Tamalpa Institute, Mountain Studio, Kentfield, California.
June 26th, 2008
Jorge Luis Morejon and teacher, choreographer, director and community leader Anna Halprin during the
Empowering Creativity through Dance Workshop. Tamalpa Institute, Mountain Studio, Kentfield, California. June 25th, 2008
Jorge Luis Morejon and fellow participants dancing during the Empowering Creativity through Dance Workshop.
Closing Ceremony. Tamalpa Institute, Mountain Studio, Kentfield, California. June 26th, 2008

"For me ritual means dancing for a purpose"

Anna Halprin

"The Empowering Creativity Through Dance Workshop with Anna Halprin reassured me of the importance of finding home in the arts. Through community-building opportunities, like this workshop, I manage to find a sense of grounding hardly experienced otherwise. During the process, I realized that movement needs to be objectified in order to be understood in its full capacity. The work allows for one to experience how physical activity is connected with one’s own expressive mind. The study of pelvic and sacrum movements, the place where emotions are stored, are the foundation for all sorts of polarities and connections. "

Jorge Luis Morejon

Mirrored Spaces

Jorge Luis Morejon and Anna Griffith in Mirrored Spaces


Jorge Luis Morejon. Solo RehearsalAcademy of Spherical Arts, La belle epoque.
Monday, April 7. Toronto, 2008
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Ana Griffith, Jorge Luis Morejon, Silvia Diaz Brown.
Adam Sherkin in the background. Rehearsal
Academy of Spherical Arts, La belle epoque.
Monday, April 7. Toronto, 2008.
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Jorge Luis Morejon, Ana Griffith,
Adam Sherkin and Silvia Diaz-Brown in Mirrored Spaces. (publicity picture)
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Mirrored Spaces was a collaborative performance work that expressed the way in which chance manifests in relationships. The characteristics of the lounge setting defined the performance idea. Manipulated by the dance of Chance, a duet between Passionate Man and Femme Fatale was expressed through the music of Per NØrgård, Wolfgang Rihm, Barbara Pentland, Avro Pärt and Luciano Berio.

The resultant work invited the audience to reflect upon the complexity of romantic relationships. It developed from the artistic interaction of pianist Adam Sherkin, cellist Angharad Parkes, costume and make-up designer Andrea Romero E. and dancer/choreographers Silvia Diaz-Brown, Ana Griffith and Jorge Luis Morejón. The piece derived its richness from melding the differing creative techniques, professional backgrounds and cultural influences of the collaborating artists.







The Acheli Chronicles/ Fall 2007

Jorge Luis Morejon. The Ashley Plays. Self-Performance.
July 24, 2007. 1 Webster Ave. Toronto. Ontario. Canada
Avatar. The Acheli Chronicles.
Photogrphy/ Judith Rudakoff. Fall 2007
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Jorge Luis Morejon collaborated with The Ashley Chronicles under the artistic direction and dramaturgy of Dr. Judith Rudakoff. The project consisted of a cycle of short-devised, site-specific performances. Each cycle began with the participants collaboratively delineating a profile of a non-gender specific character named Ashley. In the new The Acheli Chronicles, Ashley was trasformed in its phonetic Spanish equivalent, Acheli. She was still the focus of the work, but she appeared in the name of "Mercedes Bravo," a pseudonym for Acheli, who represented the voices of several Cuban women. On the Common Plants website, the audience moved through a virtual cycle of work and sites enacted through slide show images, text and audio clips. Jorge Luis Morejon gives voice to Mercedes Bravo and her meomories of a distant Cuba. There was no linear narrative, but rather a common theme: Home. " Jorge Luis Morejon invites you to share with him and other colleagues the Common Plants' cyber plays.
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Origins

Jorge Luis Morejon. Origins Project's rehearsal.
York University. Toronto, 2007
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Jorge Luis Morejon was one of the actors who participated in the September 11th, 2007, Origins Project at York University’s Joseph G. Green Studio, where they had the opportunity to create together a memorable night of ritual and magic. Origins aimed at reconnecting theatre with theatre’s ancient roots. The creative process involved getting together and sharing myths and stories of creation from different ancient cultures. In turn, these stories became the fabric of the performance that emerged as a result of the project’s workshop.
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"The content, though important, was not the most valuable thing that night. What was truly important for us, I feel, was that the essential purpose of theatre and performance was once again revealed. Before our eyes, we saw the wonders of community building, the importance of creating meaning, the different degrees of bonding, and a reviving atmosphere of solidarity, humanity and concern."
Jorge Luis Morejon

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Livejournal. Artlander. Escambray Country. July 2, 2008. http://jorgemorejon.livejournal.com/

Community Work, Toronto


Jorge Luis Morejon was invited by Christina Akrong, director of TheatrePeace of Toronto, a peace promoting theatre for children group, to be part of the Higher 5 Program at York University. Jorge Luis Morejon was responsible for introducing the visiting Elementary School children to the Performing Arts throuhg his drama/movement workshop. Bellow, there is a thank you letter from Jackie Robinson, the Westview Partnership Coordinator in the Faculty of Education at York University.

