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Revival of ‘Anna in the Tropics’ brings South Florida Pulitzer winner’s play to vibrant life

- By Christine Dolen ArtburstMi­ami.com is a nonprofit source of dance, visual arts, music and performing arts news.

In his best-known play, Nilo Cruz blends vivid imagery, Cuban-American history and tradition, the imaginatio­n-inspiring power of great literature, and a sensuality so electric you can almost hear it sparking.

Two decades after “Anna in the Tropics” made him the first Latino playwright to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama, Cruz is now revisiting the work that sent his career soaring.

Miami New Drama’s exquisite anniversar­y production of the play features Cruz in the dual roles of author and director. In the years since “Anna in the Tropics” had its world premiere at the intimate New Theatre in Coral Gables, Cruz has become an impressive­ly artful interprete­r of his own work — the new production of “Anna” included.

Set in Ybor City near Tampa in 1929, “Anna in the Tropics” honors, explores and laments the impending end of traditiona­l practices in a small Cuban-American cigar factory. One of those traditions was to have a lector read novels and newspapers to the workers, entertaini­ng and enlighteni­ng them, relieving the monotony of hand-rolling hundreds of cigars each day.

“Anna in the Tropics” becomes a testament to the life-altering possibilit­ies of literature when the factory’s handsome new lector, Juan Julian Rios (Gabriell Salgado), chooses Leo Tolstoy’s “Anna Karenina” as the first novel to read. The Alcalar family’s women — matriarch Ofelia (Saundra Santiago), unhappily married elder daughter Conchita (Hannia Guillen) and vivacious younger daughter Marela (Andrea Ferro) — are quickly besotted with Tolstoy’s romantic tragedy and the dashing Juan Julian.

Patriarch Santiago (Serafin Falcon), struggling with gambling and alcohol abuse, avoids the work area for a while but is still near enough to know that he likes what he hears from the lector. His half-brother, Cheché (Daniel Capote), and Conchita’s cheating husband, Palomo (Brandon Espinoza), on the other hand, mock Juan Julian. For different reasons, both want him gone.

Girlish Marela tries but fails to get Juan Julian to reciprocat­e her crush. He has eyes for Conchita; soon

enough, the two are sharing their personal histories, flights of fancy and kisses that cascade into an unrelentin­g passion.

Sometimes funny, sometimes fiery, “Anna in the Tropics” is also a gathering tragedy. For the play to fully pay off in the heart-stopping way the best dramas do, Cruz as director and his cast have to precisely elicit and deliver a spectrum of emotions. And they do, in a collection of superb performanc­es.

The striking Guillen, who radiates allure and a mysterious complexity as Conchita, transforms from a dissatisfi­ed wife to an ardent, awakened lover. She navigates her love triangle unapologet­ically, changing from a traditiona­l woman into a modern one who would risk trysts in the place where her entire family works.

Thanks to Cruz’s direction, as well as the chemistry and skill of Guillen and Salgado, the scene that ends the first act — the words are about one thing, the actions another — becomes inevitable, emotionall­y potent and irresistib­le.

Salgado, who has been in demand since graduating from the New World School of the Arts in 2019 and making his debut in Zoetic Stage’s “Frankenste­in”

in 2021, is notably younger than most other actors who have played Cruz’s life-changing lector. Yet the choice works and imbues this “Anna” with different emotional colors. Salgado’s Juan Julian is dreamy, but the actor is also effectivel­y playful, particular­ly with Marela as a way of trying to keep her romantic feelings at bay. He conveys the seductive power of words, whether Tolstoy’s or Cruz’s, and once Conchita has begun applying Juan Julian’s love lessons to her marriage, he looks lost and emotionall­y adrift.

Espinoza has a challenge as Palomo, a character mysterious in his own way. He observes his wife and the lector making love, then greedily demands details from Conchita, even insisting that she demonstrat­e what the lector does with her. Yet he convincing­ly reclaims his transforme­d wife, so much so that you feel (at least a little) for Juan Julian.

Ferro is a wonder as Marela, a spark plug of a human being whose hope and joy make her nearly incandesce­nt. She has many notes to play, including unrequited love and a traumatizi­ng attack. But she’s not always the sweet girl. Her half-uncle Cheché,

whom she calls by his given name Chester as if it were a curse, is the frequent target of her disdain. The two share a pair of disturbing scenes, and as staged by Cruz, the second one is horrifying if not surprising.

Though Cheché becomes the villain of the piece, Capote brings such a range of emotions to the role that his deeply effective performanc­e is arguably his best ever — and it’s among the best from a long line of actors in this role. Capote communicat­es the character’s loneliness and longing, the sting of past humiliatio­n, his frustratio­n at having his ideas dismissed. Yes, his final actions are terrible, but Capote makes it crystal clear how a broken man arrived at that place.

Falcon’s appealing Santiago is a man at one of those later-in-life crossroads, a loving husband and father whose self-destructiv­e behavior is eating away at his life and livelihood. When he cares to be, he’s strong and decisive. But he’s also capable of vulnerabil­ity, as when he asks the frequently angry Ofelia whether she is done with loving him.

As Ofelia, Santiago (a University of Miami grad who once starred in “Miami Vice”) is almost

fragile, though she’s angry enough as she watches Cheché scheming to play a bigger role in the factory while her husband is mentally checked out. But she, too, changes in the party scene celebratin­g the factory’s launch of a new “Anna Karenina” cigar.

Her Ofelia grows uninhibite­d the more she drinks, dances with her dashing husband, then beautifull­y sings a snippet of “Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man,” from the musical “Show Boat.”

Miami New Drama’s “Anna in the Tropics” design team strikingly creates the play’s visual and aural world while honoring the author-director’s minimalist aesthetic. Arnulfo Maldonado’s set features rustic cigar-rolling tables and an elevated seat for the lector, as well as nearly-transparen­t white curtains that create different playing areas while soaking up Yuki Nakase Link’s remarkable lighting. Link’s stunning work helps to drive every scene, changing a moment from romantic to ominous. Composer and sound designer Salomon Lerner further conveys time, place and culture.

Christophe­r Vergara mainly opts for a sepiatoned palette in his lovely-to-look-at

collection of period costumes. The most striking exception is the black ball gown worn by Marela, chosen by her father to be the face of the company’s new cigar. The dress helps transform Ferro’s petite Marela from energetic girl to the embodiment of Tolstoy’s tragic beauty.

Born in Cuba and raised in Miami, Cruz is an artist of internatio­nal renown, a man dedicated to looking at his work with fresh eyes. He does that even with a play as acclaimed as “Anna in the Tropics,” finding a just-right cast to bring the piece to vibrant life. It is special.

Though there have been and will be other production­s of “Anna in the Tropics,” this one stands out.

What: Miami New Drama presents 20th-anniversar­y production of “Anna in the Tropics” by Nilo Cruz Where: Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach

When: Extended through Feb. 12

Cost: Starts at $46.50 Informatio­n: 305-6741040; miaminewdr­ama.org

 ?? ANDRES MANNER ?? Conchita (Hannia Guillen) takes in the words of Juan Julian (Gabriell Salgado) as he reads from the Leo Tolstoy masterpiec­e, “Anna Karenina.”
ANDRES MANNER Conchita (Hannia Guillen) takes in the words of Juan Julian (Gabriell Salgado) as he reads from the Leo Tolstoy masterpiec­e, “Anna Karenina.”

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