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ALMA Extends at Chance Theatre

Performances continue through May 31.

By: May. 15, 2024
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Chance Theater has extended the Orange County Premiere of "Alma," written by playwright Benjamin Benne, winner of the ATC National Latine Playwrights Award, and directed by Sara Guerrero.

"Alma" has captivated audiences with its exploration of the American dream for immigrants and Dreamers, a poignant mother-daughter love story set to open May 11, 2024.

The production will grace the stage of the Bette Aitken Theater Arts Center on the Fyda-Mar Stage, running through May 31st. Due to overwhelming demand and sold-out performances, Chance Theater is thrilled to extend the run of "Alma," ensuring even more theatergoers have the opportunity to experience this magical production. Benjamin Benne's poignant exploration of the immigrant experience and the American Dream has resonated deeply, leading to widespread acclaim and packed houses. 

Benne’s award-winning play is about Alma and her daughter, Angel, who made sixteen wishes long ago: good health, love, carne asada every day, perfect SAT scores, and a spot at UC Davis, to name a few. But now that Angel is 17, she’s got a different vision for her future than her immigrant single mom. Featuring the powerfully fresh voice of playwright Benjamin Benne, winner of the National Latine Playwriting Award, “Alma” is a poetic, funny, and timely play filled with lots of amor and a touch of symbolism. It begs the question: what does the American Dream mean today—and who does it belong to?

“Alma” Playwright Benjamin Benne wrote his play about his own mother. Or at least that’s what he set out to do when he began writing it. “My mother was an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala who came to the United States in the late ’70s,” said Benne, who was born and raised in Los Angeles County. He shared a story from his youth that, at first, seems cloaked in the dread of an inevitably awful end. “I was in elementary school, and one morning, my mother said to me, ‘I can’t drop you off at school today’ — which is something she did every day. Instead, she said, ‘My friend Maria is going to drop you off because I have something really important I have to do.’” When Benne saw his mother again that afternoon, she told him, “I’m a United States citizen now.” 

As Benne looks back on that memory, he thinks it was both remarkable and a bit arbitrary that his mother went from not being a citizen in the morning to suddenly that afternoon — she was. “That got me thinking about the history of immigration and immigration law in the United States, and how it’s been constantly shifting,” said Benne, whose mother qualified for amnesty under President Reagan in the 1980s. In recent years, the issue of immigration is cloaked in the imperiled legal status of DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals – a federal program created in 2012 that provides lawful presence, employment authorization, and safety from deportation to 660,000 people who entered the U.S. as children. But recent court challenges have left 1.5 million Dreamers unable to apply for the same protections.

Benne soon realized that his burgeoning idea for a play about his mother – who crossed the border at the age of 18 in the 1970s – was no longer his mother’s story “because my mother’s pathway to citizenship no longer exists for someone who is currently in the same situation my mother was then,” he said. 

In 2019, “Alma” was named the winner of the ATC National Latine Playwrights Award. “Our judges fell in love with the poetically distilled language of ‘Alma,’” said judge and playwright Elaine Romero. “This is a covertly socially relevant play that asks us to look at the impact of the swing of the political pendulum on the lives of everyday people who have come to this country to dream.”

“Alma” was chosen for further development at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts Theatre Company’s 2020 Colorado New Play Summit, where it was introduced as a staged reading just a month before the shut down. The show then had its world premiere in March 2022 when it helped re-open the pandemic doors at Center Theatre Group’s Kirk Douglas Theater.

For the Orange County Premiere, joining director Guerrero on the design team are scenic designer Christopher Scott Murillo (“Ragtime”), costume designer Jeanette Godoy (Chance Debut), lighting designer Kara Ramlow (“Colonialism is Terrible, But Phở is Delicious”), sound designer Melanie FalcĂłn (Chance Debut), stage manager Cynthia C. Espinoza (“Rent”), and dramaturg Karli Jean Lonnquist (Chance Debut). 

The cast of “Alma” features Marta Portillo (Chance Debut) as Alma and Heather Lee Echeverria (Chance Debut) as Angel. 

Steven & Louise Koch are the Executive Producers for this production. Bette & Wylie Aitken are Executive Season Producers for the entire 2024 schedule. Laurie Smits Staude is Associate Producer, and The Family of Mary Kay Fyda-Mar is this year’s Associate Season Producers. Our community partners Breath of Fire Latina Theater Ensemble, Hispanic Education Endowment Fund, and Cafe Bianni. They will be co-hosting a Latinx Community Night at Chance Theater on Friday, May 17 starting at 7pm.



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