Higher 5:

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16 July 2007

Jorge Morejon
Theatre Studies
Faculty of Fine Arts

Dear Jorge

Thank you very much for your drama workshop on for the Higher 5 Program, part of the Westview Partnership. The mandate of the Partnership is to increase access to post secondary education and training for students living in the Jane-Finch community, many of whom experience systemic barriers to continuing in school.

Thirteen grade 5 classes from local elementary schools each participated in a full day of activities related to Ministry of Education curriculum expectations. Seventeen faculties and departments offered the teachers a choice from thirty five different lectures, tours and workshops, and every student received a tangible reminder of their visit -a lunch bag, piggy bank, pen, pencil, carabiner or lanyard donated by various faculties and departments.

Feedback from students, teachers and principals has been overwhelmingly positive. Many students wrote that they knew little or nothing about university before the Higher 5 visit and most were not aware they could study theatre. However, the post visit questionnaires have indicated a great deal of learning about post-secondary:

"I learned you can become many things in college and university."
"I got to learn what you do in university."
"I liked everything about [the visit] because it was interesting and fun... and it is a great place to learn."

Most students said the presentations they attended were interesting and that the only improvement to the experience would be to make it longer so they could see everything! The program appears to have increased both the students' knowledge of post secondary pursuits and, in the short term, their motivation to continue their education.

If you have comments or suggestions for improving Higher 5, please give me a telephone call or send me a note. Thank you again for participating this year and I look forward to working with you next spring. Building on what we have learned it should be possible to begin earlier and include even more children.

Sincerely


Jackie Robinson
Westview Partnership Coordinator
Faculty of Education
(416) 736-2100 x70323

La Pocha Nostra: Group Jamming Session

Jorge Luis Morejon. Stage Center. Group Jamming Session
Tucson, Arizona. La Pocha Nostra Workshop and Performance
Day 10: Saturday, August 11, 2007

Space, Time and Motion
By Perry Vasquez

Our final performance for the public will take place in two separate sites, inthe MOCA itself and also across the street where the administrative offices share space with a cluster of artists' studios in an industrial warehouse. Most of us organized into groups of two, three and four performance squads. But most of us also have solo performances to do after our collaborative ones are done.

We held our final Zapatista-style break out session today. All during the workshop, these sessions have given us a way to unload our minds with the many issues, ideas and contradictions that pile up by the end of our days. What’s worked really well is the way of converting the group’s feedback into a piece of collaborative writing that's read back to everyone. It’s one more way of doing a little mass creativity La Pocha style. The results have been polemic, poetic and sometimes incomprehensible.

After our Zapatista sessions we start getting ready for the show. This means practicing our moves, rehearsing transitions, doing the equipment checks and putting the final touches on our costumes and makeup or for some, getting a little sleep. The characteristics of the main performance site are rough and industrial. The walls are made out of brick, and the studio walls go about 7 feet high in a building with 15’ high ceilings. It feels very open. Exposed lights and conduits hang from the wood beamed ceiling. Cockroaches occasionally scuttle across the floor. There are theatrical lights were installed to illuminate the performance spaces as the sunlight fades.

As people have sought out locations in the building, performance universes have popped up all over the space. I have a good idea of what a few of those universes will contain, but mostly I am clueless about what the others are doing. Basically, our performance spaces break up into two different categories: primary and liminal. The primary spaces are large and centrally located. The liminal spaces tend to be smaller in scale and at the margins and edges of adjoining spaces. Therefore, our performance universes get determined to a large degree by the spatial restrictions we encounter or choose to deal with.
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Time and mood will also be organized in a specific way. The first hour will have slow, religious music playing. The second hour will have music with a slightly quicker tempo. And the final hour will have high-energy dance music. The timing of the music applies to our movements as well. In the beginning, the idea is to add gravity to our movements by slowing them down dramatically. As the performance progresses to the last hour we’ll have a group jamming session at full speed.

