THOSE WOMEN PRODUCTIONS
House of Desires by Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
La Val's Subterranean Theater
Berkeley, CA
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House of Desires by Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
Elizabeth (Libby) Vega directs this production of House of Desires (Los empeños de una casa) by the 17th century Mexican poet, playwright, and theologian, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, in a translation by Catherine Boyle (written for the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2004). By turns sly, subversive, witty, and goofy, this little-known romantic farce will delight audiences. House of Desires previews on July 29, opens on Saturday, July 30, and runs through August 14 at La Val's Subterranean Theater in Berkeley. Those Women Productions practices Radical Hospitality: the suggested price for tickets is $35 but all tickets for all shows are choose your own price with no minimum.

"Suppose the Three Stooges were feminists," says Those Women Productions Artistic Director Libby Vega, "and they got together with William Shakespeare to write a version of Midsummer Nights Dream, and youll have the right idea." House of Desires will be directed by Vega and will feature a cast of nine, as well as original music composed by Erika Oba.

The cast for House of Desires includes April Ballesteros as Doña Ana, L. Duarte as Castaño, Maria Figueroa as Celia, Konnor Heredia as Don Pedro, Justin P. Lopez as Don Carlos, Tara Navarro as Don Juan, Jeanette Sarmiento as Don Rodrigo, Brittany Sims as Doña Leonor, and Susannah Wood as Hernanda. Design and production team includes Quinnton Barringer (scenic), Rachael Heiman (costumes and props), Adri Schurman (costume assistant); Samuel Raskin (sound), Nate Bogner (lighting), Kristen Matia (fight director); Kit Lanthier (stage manager); Harley Greene (assist. stage manager); Carol Lashof (producer, Executive Director of TWP); Erika Oba (music); Audrey Ronningen (marketing, front of house); Julie Ann Sarabia (Covid safety manager); Susannah Wood (choreography); and Elizabeth Vega (director, Artistic Director of TWP).

House of Desires was first performed on October 4, 1683, as part of the birthday celebrations held for the first-born child of the Viceroy Count of Paredes. This comedy of intrigue, deemed one of the most famous works from late Baroque Spanish-American literature, features a romantic couple pining to be together amid a never-ending gamut of jealous lovers, sword fights, rivalries, disguises and duplicities. Sor Juana  herself a nun from the age of 19  creates passionate and strong-willed characters who speak their minds, and her work subtly criticizes the social, racial, and gender-based barriers of her day. This work is considered in many circles to be the pinnacle of Sor Juana's writings as well as throughout all Mexican literature, and is a rare theatric piece of colonial Latin America.

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz is widely regarded as one of the first great Latin American writers, yet is unfamiliar to most audiences and readers in the United States. Writing between 1660 and 1693, her plays often included brave and clever women, and she openly criticized the Church for keeping women uneducated. At the age of eight she composed her first poem; by adolescence, she had comprehensively studied Greek logic, and was teaching Latin to young children at age 13. She also learned Nahuatl, an Aztec language spoken in Central Mexico, and wrote some short poems in that language. She begged to disguise herself as a male to further her education, but was not given permission by her family to do so. She continued to study privately, and at 16, was admitted to the service of a Viceroy's wife. When she was 17, the Viceroy assembled a panel of scholars to test her intelligence. The vast array of skills and knowledge she demonstrated before the panel became publicly known throughout Mexico. Her reputation and her apparent beauty attracted a great deal of attention. Interested not in marriage but in the furthering of her studies, Juana entered the Convent of the Discalced Carmelites of St. Joseph, where she remained for a few months. In 1669, at age 21, she entered the Convent of the Order of St. Jérôme, where she would remain until her death. Eventually, controversy surrounding Sor Juana's writing and pressure from those around her (including her confessor Núñez de Miranda) resulted in Sor Juana's forced abjuration. During this time, Sor Juana was required to sell her books as well as all musical and scientific instruments.


Director Elizabeth Vega is the Founding Artistic Director of Those Women Productions. She holds a BA in Liberal Arts from St. Johns College and an MFA in Staging Shakespeare from Exeter
University where she studied at the Globe Theater in London. Directing credits include Troilus and Cressida at the Dell Theater in Stratford-Upon-Avon and the world premieres of Carol Lashofs Witch Hunt and Just Deserts. She is on the faculty at Holden High School and has also taught at CalShakes and the Berkeley Rep School of Theater.

House of Desires is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French Inc. https://www.concordtheatricals.com/

Location

La Val's Subterranean Theater (View)
1834 Euclid Ave
Berkeley, CA 94709
United States

Categories

Arts > Theatre

Minimum Age: 10
Kid Friendly: No
Dog Friendly: No
Non-Smoking: Yes!
Wheelchair Accessible: No

Contact

Owner: Those Women Productions
On BPT Since: Jun 13, 2014
 
Those Women Productions
www.thosewomenproductions....

Accessibility

There is a steep flight of steps down to the theater, which is in the basement of La Val's Pizza Parlor.

https://thosewomenproductions.com/