Chicago Sun-Times

TEENAGE TRIUMPH

Young heroes of ‘ Beautiful North’ take cues from epic tales

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN Catey Sullivan is a local freelance writer.

EFor the Sun- Times pic quest stories are nothing new — from “Don Quixote” to “The Magnificen­t Seven” to “The Lord of the Rings,” tales of unlikely heroes conquering all in order to save the world, their country or themselves are familiar to anyone with even a glancing interest in movies, novels or theater.

With “Into the Beautiful North,” Berwyn’s 16th Street Theater mines the tropes of a familiar form while revolution­izing it for a 21st- century audience. Instead of errant cowboys and woeful knights, we get heroes in the form of resilient, resourcefu­l teenage Mexican girls.

Co- directed by Miguel Nunez and Ann Filmer, Karen Zacarias’ adaptation of Luis Alberto Urrea’s epic novel hews closely to the original source in creating a world that’s both intensely specific and enduringly universal. The young protagonis­ts might be on a quest to save their tiny town from drug trafficker­s, but their pluck and smarts wouldn’t be out of place in the New England of “Little Women” or Panem of “The Hunger Games.”

At first glance, Urrea’s book isn’t a likely candidate for stage adaptation. It’s packed with more than 100 characters and covers thousands of miles as its heroes voyage back and forth from a tiny Mexican village to Kankakee, Illinois. Nunez and Filmer manage to capture both the vast scope of the story and the singular details that make it unique. Their eight- person ensemble throws its collective heart into the staging, delivering a drama that feels like it features a cast of hundreds.

The sweeping plot begins as Nayeli, a teenage waitress, her boss Tacho and her best friend Vampi vow to save their town from an incursion of brutal narcotraff­icantes. Nayeli’s plan is to journey to the United States to find her long absent father, who will lead a charge of “seven magnificen­t men” to defeat the cartel. She carries his postcard — date- stamped from Kankakee — like a talisman.

As Nayeli, Ilse Zacharias is a formidable presence — and not just because the char- acter is ferociousl­y good at karate. Zacharias captures the wide- eyed innocence of a young woman who has never traveled beyond her hometown and the fierceness of a born warrior. Her evolution is subtle but unmistakab­le. Without indulging in spoilers, Nayeli’s ultimate, radiant triumph lies in her own selfdiscov­ery as much as her battle with the narcos.

Nayeli’s fellow travelers are equally memorable. As the ultra- goth girl Vampi, Allyce Torres is the sharpedged cynic to Nayeli’s boundless optimism. Vampi undergoes changes as profound as Nayeli, and Torres makes them visible both outwardly and inwardly.

Filmer and Nunez did well in luring former Chicagoan Esteban Andres Cruz back from L. A. for the production. As Tacho, Cruz serves up a mix of vulnerabil­ity and don’t- mess- with- me strength, giving the unapologet­ically gay Tacho a spine of steel.

Zacharias leads the ensemble, but its undeniable anchor is Laura Crotte as Nayeli’s aunt Tia Irma. Irma is both the mayor of Tres Camerones and Mexico’s reigning bowling champ — both of which are altogether believable in Crotte’s unabashedl­y sensuous and uncompromi­singly imperious Irma. It’s a powerhouse performanc­e that may well leave you wishing Tia Irma were real and considerin­g a run for office Stateside.

For all the triumphant joy bursting from “Into the Beautiful North,” the production doesn’t shy away from the violence and danger that often await those who try to cross from Mexico into the U. S. without proper papers. There’s a tunnel scene that will make you feel like you’ve been buried alive, and a gaybashing scene that’s difficult to watch. In trying to escape rape and murder at the hands of the Mexican narcos, Nayeli and her cohorts run headlong into hate crimes north of the border.

There are no fancy production values in “Into the Beautiful North.” Joanna Iwanicki’s minimalist set design is a series of rustcolore­d, correlated walls that slide and open to imply buses, restaurant­s, mountain tops and the massive, foreboding “border fence” that stretches along the boundary between Mexico and the U. S.

Minus the frills, “Into the Beautiful North” relies almost exclusivel­y on human feats of storytelli­ng. Those are in ample evidence here, and that’s a beautiful thing.

 ??  ?? Ilse Zacharias ( from left), Miguel Nunez and Esteban Andres Cruz star in “Into the Beautiful North” at 16th Street Theater.
| ANTHONY AICARDI
Ilse Zacharias ( from left), Miguel Nunez and Esteban Andres Cruz star in “Into the Beautiful North” at 16th Street Theater. | ANTHONY AICARDI

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