Dirty Indian

Jorge Luis Morejon's Dirty Indian.
MOCA /La Pocha Nostra. Tucson Arizona. August 11,2007

Dirty Indian was the result of a work in progress. During the performance for MOCA in Tucson, I decided to work with the Taino character from my previous Wet Feet/Dry Feet piece and create a dialogue between the image I presented to the audience, (a sort of hollywoodian savage), the historical stereotype of the “Indian” as dirty and stinky, and the invasive transformation of the hollywoodian Indian into a dirty and stinky one, through covering my skin with layers of mayonnaise, peanut butter, ketchup, mustard, fruit jams, chocolate butter, etc. The performance was durational. It lasted the full three hours, during which I kept on applying layers and layers of these very industrialized eatable products. The result was not at all glamorizing or sensual, even though I played with those problematic elements, on the contrary the hollywoodian Indian became gradually the historically stereotypically undesirable one. I presented the repulsive and disgusting site of a Taino erased by food brands, consumerism, artificial flavors, odors and colors, once again defeated not by weapons, but by a culture of comodification.

The Aeschylus Project

Women's Rehearsal of the Greek Chorus. Burton Auditorium. June 28Th, 2007
Jorge Luis Morejon. Entrance of one of the Eteocleans

Jorge Luis Morejon. Excerpt of one of Eteocles' monologues
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Seven Against Thebes: A Rehearsal in Evolution
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"Jorge’s participation in this project has been invaluable and he has made his own progress and gained his self-assertion, especially on stage. His work has power and dignity. "
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Regina Kapetanakis


The Aeschylus Project was a series of lectures and practical series of workshops involving movement and rehearsals of scenes from Seven Against Thebes, a play written by Aeschylus. The workshop focused on an examination of the ancient Greek chorus as envisaged by Aeschylus, the first major Greek tragedian, and as interpreted by the National Theatre of Greece and its foremost choreographer, Regina Kapetanakis. Two open rehearsals were presented at the conclusion of the five week workshop. Actors, dancers and musicians received the applause and recognition of the audience and the faculty present at the event.

"To the pioneer students of the Aeschylus project (...). I leave them all with fondest memories and with the gift of Thelxis (infatuation) of the theatre experience."
Regina Kapetanakis

"Where theatre is put into practice (...), our vision in action."
Don Rubin

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Regina Kapetanakis, in reference to the pictures, kindly wrote to Jorge:

"The one I like best is your Eteocles solo one, it is quite dramatic. I remember what an impact you made on the audience in general, especially your closing exit with the song."






The Ashley Plays/ July 16 to 22

Jorge Luis Morejon. Ashley Plays. Self Performance.
1 Webster Ave. Yorkville. Toronto. 2007

Jorge Luis Morejon was a collaborator of the project The Ashley Plays under the artistic direction of Dr. Judith Rudakoff. "The Ashley Plays is a cycle of short, devised site specific performances. Each cycle begins with the participants collaboratively delineating a profile of a non gender specific character named Ashley. Ashley must be the focus of the work, but need not be a character who appears. Each "play" is created at an assigned or chosen site. The plays in live performance are viewed in random order by roving pods of spectators. On the Common Plants website, the audience moves through a virtual cycle of work and sites enacted through short video, slideshow images, text and audio clips. Each Ashley cycle of work shares a date/year, and participants must research and be true to local, regional, national and global current events. The germination, evolution and performance of the cycles can take place in a twelve hour period or over months of development. There is no linear narrative, but rather a common theme: Home. " Jorge Luis Morejon invites you to share with him and other colleagues these cyber plays.

link: http://www.yorku.ca/gardens/html/

Common Plants: Blogarden

Jorge Luis Morejon's Blogarden avatar. Untitled (Self Performance )
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Jorge Luis Morejon writes for Common Plants, a project which connects distant and displaced communites from different parts of the world through artistic cyber work. Under the supervision of Doctor Judith Rudakoff at York University, this "Cross Pollinations in Hybrid Reality will cultivate the following principles: creative resources reside within the self; we must exercise our own voices, within our own context; to affect change, we must identify and articulate who we are, where we are and how we relate to our landscape; we must engage with and speak to those outside of our context for our message to be heard; listening is as important as speaking. This project lives in a garden, where cross-pollination is vital to survival: art is the last line of defence in the war against cultural obliteration." Jorge Luis Morejon invites you to share with him thoughts and ideas resulting from his own pollinations of hybrid realities.

link: http://jorgemorejon.livejournal.com/

Wet Feet/Dry Feet

Jorge Luis Morejon. Wet Feet / Dry Feet.
The Lab Sessions 1 .0. “Nodes & Naughty Codes.” Saturday, May 5th, 2007
http://www.labspacestudio.com/gallery/labSessions/index.php

Performance Artist: Jorge Luis Morejon Toronto.
York University. Accolade West. Room 009. Performance Art: Politics and Aesthetics. March 29, 2007

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Wet Feet / Dry Feet: Artistic Statement

Wet Foot/Dry Foot, a solo performance piece has three main parts, audiovisual, body and ritual. The role of video technology in this piece is to bring the urban scene into the performance space and ritual. The exploration of emotion is present in the ritual-like narrative piece. The images projected on the screen and the artist’s body moving in space, expressed through paper dolls, music, movement, soil and water convey a history of displacement and separation. The performance piece re-enacts the metaphorical past by constructing abstract images of displacement.

