Chicago Sun-Times

LESSONS FROM PROF. LEGUIZAMO

The actor-writer shares what he’s learned about his people’s past in the one-man show ‘Latin History for Morons’

- BY MARY HOULIHAN

Anyone who has seen John Leguizamo’s autobiogra­phical one-man shows knows that his mind and his mouth go a mile a minute. Each of these pioneering and very funny pieces — “Mambo Mouth,” “Spic-O-Rama,” “Freak,” “Sexaholix” and “Ghetto Klown” — dug into Leguizamo’s life as the son of Colombian immigrants and his observatio­ns of the people and the world around him.

In his most recent solo show, Leguizamo dives into history — more specifical­ly the Latin history missing from school textbooks. “Latin History for Morons” is a Leguizamo-fueled riff begun as the antidote to the bullying his then 12-year-old son (now a student at Vassar College) experience­d in middle school.

“I wanted to arm him with facts and informatio­n about Latin contributi­ons and Latin heroes,” Leguizamo recalls. After a look through his son’s history textbook, he says he found “not one name, not one mention, not one chapter that I could use, and I was outraged.”

In the 90-minute “Latin History for Morons,” Leguizamo plays the role of professor as he wends his way through 3,000 years of history from Aztec and Incan culture to overlooked contributi­ons of Latin patriots in the Revolution­ary and Civil Wars and beyond. It’s a satirical history lesson embedded with his trademark brand of humor; he’s convinced that’s the only way to get this sort of message through to people.

“Even my people won’t listen to history unless it’s funny and visual. It’s sort of like kombucha; it has to be perfectly brewed,” he says with a laugh.

As in his past shows, Leguizamo impersonat­es a variety of characters, ranging from Andrew Jackson and Alexis de Tocquevill­e to members of his family, the school principal, the bully and more.

The concept of the show began with a lot of research, a lot of reading books that led him to other books. Among them were Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States,” Charles Mann’s “1491: New Revelation­s of the Americas Before Columbus,” and his favorite, Eduardo Galeano’s “Open Veins of Latin America,” in which the author analyzes the history of the Americas as a whole.

“It’s the shortest of them all, but as Isabel Allende says, you have to read each chapter at least five times, and she is not overstatin­g that,” Leguizamo says.

Along the way, he discovered unsung heroes and unrecogniz­ed patriots and all the things they’ve done to build America and the world. It was a mind-blowing, lifechangi­ng lesson, says Leguizamo, who was

born in Bogota and raised in New York City, where he still lives.

“It made me feel like being Latin was a superpower,” he says. “We’ve survived so much abuse, so much violence, so much genocide and exploitati­on and yet continued to give so much to the world.

“I’ll never be the same after this,” he adds with conviction. “I’ll never feel less than. I’ll never be made to feel like a second-class citizen as long as I live. They can’t take away my knowledge.”

Leguizamo’s first one-man show, 1990’s “Mambo Mouth,” was created in response to the limited options he experience­d when he tried to break into film and was only getting cast as drug dealers, killers and servants. He says he saw “no real Latin representa­tion anywhere.”

“I thought, wait a minute, I see all these amazing people in my life every day around the city being funny, being political. It was so deep and rich but they were nowhere to be seen on stage or in film. So I started creating what I wanted to see.”

Since those days, he also has forged a long and successful film and TV career, most recently in Ava DuVernay’s “When They See Us,” in which he plays Raymond

Santana Sr., the father of one of the four young men falsely accused of rape in the Central Park Five case.

“I would have paid to be in it,” he says. “I think it’s one of the most important pieces of work in a long time to show that art can be transforma­tive and change things.”

Leguizamo’s newest ventures include a co-starring role with John Cena and Keegan-Michael Key in the film “Playing With Fire,” opening Nov. 8, and he’s also part of the writing team behind the irreverent musical comedy “Kiss My Aztec,” which recently finished California runs at Berkeley Repertory Theatre and the La Jolla Playhouse and is headed to New York’s Public Theatre and hopefully to Broadway.

“It’s a super funny history of the Aztecs,” he says. “It’s like ‘The Book of Mormon’ meets ‘Avenue Q’ meets ‘In the Heights.’ ”

What keeps him coming back to live theater as a writer and performer?

“The stage is the place that has allowed me to be the most me, the most true to myself without redaction, without censorship. I can just be me and I’m so grateful for that.”

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 ?? MICHAEL MURPHY ?? John Leguizamo in a scene from “Latin History for Morons.”
MICHAEL MURPHY John Leguizamo in a scene from “Latin History for Morons.”
 ??  ?? ABOVE: John Leguizamo plays the father of a rape suspect in “When They See Us.” NETFLIX
ABOVE: John Leguizamo plays the father of a rape suspect in “When They See Us.” NETFLIX
 ?? PROVIDED PHOTO ?? LEFT: Leguizamo’s autobiogra­phical one-man shows include “Sexaholix” (2002).
PROVIDED PHOTO LEFT: Leguizamo’s autobiogra­phical one-man shows include “Sexaholix” (2002).

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