Vancouver Sun

Like father, like son

- PETER MARKS

The inspiratio­nal path from Luis A. Miranda Jr. to Alexander Hamilton was surprising­ly short for Lin-Manuel Miranda. “My dad came to the mainland at 18 on a scholarshi­p,” Lin-Manuel was saying the other day, ticking off some of the parallels he discovered between his father and the American Revolution­ary figure he would turn into a hiphop musical sensation.

“This guy was so relentless, he wanted to get out of where he was,” he said, quickly managing to confuse a listener as to which man he was talking about.

“He accomplish­ed the task and, for me, that's what helped on a subconscio­us level: `I know this guy. I can write this.'”

The occasion for this rumination was the launch of yet another Miranda-intensive project — only this one revolves not around the son, but the father. Siempre, Luis (Always, Luis) is a new HBO documentar­y, directed by a close family ally, John James, that records the journey through time, politics and culture of Luis Miranda, who became a potent force in New York City's Puerto Rican community and a power player in the city's political inner circles.

The son's fame, heightened by the global success of Hamilton, no doubt jump-started public interest in the story of the father — who in turn has emerged as an important partner in the son's ever-expanding entertainm­ent universe.

During a joint interview with his dad, the 40-yearold Lin-Manuel said Hamilton had “supercharg­ed” his relationsh­ip with the 66-year-old Luis, propelling his father from the sidelines of his career to “playing full tackle.”

“One of the sources of tension,” Lin-Manuel added, laughing, “was that he comes over to just be the granddad and play with my kids, and he says: `I just have to talk to you about these 10 things.'”

You get the sense from the 95-minute film that the driven Lin-Manuel, who premièred his first Broadway musical, In the Heights, at 28, is the more laid-back of the two. The movie explores Luis's early life in Puerto Rico, his time in the administra­tion of New York City's then-mayor Edward Koch and especially the father-son efforts that brought Hamilton to San Juan in the aftermath of hurricane Maria.

James, the filmmaker, befriended Luis several years ago while working with him at a New York political strategy group.

In late 2016 or early 2017, he began following Luis around with a camera.

“I said, `That might be a good idea, he has a good story,'” Luis's daughter Luz recalled.

James records Lin-Manuel asking his father whether he considers his two biggest achievemen­ts to have been managing the unsuccessf­ul 2001 mayoral campaign of then-Bronx Borough president Fernando Ferrer and bringing Hamilton to Puerto Rico.

It's an interestin­g juxtaposit­ion. What the two episodes share is one man's efforts to be the conduit for the completion of another man's vision. But each is also rooted deeply in Luis's own aspiration­s: to help realize the political power of a Puerto Rican politician on the mainland, and to bring help back to a devastated island he loves.

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