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The man in the video represents the urban need for grounding. In contrast, the loin clothed Taino embodies the emotion that results from his immediate immersion in the elements of earth and water. Both characters, the urban man and the Taino are intended to give the impression of being spiritually displaced. The idea of shared displacement allows the artist to explore the forging of a ritualized intimacy with the audience as he evokes the absence and ruptures of time and space through performance art.

Final Chapter

Team members in the making: from left to right, Vanessa Burns, Doug Chapman,
Peter Reynolds, Mona Waserman, Jorge Luis Morejon, and Nick Vitacco (center)
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Jorge Luis Morejon was a member of Final Chapter, a short film which was submitted to the 24 HR Toronto Film Challenge, the Spring of 2007. The 24 HR Toronto Film Challenge takes place once a year, and it invites filmmakers to write, produce and direct a film in twenty four hours. For the filmmakers who participate, the challenge implies overcoming technical obstacles and writing a good story to tell as they integrate the challenge pack shooting guerrilla style. In producer Chantal Leblanc-Everett's own words, "this is by far one of the most industrious festivals in existence." The challenge package for year 2007 was Do It Yourself as the theme, Doc/Mock as a genre, a coloured paint swatch for a prop and "Famous last words" for a line. Fingers Crossed Productions, the team that produced Final Chapter for the festival described their film as a "short-subject documentary , investigating the do-it-yourself alternative to commercial funeral homes and the controversy surrounding author Linda Lewis." The Fingers Crossed team was integrated by director Peter Reynolds, producer and actress Mona Waserman as Linda, actors Vanessa Burns and Doug Chapman as the couple, actor Jorge Luis Morejon as the funeral director, and Nick Vitacco as the corpse. The team was satisfied to witness that, out of 27 films, Final Chapter's humor was welcomed with continuos waves of laughter by the sympathetic festival audience.

Rebambaramba


Rebambaramba and Other Readings


This was Jorge Luis Morejon's second participation in La “Rebambaramba.” This time the event was the stage where Jorge Luis Morejon said goodbye to Miami by participating with a creative emsemble of dancers and actors in a dance piece. He shared the stage with his colleagues Kelly Hamilton, Rosanna Morronne and Nick Perez. La "Rebambaramba" invited also local poets and artists who got together to present their works created for the occasion and inspired by Fahrenheit 451 . The guests artists were, among others, Daína Chaviano, Germán Guerra, Nelly Torres, Jorge Luis Morejón, and Pedro Portal. Date and time - 13 May at 7:30 Following the tradition of the yearly event of The Center for Literary Arts, Miami Dade College at 7:30p.m. Place: Books & Books, Coral Gables. 2006.

Clytemnestra

Actress Rosanna Morrone in her solo Clytemnestra. Camera Obscura
Adapted and directed by Jorge Luis Morejon.
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Superbly performed by actress Rosanna Morrone, Clytemnestra was a solo performance adapted and directed by Jorge Luis Morejon for the Festival de Monologos produced by Havanafama Co., where Ms. Morrone received standing ovations. For its quality and power, Clytemnestra was also selected to be performed at the "Teatro a una Voz: Monologues and More" production of Havanafama. Commissioned by Armando Alfano, Clytemnestra was last performed in Italian at Soya & Pomodoro Restaurant's performance space for an all Italian audience in Miami, Florida, in 2006. Awarded with the audience's bravos, it was last performed the 12 of April, 2008, at Teatro Estudio Havana Fama, as part of the VII Festival Latinoamericano del Monologo, Miami, Florida.

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Critique: Theatre In One Voice Of Four Voices in Camera Obscura of Miami (translated excerpt)

Carlos Pittella TeatroMundial.com, Miami

"The spectacle “Teatro a una voz” had a variety of styles and forms which made it entertaining, but most of all attractive. There were presented four monologues with dignity and within the frame the space tries to offer. The first one was “Clytemnestra”, a segment of the Greek tragedy “Electra”, by Sophocles, interpreted by the Italian Rossana Morrone. The scene is the entrance of Clytemnestra, the widow of Agamemnon, who comes to confront Electra, her daughter. The knot of the monologue relies on the uncertainty of the mother due the torturous and horrific dream caused by the murder of her own husband. Electra manifests that it must be a very special sacrifice, and her answer is what fills up the monologue.

