South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Actor’s odyssey from Cuba to stage, screen and Zoom

Fort Lauderdale soap, movie star featured in ‘Borrowed’ reading for Broadway Virtual

- By Christine Dolen ArtburstMi­ami.com

Rene Lavan is an actor with range, charismati­c sensitivit­y and the kind of evolutiona­ry ability that buoys a long career.

The likelihood of achieving crossover success in such a glamorous world would probably have seemed unfathomab­le at the most dramatic moment of his young life in 1980. That’s when 11-year-old Rene Lavandera, his parents and younger brother Rey left Cuba for a new life in Miami during the Mariel boatlift.

Born in 1968 in Artemisa, southwest of Havana, Lavan spent each Sunday through Friday during his Cuban childhood at a school where ideologica­l lessons, working the fields and military training constitute­d the curriculum. But on one memorable day, his parents tricked him into leaving school by saying his grandmothe­r was in the hospital.

“They took a cab to the place you had to be to take the boat, and you had to be very discreet,” Lavan remembers, his voice growing thick with emotion. “The cab drove in front of my grandmothe­r’s house. My dad was crying because he couldn’t say goodbye.”

Though Lavan spoke not a word of English when his family arrived in Miami, he worked hard to learn the language and lose his accent, becoming an on-air radio talent at Power 96 (WPOW-FM) by the late ’80s.

“I submerged myself in Miami’s English-speaking culture,” says Lavan, who lives in Fort Lauderdale with wife Amanda and their 13-year-old identical twin sons, Luca and Julian. He transition­ed into the innovative high school-college Performing and Visual Arts Center (PAVAC) magnet program, then graduated from Miami’s New World School of the Arts in 1988.

Success came quickly to the bilingual artist.

His lengthy resume includes: soap opera and telenovela hottie (“One Life To Live,” “Morelia,” “Enamorada” and “Maria Belen”); breakout movie star (director Leon Ichaso’s tragic “Azucar Amarga”); Hollywood actor (“Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights” and “Christmas with the Kranks”); and TV performer (“CSI: Miami,” “The Glades,” “Burn Notice,” “Every Witch Way” and “Hialeah”). Most recently, Lavan appeared in the 2020 indie movie, “El Ultimo Balsero,” which is now making the rounds of film festivals.

Although Lavan’s work in theater has been less frequent, he made his Broadway debut in late 2005 in “Latinologu­es.” During the long Miami run of Vanessa Garcia’s hit immersive play, “The Amparo Experience,” in 2019, he stepped into the roles of both Havana Club Rum scion Ramon Arechabala and Bacardi sales manager Juan Prado.

Now the actor is trying theater of a different sort. He’s starring alongside Tim Creavin in a recorded Zoom reading of “Borrowed,” the playwritin­g debut of Broadway producer Jim Kierstead. The play is streaming through Oct. 29 on Broadway Virtual’s YouTube channel, with part of the $10 ticket price benefiting the nonprofit Humanity Project.

Plans are also in the works for a post-election “official” showing of “Borrowed” at Drive-In at the Fair, a movie-concert venue in a parking lot on the Miami-Dade Youth Fairground­s.

Produced by Kierstead’s frequent producing partner, William Fernandez, along with Adriana Gaviria and George Cabrera, the virtual “Borrowed” reading was directed by Conor Bagley, Creavin’s former Yale University classmate.

Most recently, Fernandez, Kierstead, Gaviria and Bagley teamed up for the Broadway On Demand streamed reading of “Jenna and the Whale” by South Florida playwright­s Garcia (“Amparo”) and Jake Cline. On Oct. 15, Fernandez and Kierstead were among the groups of producers who received 2020 Tony Award nomination­s – best play for Matthew Lopez’s two-part “The Inheritanc­e,” and best revival for Terrence McNally’s “Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune.”

