Los Angeles Times

Reaching for one’s true love

Boni B. Alvarez’s ‘Fixed’ reflects on identity, acceptance

- By Daryl H. Miller daryl.miller@latimes.com Twitter: @darylhmill­er

The remarkable new play “Fixed” is set in a drag ball culture where “realness” is prized. To an outsider, that might seem an odd word to ascribe to what seems a world of illusion, but to the participan­ts it can be more truthful than the strict gender roles of social conformity.

As entertaini­ng as it is thoughtpro­voking, the play, presented by Echo Theater Company in Atwater Village, percolates with ideas about identity and diversity, conveyed through a tale of two people who might find love if the world would just leave them alone. It’s written by a Los Angeles playwright who’s headed nowhere but up: Boni B. Alvarez, whose previous plays include “Ruby, Tragically Rotund” and “Dallas Non-Stop.”

The piece is inspired by a 1637 Spanish drama by one of the greats of that era — Pedro Calderón de la Barca — called “The Physician of His Own Honor,” though that “Othello”like tale of an honor killing “might be hard to spot at this point,” Alvarez said at a recent after-performanc­e talk. The drag balls are the sort recorded in the documentar­ies “Paris Is Burning” (1990) and “Kiki” (2016) and taking place in L.A. and other cities today.

The story begins at a ball where ethereal figures, diaphanous and sparkling, move like fashion models and bust some serious dance moves. Two of them lift a third, who trails a gauzy train, looking like an angel taking wing.

This heavenly creature is Miracles (Chris Aguila), who works as a crossdress­ed masseuse in an L.A. parlor among other young Filipinos and Latinos (Allen Lucky Weaver and Tonatiuh Elizarrara­z). The business’ no-nonsense mother figure (the playwright, Alvarez, lips pursed into a ferocious frown) is also matriarch of the drag-ball “house” with which the workers perform.

Miracles is in love with the macho yet soulful Mariano (Wade AllainMarc­us), who is often absent.

Their relationsh­ip is complex, to say the least. Miracles has been seeking gender reassignme­nt because Mariano once said that things would be easier if Miracles were a woman. Whether Mariano meant this literally is not clear, nor is the question of whether Miracles is truly transgende­r. For his part, Mariano insists he’s not gay.

They defy categories, which makes nearly everyone around them nervous.

Seeing how misunderst­ood they are even among compatriot­s, we realize how compounded the situation is in the larger world.

A runway extends through the audience, so we never entirely leave the balls, even when the action takes place elsewhere (design by Amanda Knehans). The marvelousl­y detailed clothes (by Michael Mullen) convey volumes about the people wearing them.

Director Rodney To shapes the story with tremendous variety and specificit­y. His extraordin­ary cast — every performer filling a role to aT — includes Joseph Valdez, Renee-Marie Brewster, Adrian Gonzalez and Anna Lamadrid, all contributi­ng vivid texture to the secondary plots.

As Miracles and Mariano try to find their way, their situation touches on issues of community, family, honor, self-worth and more. The script reaches wide, and though it doesn’t always express itself clearly, it sparks thoughts that keep bubbling up days afterward.

Miracles displays rare courage in pursuing love in no uncertain terms and insisting, “Me and Mariano, that’s God’s work.”

 ?? Darrett Sanders ?? MIRACLES (Chris Aguila, left, shown with Allen Lucky Weaver) is a hopeful soul.
Darrett Sanders MIRACLES (Chris Aguila, left, shown with Allen Lucky Weaver) is a hopeful soul.

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