The actress' work is magnificent, and I clarify, it was in Italian. Yes, magnificent, giving a demonstration of what can be done with the body on stage, deserving of admiration. No doubt, it is noticeable the directorial work to which Morrone put herself through, because Jorge Luis Morejón, an accomplished modern dancer, influenced tremendously the aesthetic development of the spectacle through the actress whom definitely exhibited the totality of the montage. Her body expression is the main element that accompanies what we call a good voice, a blessing given to a “prima donna” as well as a dramatic actress, hence, to a person with the talent to command the sounds and know that with them she will communicate with force the smallest details, modulations and tones. That bundle of aesthetic manifestations, in this case, was called Rosanna Morrone. And a peculiar detail, the divisions in the textual units, those marking the differences in intention are signaled with a transition, and it is here (work and idea of Morejón, I suppose) that it was coupled by the use of a veil, which indicated and enforced the inner expression directed at the expectator. In summary, Rossana Morrone showed dignity and efficacy in her work, a pride of her director because according to my own reading of what I saw , it is indeed what Sophocles wanted to manifest in his "Electra, and if the after world exists, the great Greek man should have felt happy with this presentation of his play."

http://www.teatroenmiami.net/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=4240


Rabinal Achi

Rabinal Achi, adapted and directed by Jorge Luis Morejon. Publicity picture.
Actors: Rosanna Morrone, Daniel Lugo, Nick Perez, Martin Mayen

Rabinal Achí, Precolombian Theater
by Luis de la Paz, Diario de Las Américas (translation)

The only space for alternative theater in the city, Camera Obscura, is going into ancient forms of expression, through a fresh look, and full of cultural nuances to Rabinal Achí, a pre-Colombian drama, which goes back to the Mayans, more specifically towards those established on the territory of Guatemala.

Jorge Luis Morejon and Thelos Theater Group took the text that has come to our days, to offer a comprehensive show, which includes extensive dialogues through monologues, dance rituals, the use of masks, costumes in accordance with the time represented, in addition to the a successful musical arrangement of Alexandro Danko Sieth, which integrates the elements specific to the region, such as flutes and drums. The unification of these components, has resulted in a successful proposal.

The drama of Rabinal Achí is comparable, from the point of view of its significance, to the Popol-Vuh and the Chilam-Balam, which are part of the pre-Hispanic customs transmitted through word of mouth, until after colonization when early versions were made in writing. The tour started with Bartolo Sis' literary text in 1850 and then to abate Charles Etienne Brasseur of Bourbourg, collecting directly from the tragedy of Quiche, Rabinal Achí was published in Paris in 1862, a later versions in Spanish arrived.

The story notes that the warrior Cavek Queche spied for 260 days and 260 nights on the strength of Rabinal, to kidnap and bring in the Lord of Rabinal. Subsequently, the warrior Rabinal Achí rescued his lord and captured the enemy warrior. At this point begins the work proposed by Morejon, when Rabinal Achí comes with the prisoner and begins to establish an angry dialogue where the two contenders hurl allegations at each other, highlighting the fights and adventures of each, until the final outcome, when the the prisoner is executed.

Using arena theatre as a resource and without any sets, as props a cane, and a mesh mask, Jorge Luis Morejon put into operation a successful dramatic structure that is smooth and precise, despite being a repetitive text with little scenic movement.

The interpretive work of Martin Mayen and Nick Perez as warriors is well accomplished. The first is very expressive, with a strong voice and fury to the surface. In the other hand, Perez has to perform, nearly all his participation, crawling on the floor covered by a mesh. Still, he reaches height in his interpretation. The play is an act of an hour and a half long without a break. During the "intermediate" part of it, it is almost incidental when the actors move from Spanish language (the language it starts with at the beginning), to English. Although the transition flows naturally, I do not see the reasons for the play to be bilingual, meaning that one par is in one language and then the other.
The other two characters Chief Five Rain, interpreted by Daniel Lugo and Lady (Rossanna Morrone), work side by side, blending in the making, which has a high moment when all four players moving slowly, almost ceremonially, complemented each other by producing an increasing lamenting sound, which marks the end of the work.

Rabinal Achí is an integral and necessary work in our multi-ethnic city. It is a wise move to offer the public this truly unique work, which hardly will return to the stage.

