Los Angeles Times

Power in joyous blast of music

A young woman’s poignant quest is set to vibrant tunes in SCR’s crowd-pleasing ‘American Mariachi.’

- By Daryl H. Miller

Music is magical. It multiplies people’s individual talents into a greater, more glorious form.

This goes a long way toward explaining the inspiratio­nal vibe of “American Mariachi,” a seriocomic tale wrapped in culture, tradition and music. The show launches a new season at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa, the first to be programmed by its new artistic director, David Ivers, and it sends a message about the ways in which he has said he hopes to deepen SCR’s connection­s to the community, in all of its diversity.

To judge by audience response, the show is performing as expected. As the story reached its culminatio­n at an opening weekend matinee, the sniffles of emotional theatergoe­rs mingled with vibrant mariachi music, and the room rang with applause.

It’s hard to resist mariachi tunes, with their insistent rhythms and invigorati­ng tempos. They quicken the pulse of this show in ways that the story rarely does. Even at a brief 97 minutes, the presentati­on is a bit of a slog because viewers can predict the ending before the action has properly begun.

That doesn’t seem to be hindering José Cruz González’s family-friendly play, however. It was introduced in early 2018 at Denver Center for the Performing Arts, where it was commission­ed and developed, then seen at the Old Globe in San Diego. It has since been staged in Arizona, with Chicago and Dallas production­s scheduled.

Folding relatable domestic hardships into a narrative about self-actualizat­ion and empowermen­t, “American Mariachi” takes place in the mid-1970s in a workingcla­ss Chicano household. Lucha (Gabriela Carrillo), who’s in her early 20s, is a nursing student whose studies are increasing­ly overwhelme­d by taking care of her mother (Diana Burbano), who is receding into dementia.

By chance, Lucha plays a mariachi recording that momentaril­y awakens Mom’s memory and restores her luster. When the irreplacea­ble vinyl gets broken, Lucha resolves to learn mariachi so that she can re-create the song. She’ll pull together an all-female band, she decides, although mariachi at the time is still a thoroughly male endeavor — a roadblock given human form in her father (Mauricio Mendoza), himself a mariachi, who has old-school attitudes about women’s roles.

Profession­al musicians deliver most of the mariachi tunes, all but a couple of which are culled from existing repertoire, while the actors convincing­ly grow into their instrument­al duties. The singing is particular­ly exhilarati­ng, especially when the female mariachis soar into shimmering harmony.

Comic moments that seem over-the-top to viewers steeped in the U.S. devotion to realism might not necessaril­y read that way to other theatergoe­rs, whose shouts and guffaws reveal a fondness for the broader, more Latin American-style approach. Dia de los Muertos imagery lends a visual kick as well as a cultural touchstone.

The playwright’s associatio­n with SCR stretches to the mid-1980s. Most prominentl­y, he created its Hispanic Playwright­s Project, a script-developmen­t program that he ran for a decade. He’s also a theater educator, having recently retired after 30 years of teaching at Cal State L.A.

His new show appears to have sparked a joyful collaborat­ion among director Christophe­r Acebo, music director Cynthia Reifler Flores, a dynamic ensemble of 14 and a detail-focused team of designers (bonus style points go to costume designer Kish Finnegan for her vintage-looking bell bottoms and the women’s stunning, floral-embroidere­d mariachi ensembles).

The young women of “American Mariachi” are eager to change 1970s society so they’ll have equal access to whatever they dream of doing. As they learn mariachi, they are trained in how to make that happen: by embracing discipline and delighting in discovery as they work to create something bigger than themselves. That’s music in action.

 ?? Jordan Kubat SCR ?? A WOMAN (Gabriela Carrillo) defies convention in SCR’s “American Mariachi.” With Mauricio Mendoza, left, and Andrew Joseph Perez.
Jordan Kubat SCR A WOMAN (Gabriela Carrillo) defies convention in SCR’s “American Mariachi.” With Mauricio Mendoza, left, and Andrew Joseph Perez.

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