“Borrowed” takes place in a bungalow on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River, near the George Washington Bridge. David (Lavan), a lonely older artist whose face bears the scars of cancer surgery, has connected with the younger Justin

(Creavin) online, inviting him over with a sexual connection in mind. But things quickly go south, and after David refuses to let Justin leave, their encounter evolves into an intense evening of shared histories and, perhaps, the beginnings of healing.

Kierstead, the show’s multifacet­ed author, has a master’s degree in computer science, and another in clinical and counseling psychology. He got into producing theater 20 years ago and has had an increasing­ly active Broadway and regional career. His original impulse to try playwritin­g came after he saw a play on Broadway that he thought was just plain bad.

“I wrote ‘Borrowed’ on long flights to California and Chicago when I was producing ‘Kinky Boots,’” says Kierstead, who originally put the pseudonym “Jack Allen” on the script because he didn’t want those with whom he shared it to be reluctant to criticize it or influenced into producing it. “When people read it, they had two reactions. They asked, ‘This didn’t happen to you, did it?’ (It didn’t.) Or they thought it was so haunting.”

The character of David is a Vietnam veteran who married, raised a troubled son and later embraced his sexual orientatio­n. Though the role wasn’t written specifical­ly to be played by a Latino actor, Kierstead calls Lavan “really amazing.”

“He’s very warm, very kind and obviously a very good actor … He’s got to walk a fine line, being threatenin­g without being too scary, and vulnerable without being too vulnerable.”

Gaviria was moved by what Creavin and Lavan brought to their roles in the play’s filmlike reading.

“There’s a playfulnes­s when you see Tim portraying Justin, because that’s how the character has learned to survive,” she says. “With René, especially when there are deep emotions involved, he just jumps right in. That’s gold right there. He’s a very open, warm, intelligen­t actor. In someone else’s hands, David wouldn’t be as appealing. You wouldn’t care as much.”

Plenty of Lavan’s varied work has been in mainstream entertainm­ent, but he has also been a risk-taker, particular­ly when a project and his own history intersecte­d, as with “Azucar Amarga.” In his breakout movie, he played Gustavo, a fervent supporter of Fidel Castro’s government until the experience­s of his family and the woman he loves lead to his disillusio­nment, with tragic results.

“I was doing ‘One Life to Live’ when I got a call from Leon Ichaso about making a movie set in Cuba … When I read the script, it was in English, and it was so powerful – I thought, ‘I need to do this,’” says Lavan.

Ultimately shot in Spanish and in gritty black-and-white, the movie was made in just over a week with locations in the Dominican Republic and New York. On set, Levan discovered that among the props were history books brought from Cuba. They brought back memories of his pre-Mariel boyhood.

“It’s one thing to feel you were betrayed,” he says. “It’s another to have the evidence.”

Lavan hasn’t been back to Cuba since he and his family left in 1980. But last year’s “Amparo,” his first experience with immersive theater, became a kind of emotional passport connecting past and present.

“To see a grandson walk his grandparen­ts through ‘the revolution,’ it bridged the generation­s. You saw what it was like to lose your freedom like that. The story was magic, beautiful … And that final monologue, in the middle of the audience, was like a hybrid of film and theater,” he says. “I read it. I lived it. It was in my skin. Every night was such a soulcleans­ing experience. In doing all those shows, I must have cried 5,000 gallons of tears.”

Borrowed” virtual

reading

Through Oct. 29

Buy tickets at 3feo.com and a link will be emailed. Tickets are good anytime through Oct. 29.

$10; part of the proceeds will benefit The Humanity Project.

ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of theater, dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.

 ?? ADRIANA GAVIRIA ?? Tim Creavin (top) and Rene Lavan have a contentiou­s relationsh­ip in the streamed reading of Jim Kirstead’s “Borrowed.”
ADRIANA GAVIRIA Tim Creavin (top) and Rene Lavan have a contentiou­s relationsh­ip in the streamed reading of Jim Kirstead’s “Borrowed.”

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