Rabinal Achí , Cultural Space Camera Obscura, 1165 SW 6 Street.. Rabinal Achí, Espacio Cultural Camera Obscura, 1165 SW 6 Street. Friday and Saturday 8:30 pm and Sunday2:00 pm. Suggested Donation:$ 20.00

Go Tour

Advertisement card for the GoTour show in New York, 2004,
where Thelos Theatre Group Participated with Three Greek Women.
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Thelos of Miami will perform in NY with its spectacle 'Three Greek Women'(translation)
By Ernesto Hernadez
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"What do yo expect from this festival in New York?
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The festival has been created to give support to the independent artists community in the United States, from there it derives that, in artistic terms, the festival will serve as a platform to expose our work to the New York audience. Practically, it will put us on the map the festival is trying to create and that includes independent arts communities from all over the country. I also expect precisely all that the festival offers, that it will help us to to take control of our vision through sharing information with other participants and organize our own tours. The information includes the places, presenters and resources to which potentially we will have access to through our work in this festival. I hope that Thelos will bring high the name of our city. Yuya Dola, our direction assistant, will be in charge of the group during the festival. I hope for them to have a good time, to have fun, and for Three Greek Women to have the same success that it has had in Miami."
http://www.teatroenmiami.net/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2684
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Thelos in the Big Apple
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Thelos went to New York with Three Greek Women. This was Thelos’ first production and its first invitation to perform outside of Miami and outside of Camera Obscura. "T2K, nyc notebook" announced Three Greek Women, among other pieces, in the “Road Show," the Field's Gotour mini-fest at ps 122, July 5, 2005.
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Three Greek Women (excerpt) Thelos Theater Group (THEATER - Miami, FL):
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"Three Greek Women works from the classic Greek texts of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, intertwining the stories of Clytemnestra, Antigone and Medea to create a new story."
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On its front page T2K explains how the “selection of the 14 acts representing GoTour's first anniversary celebration was equally democratic: "they selected one another. In January, GoTour invited members to define on a personal level -- in 500 words or less -- what it means to be an independent artist.”
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T2K quotes Jorge Luis Morejon:
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"For some of us," writes Thelos' Jorge Luis Morejon, "the format of independent work is a real necessity and the only way possible to be genuine, real and artistically uncompromising."

Readings Without Censorship

Lecturas sin Censura,”(Readings Without Censorship) was a lecture given by founder of the Biliotecas Independientes de Cuba, Ramón Colás with presentations by Berta Mexidor, Jorge Luís Morejón, and Roberto Lozano hosted by the Cuban and Cuban-American Studies Center at the University of Miami, the Human Rights Foundation in Cuba, and Las Bibliotecas Independientes de Cuba, (Independent Libraries of Cuba) at Casa Bacardí, Coral Gables, Florida, Wednesday, April 28th, 2004.

Three Greek Women

Actresses Elisa Reig, Aymara Melo and Rosanna Morrone
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The Multicultural Space Camera Obscura marked an important chapter in the artistic development of Jorge Luis Morejon. He directed the performance space, located in the heart of Little Havana, Miami, Florida, from 2003 to 2005. The small black box allowed him and the actors he collaborated with to experiment, feel and live theatre in a different and unique way. Thelos Theatre was created simultaneously with Camera Obscura, a space that became the group’s home and the home of other groups with whom the space was shared. As a result of this fusion, the first play ever directed and produced by Jorge Luis Morejon in Camera Obscura was born, Three Greek Women, with the participation of actresses Rosanna Morrone, Elisa Reig and Aymara Melo. The following articles, critical reviews, interviews and letters are a reaction to the approximately 20 performances of the play in Miami and New York.

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A Good Proposal (translation)
By Jesús Hernández /Diario Las Américas

