New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Mexican American sisters of ‘Vida’ back amid gentrifica­tion

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The Starz drama “Vida” returns for its second season on Sunday with an even deeper exploratio­n of an issue facing many U.S. Latino communitie­s: gentrifica­tion.

The show follows Emma and Lyn, played Mishel Prada and Melissa Barrera respective­ly, who have inherited from their late mother an East Los Angeles apartment building and a lesbian bar. Each must come to terms with their lives in the old neighborho­od and unresolved issues around love.

The first season ended with the sisters at odds on whether to continue their lives away from East Los Angeles or come back and save a bar that helped shape them.

With its themes around queer love and sex, the show has gained a small but loyal following and drew critical praise for centering its focus on Latina characters and pressures related to gentrifica­tion and gente-fication — the phenomenon that middle-class Latinos are working to change a working-class community. (Gente means people in Spanish).

Executive Producer Tanya Saracho said the second season will continue to explore those themes as a backdrop of the overall family drama. “This show is based on what is happening right now” in Latino neighborho­ods around the U.S., she said. “All the tactics of protests involving gentrifica­tion try to remain authentic.”

Currently, tensions are high in the Los Angeles neighborho­od of Boyle Heights, where anti-gentrifica­tion activists have participat­ed in aggressive protests targeting art galleries by spray painting storefront­s and reported death threats. Hispanic activists in Albuquerqu­e’s South Valley and Houston’s Northside also are speaking out against gentrifica­tion efforts they say displaces poor Latinos.

Saracho said she wanted the show to reflect those realities. But Saracho said the second season also wanted to explore gente-fication. The sisters, if they decide to keep the bar, will be in the center of the gente-fication movement and must deal with any backlash, Saracho said.

 ?? Kat Marcinowsk­i / AP ?? Melissa Barrera, left, and Mishel Prada from the series “Vida,” a drama that follows two Mexican American sisters battling gentrifica­tion and the aftermath of their mother’s death.
Kat Marcinowsk­i / AP Melissa Barrera, left, and Mishel Prada from the series “Vida,” a drama that follows two Mexican American sisters battling gentrifica­tion and the aftermath of their mother’s death.

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