Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Sebastian Zurita gets into character

- By Jae-Ha Kim For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

Actor Sebastian Zurita views his hometown of Mexico City as another character on his Amazon Prime Spanish-language scripted series, “How to Survive Being Single” (“Como Sobrevivir Soltero”). Splitting his time between Mexico and the United States, Zurita, 33, traveled frequently prior to the coronaviru­s pandemic and said the destinatio­n was less important than his traveling companions. “I truly believe a dream trip comes from the people you are with and the type of trip you are making,” Zurita said. “Anything with friends without having to rush. I hate rushing.”

Q. What is your favorite vacation destinatio­n? A. I have this secluded little place that I go to at least once a year called La Ventana in Baja California Sur. It’s a kite surfer’s paradise, where the desert mountains meet the Sea of Cortez. It’s amazing! It’s a small town where there is almost no cell service. The food is amazing, the people are warm, and you get to kite all day. It’s my little retreat from the world.

Q. To someone who was going there for the first time, what would you recommend that they do during their visit?

A. Get into one of those little hotels by the beach. Kurt N’ Marina is one of them. After you settle, find out where they are having the nightly event, go meet some new people and find someone to teach you how to kite surf. Eat somewhere new every day, too.

Q. What untapped destinatio­n should people know about?

A. I feel like people should take a bit of a road trip through Ensenada to get to Cabo Pulmo to scuba dive and then finish at Valle de Guadalupe for some amazing wine. I’m sure you will thank me for that.

Q. What was the first trip you took as a child? A. We have a family tradition where every winter we travel to different parts of the world. We have gone to Australia, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Russia, Italy, Paris, Brazil, Argentina. You name it. But some of my first trips definitely were to Acapulco in the 1980s. We used to spend most of our summers there and we loved it.

Q. What’s the most important thing you’ve learned from your travels?

A. Traveling is the best way to spend your money. You create lifelong experience­s, enjoy different cultures and grow as a person. Whether you choose to do it alone or with someone, it’s always rewarding and every experience is different.

Q. Where are your favorite weekend getaways?

A. It depends on the season, but Acapulco or Tulum if we are talking Mexico. Here in Los Angeles, I’d say Yosemite.

Q. If you’ve ever gone away for the holidays, which was the best trip?

A. One of the most recent ones was traveling from Hong Kong all the way down to China and then heading to Cambodia. We touched a bunch of places — Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore. That was an amazing experience! Also, we made a road trip through New Zealand and that was mind blowing.

Q. Do you speak any foreign languages? And on the same train of thought, do you pick up new languages easily?

A. I speak English and Spanish. I can dabble in French and Italian so I can’t be that bad!

Q. What kind of research do you do before you go away on a trip?

A. Extensive! (Laughs) I like a good balance of comfort traveling and improvisat­ion, though.

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ANTAR HANIF PHOTO

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