Like in ancient times, very ancient, in the V century BC, when the Greeks sang odes to the God Dionysus, a group of classic theatre admirers have gathered efforts in the name Thelos Group to represent what others would consider a failure in Miami; a play of the Greek tragic theatre. A piece that is titled "Three Greek Women," and that it is presented in a small cultural space, opened recently, named Camera Obscura, on 6 street, south west, 12th Avenue.
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The three women are three known heroines of Hellenic mythology; Medea, Antigone and Clytemnestra, whom without being characters of the same text or author, carrie misfortune and pain as common peculiarities.
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The concept is Jorge Luis Morejón's, an actor and e instructor of performing arts (who currently teaches at Prometeo school), that beginning with Esquilo's, Sófocles' y Euripides' classic texts, places the mystic characters in trial before Zeus, to expose their cases, defend them, and obtain the desired divine absolution to rest in piece.
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Three guilty souls wander in the infinite. They do not know tranquility because of the evils committed: Medea killed her children to hurt her husband who abandoned her for another woman, Antigone suffers her death, the suicide out disobedience of the king's decreet after having buried her brother, and Clytemnestra killed her husband Agamemnon, king of Mycenae, in revenge for the death of her daughter Iphigenia.
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The development of the plot equally manifests mankind's disilusion, the evolution of submission to a superior destiny, even to divine will, and the challenging of the dictates of the gods. Jorge Luis takes into account the eternal fate which characterizes the characters, but brakes the myth when he gives them an end which even though in accordance with the ancient dialogues, it reflects the redemption of women in times to come.
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Even more important that the final message, it is the effect this piece could cause on the spectator. If peculiar is the presentation of a classic Greek theatre passage in Miami, it is admirable the affinity of the actresses with the characters. Elisa Reig and Rossana Morrone practically debut in the great theatre with this piece and already show a moving connection. Aymara Melo comes from the Escuela Cubana Superior de Actuacion, where she was also successful.
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Jorge Luis succeeds in guiding the three actresses through the path of body movement and the impact of dramatization, which substantiated by the interpretation, the text and the momentum of choral expression, succeeds in differentiating one character from the other, in that way producing a useful communication with the audience without any other ambientation than the allegoric Greek music, the costumes, the darkness and an appropriate use of the light. It is a beneficial theatrical event that should be well received.
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Three Greek Women, Fridays and Saturdays, 8.00 pm, Camera Obscura Space, 1165 S.W. 6 Street, Miami, phone 305 324 4000, tickets $15 or $10 for students.

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Critical Review

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Three Greek Women: A Masterpiece in Originality and Talent
By: Maggie Ortiz
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The lights dim as the three women enter the stage; the audience is transfixed. There is no traditional script to hide behind, the script is written in the actresses’ movements and unforgettable facial expressions. Prior to the performance, Jorge Luis Morejon, Three Greek Women’s producer, director and choreographer, and the backbone of the Camera Obscura Cultural Space theater, tells the audience how over time, we have become far removed from the classics, and particularly from Greek literature and thought.
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Morejon’s introductory remarks are quite accurate; classical Greek themes are rarely a part of contemporary literature and theatrical productions.Throughout the Greek classics, archetypal images emerge. Within the tragedies and comedies are depicted our own human weaknesses and strengths. I recall an interview several years ago, where Bill Moyers asked the late great mythologist Joseph Campbell why the myths should matter to us, to which Campbell responded, “the myths are the literature of the spirit,” and indeed they are. According to Joseph Campbell: These bits of information from ancient times, which have to do with themes that have supported human life, built civilizations, and informed religions over the millennia, have to do with deep inner problems, inner mysteries, inner thresholds of passage, and if you don’t know what the guide-signs are along the way, you have to work it out yourself. But once the subject catches you, there is such a feeling, from one or another of these traditions, of information of a deep, rich, life-vivifying sort that you don’t want to give it up.[1][1]
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In Three Greek Women, beyond the power inherent within the Greek tragedies, is the powerful talent of the three superb actresses, Elisa Reig, Rosanna Morrone, and Aymara Melo. This multi-cultural ensemble, which includes a Spaniard, an Italian, and a Cuban, comprise what is perhaps some of the best talent I have yet to witness. They captivate everyone present with the sheer strength and energy they bring to their characters, leaving the audience spellbound, and eliciting a standing ovation.
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Jorge Luis Morejon’s outstanding direction is a true homage to the arts. The originality and vision of his work is reflected in each detail throughout the play. After the performance, I find myself making a mental list of everyone I would tell about the play, except it is Three Greek Women’s last night. Nonetheless, I am delighted to have found Camera Obscura, a place where talent abounds, and which I am certain I will visit again soon.
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1 Campbell, Joseph, The Power of Myth, Doubleday, New York, NY, 1988.

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Critique
By Christine Dolen/the Miami Herald
“Inside the black-box space called Camera Obscura, fresh dreams and ancient tragedies are being played out.The space once known as Little Havana's P.S. 742 has been rechristened and reopened, and it's now home to the maiden effort of the Thelos, Camera Obscura's resident theater company. Director Jorge Luis Morejon has created a piece titled Three Greek Women, merging music, movement and text drawn from the work of Sophocles, Euripides and Aeschylus, with Elisa Reig portraying Antigone, Rosanna Morrone as Clytemnestra and Aymara Melo as Medea.
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Morejon's experimental concept is that the three women -- Antigone, who defiantly buried her brother and then committed suicide; Clytemnestra, who murdered the adulterous Agamemnon; Medea, who repaid Jason's abandonment by murdering their children -- are on trial, with the gods as their judges. The actors play both the ''defendants'' and sorceresses relaying the gods' pronouncements.Reig, Morrone and Melo bring intense physicality into the barren space. They move in a tight knot then separate, pound their bodies, react to invisible torments. Because they're in beige costumes that blend with their skin tones, their expressive faces -- agonized, mournful, horrified -- seize and command attention.”

