FUENTEOVEJUNA: EAST END

Cast members from Fuenteovejuna.
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A Spanish theater classic, reimagined for our community.

Guild Hall and OLA of Eastern Long Island present Fuenteovejuna: East End, a bold reimagining of Lope de Vega’s 17th-century play. Co-directed by Guild Hall Community Artists-in-Residence, Margarita Espada and Minerva Perez, this production—performed entirely in Spanish*— tells the story of a community’s courageous stand against tyranny.

Featuring a talented cast of Latino community members from across Long Island, Fuenteovejuna: East End is the first Spanish-language theater production at Guild Hall.

Join us for an unforgettable evening of theater that speaks to the past while resonating powerfully in the present.

*An English libretto will be available for non-Spanish speakers.

Un clásico del teatro español, reinventado para nuestra comunidad.

Guild Hall y OLA del Este de Long Island presentan Fuenteovejuna: East End, una audaz reinterpretación de la obra del siglo XVII de Lope de Vega. Codirigida por las Artistas en Residencia Comunitarias de Guild Hall, Margarita Espada y Minerva Perez, esta producción—interpretada completamente en español*— cuenta la historia del valiente levantamiento de una comunidad contra la tiranía.

Con un talentoso elenco de miembros de la comunidad latina de todo Long Island, Fuenteovejuna: East End es la primera producción teatral en español en Guild Hall.

Acompáñanos en una velada inolvidable de teatro que dialoga con el pasado y resuena poderosamente en el presente.

*Un libreto en inglés estará disponible para los no hispanohablantes.

  • Margarita Espada

    Margarita Espada (MFA) is an award-winning  performer, educator, cultural maker, researcher, and activist in the fields and studies of physical theater, body and embodiments, settlers-colonialism, race, ethnicity and migration. 

    Margarita  is the founder and director of Teatro Experimental Yerbabuja, an art organization with the mission to use the arts as a tool for social change (www.teatroyerbabruja.org).  She is part of the faculty at the Department of Women Study at Stony Brook University where she teaches theater and activism.

    Margarita received her Master of Fine Art in Dramaturgy  from Stony Brook University and her Bachelor of Art in Education from Puerto Rico University. She is a New York State and Puerto Rico-certified theater teacher with over 30 years of experience as an educator, performer, playwright, arts activist, and cultural and community organizer.   

    Margarita has conducted research, supported school and organization change efforts, and facilitated  professional learning around applied theater, culturally responsive practice, curriculum design, problem solving, and reflective communication.  Margarita advocates on the importance of arts and culture for the social and economic well-being of the local and global community. Her work advancing the art of LatinX, Black, Indigenous, and artists of color on Long Island has made her one of the most prominent leaders in Long Island.  She is a board member for the New York State Dance Force, and a member of the Arts Advisory Council for the Suffolk County Legislature.

    She has received numerous awards and proclamations for her leadership, her art  and community work including 2021 Faces of Long Island, Newsday, 2018 Martin Luther King Living Legend Award, NAACP Islip, NY, 2018. Her work has been reviewed in the New York Times and by the Associated Press, Newsday, and numerous other media outlets.

    Photo courtesy of Newsday.

  • Minerva Perez

    Minerva Perez is the executive director of OLA of Eastern Long Island, where she centers her work on the protection, empowerment, and celebration of our Latino community through OLA’s mission to create a safer, healthier, and more equitable East End region for all. As an advocate and an artist, she relishes being in the uncomfortable spaces where love and understanding can grow. 

    Ms. Perez holds a theatre arts degree from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. She founded and ran a theatre company for 8 years in NYC.  In addition to acting in theatre, film, and television, she has directed and produced independent films and local theatre productions including the only Spanish language version of the Vagina Monologues on the East End as well as the English version featuring cast members Brooke Shields, Blythe Danner, and Julie White. She has curated more than 10 OLA Latino Film Festivals which feature Spanish language films with English subtitles meant to bridge cultural interests and create harmony and understanding. She has created and produces two OLA shows on LTV meant to highlight community members and guests of all backgrounds and disciplines: “Conversations with OLA” and “Sabor con OLA”. 

    OLA of Eastern Long Island works to create a more equitable East End for Latino immigrants through advocating for just and inclusive government and school policies; protecting families; nurturing power and unity among Latinos through leadership workshops and other programs; and building bridges among different sectors of the East End community through celebrating arts and culture.

    https://www.olaofeasternlongisland.org

Sponsors

Fuenteovejuna: East End is possible thanks to support from CAiR’s patrons and the Suffolk County Department of Economic Development and Planning, and is led by 2025 Guild Hall Community Artists-in-Residence, Margarita Espada and Minerva Perez. The 2025 CAiR is co-produced by Guild Hall of East Hampton and OLA of Eastern Long Island.

Performing Arts programming is supported in part by funding from Galia Meiri-Stawski and Axel Stawski, Henry and Peggy Schleiff, The Melville Straus Family Endowment, and Monica and Peter Tessler. Music Programming is supported in part by The Ellen and James S. Marcus Endowment for Musical Programming. 

Additional support provided by Friends of the Theater: John and Joan D’Addario, Natascia Ayers and Jim Ciquera, Christine and Bill Campbell, Gabrielle and Gianpaolo de Felice, Lena Kaplan, Hilarie and Mitchell Morgan, Michèle and Steve Pesner, The Schaffner Family Foundation, Lisa Schultz and Ezriel Kornel, Jayne Baron Sherman and Deborah Zum, Stacey and Oliver Stanton, Leila Straus, Susi and Peter Wunsch, and Andrew Yuder and Kyle Glaeser.  

Guild Hall’s Learning + New Works programs are made possible through Vital Projects Fund, the Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Endowment Fund, and The Melville Straus Family Endowment. 

Additional support provided by Friends of Learning + New Works: Julie Raynor Gross, Stephanie Joyce and Jim Vos, S. Kutler Foundation, N. Glickberg, D. Glickberg, and J. Abrahams, Andrea and Jeffrey Lomasky, Peter Marino, Stephen Meringoff, and Eva Sandler. 

 

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