La Llorona

The La Llorona story is similar to the Greek Medea myth. La Llorona means "woman who cries." Though there are variations to this story, the oldest oral versions can be traced to the 1500s, when the Spanish conquistadors took the country now called Mexico. They married the Indian women and were very proud of their offspring, aware they were starting a new breed. In this play, a Spaniard, who has lived peacefully in the jungles with his new family, must return to Spain. He plans to take his wife and children with him, but his relatives in Spain won't hear of it. They consider the Indians worthless savages with no place in their society. After some debate, his family consents to his bringing only the children since they, at least, are half Spanish. The soldier tells his Indian wife. Devastated and crazed that her children are to be taken away, La Llorona kills them so her husband cannot have them. Realizing what she has done, she runs through the streets screaming and crying. The Spaniard returns home, disconsolate.

Produced by 10 min play Festival at Williamstown Theatre Festival

CAST

Lauren Rexach, Skylar Okerstrom-Lang, , Sonia Joffe , Lily DiSilverio & Jake Zeranko (musician/ composer)

PRODUCTION TEAM

Set Design: Daniel Russo, Costume Design: Trey Gray, Lighting Design: Qier Luo. Photos by Carolyn Brown


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“I look forward to exploring, expanding, and physicalizing the essence of the text to highlight the character’s states of mind. My work provoke the audience to submerge into the darkest and purest places of the psyches of each character and the play.”

— Andrés López-Alicea