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The Miami Herald
4L Sunday, January 23, 2005

OPINION

Culturally Myopic

Re Herald theater critic Christine Dolen's ethnically intensive comment about the actresses' heavy accents in her Jan 17 review of Three Greek Women at Camera Obscura:

Is Dolen unaware that we all, she included, speak English with some sort of accent (Southern, Midwestern, Spanish)? Which should she have us believe is the correct accent for this work - a Greek one? In a nation in which the population grows more multiethnic, led in this change by places like Miami, comments like this are culturally myopic.

Richard Iacino, Miami
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Letters

Letter (e-mail) from actor and friend Horacio Lazo after having seen the last performance of Three Greek Women.
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Wed, 23 Mar 2005

Dear friends,

After attending your final performance of "Three Greek Women," the least I can do is to congratulate you. Not only for having presented a work of outmost quality, but for having dared to go against the current, for having given us that gift, for having started a path which, though perceived as long and arduous, I am sure it will make feel very proud. Not only of the work itself, but of what you have started.

At the beginning of the year, a journalist complained about theater in Miami always following the easy way of comedy, without daring to touch other audience's fibers needed to awaken in order to initiate that path. I am proud to be able to say that the initiators are my friends.

A hug,

Horacio

PS. I don't have the e-mails of the other members of this work. Please extend to them my congratulations.
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Thelos in the Big Apple

Thelos went to New York with Three Greek Women. This was Thelos’ first production and its first invitation to perform outside of Miami and outside of Camera Obscura. "T2K, nyc notebook" announced Three Greek Women, among other pieces, in the “Road Show," the Field's Gotour mini-fest at ps 122, July 5, 2005.
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Three Greek Women (excerpt) Thelos Theater Group (THEATER - Miami, FL):
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"Three Greek Women works from the classic Greek texts of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, intertwining the stories of Clytemnestra, Antigone and Medea to create a new story."
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On its front page T2K explains how the “selection of the 14 acts representing GoTour's first anniversary celebration was equally democratic: "they selected one another. In January, GoTour invited members to define on a personal level -- in 500 words or less -- what it means to be an independent artist.”
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T2K quotes Jorge Luis Morejon:
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"For some of us," writes Thelos' Jorge Luis Morejon, "the format of independent work is a real necessity and the only way possible to be genuine, real and artistically uncompromising."

http://www.theater2k.com/Notebook070505_Roadshow.htm

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Community Work

St. Sophia Cathedral Bulletin - January 30, 2005
Today 'Three Greek Women' a variation of the theatrical production donated by the Thelos Theater Group will be presented in the Hall after church Services.
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"Three Greek Women" is the result of a theatrical research project conceptualized, adapted and directed by Jorge Luis Morejon. Thelos Theatre, a new theater group that resides at Camera Obscura Cultural Space in Little Havana, has developed the work for performance.
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The piece compiles classic Greek texts of Aeschylus, Sophocles, as well as The Eumenides, The Libation Bearers, and Prometheus Bound. The play is an example of the Morejon's Exposition Style, which includes music, text, and movement, all combined in a way which allows for the stories of Clytemnestra( wife of Agamemnon, killed her adulterous husband to avenge the death of her daughter Iphigenia), Antigone (disobeying the king's edict buried her brother and then killed herself), and Medea 9after being abandoned by her husband for another woman, out of revenge, kills her children, his sons) to weave into a new story.
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Teatromundial.com

Excerpt of Jorge Luis Morejon's interview by Teatromundial
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Thelos of Miami will perform in NY with its spectacle 'Three Greek Women'(translation)
By Ernesto Hernadez
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"What do yo expect from this festival in New York?
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The festival has been created to give support to the independent artists community in the United States, from there it derives that, in artistic terms, the festival will serve as a platform to expose our work to the New York audience. Practically, it will put us on the map the festival is trying to create and that includes independent arts communities from all over the country. I also expect precisely all that the festival offers, that it will help us to to take control of our vision through sharing information with other participants and organize our own tours. The information includes the places, presenters and resources to which potentially we will have access to through our work in this festival. I hope that Thelos will bring high the name of our city. Yuya Dola, our direction assistant, will be in charge of the group during the festival. I hope for them to have a good time, to have fun, and for Three Greek Women to have the same success that it has had in Miami."

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