fbpx La Esquinita | HowlRound Theatre Commons

La Esquinita

Lupe Valdez

La Esquinita is a new series that serves as a production notebook for Latina/o designers and artisans working on stages across the nation. In La Esquinita, designers and artisans share their process and production work, plus overall thoughts on dynamic collaboration. This series will provide glimpses of the off-stage world where you will find these master artisans, technicians, and designers remembering and retelling their experiences in creating the evocative theatrical landscapes we see today. Welcome to our corner!

Like my mother and father, I use everything that I find, and sometimes by a miracle, it finds me! —Lupe Valdez

a family scene on stage
(Left to right) Andres Ortiz, Gustavo Mellado, Christy Sandoval, Rosamaria Escalante, and Eduardo Esparza as the Montano family in Valley of the Heart. Photo by Robert Eliason

 

three actors dancing on stage
(Left to right) Eduardo Esparza, Christy Sandoval, and Gustavo Mellado in Valley of the Heart. Photo by Robert Eliason.

 

a group of actors on stage
(Left to right) Steven Young (on the floor), Justin Min, Eduardo Esparza, Christina Chu, Cara Mitsuko, Gustavo Mellado, and Rosamaria Escalante in Valley of the Heart. Photo by Robert Eliason.

Inspiration for costume design for Valley of the Heart:

“With little or no money for costume design, my aesthetic and that of El Teatro Campesino, is ‘use what you have.’ We recycled and up-cycled before it was relevant and a necessity! I’m a thrift store junkie, and a collector of period pieces from every conceivable era gathered through the years—a real arsenal of costume gems.

For Valley of the Heart, I used my parents as my inspiration for the design. They were still young campesinos in the ’40s. No matter how poor, I remember seeing my father dress himself in his dark pin stripe suit every Sunday morning for Mass; his calloused hands darkened by fieldwork. As a campesina, my mother would wear her khaki pants under her cotton dress for modesty. It was inconceivable just to wear pants for fieldwork! I remember fondly my mother making my clothes from the 100-pound cotton, flour sacks bought at the general store. My mother would even go so far as to use the cotton sacks to make our undergarments. In those days, the sacks came in various colors with wonderful design prints. Every Christmas, my father would kill a pig in our back yard, use the meat for tamales, the pig’s skin for chicharrones and the tripas to make blood sausage—using everything conceivable. Like my mother and father, I use everything that I find, and sometimes by a miracle, it finds me!”

a woman on stage holding a hanger
Lupe Valdez in rehearsal. Photo by Robert Eliason.

Lupe Trujillo Valdez joined El Teatro Campesino in 1968 as a young Chicana Activist after graduating from Fresno State University. She originated the iconic role of “Miss Jimenez” in Los Vendidos in 1968, and played the role of “Lupe” in the ETC production of The Shrunken Head of Pancho Villa in 1969. She then married Luis Valdez in 1969 and is the proud mother of their three sons Anahuac, Kinan, and Lakin. After assisting other costume designers at ETC, Lupe designed her first shows in 2010, Simply Maria and Food for the Dead by Josefina López, co-directed by Christy Sandoval and Jillian Valdez.

Other productions include:

  • Sam Burguesa and the Pixie Chicks, written and directed by Kinan Valdez.
  • Corridos Remix, a blend of traditional and narco corrido ballads by Kinan and Luis Valdez.
  • The biennial La Virgin de Tepeyac and La Pastorela by Luis Valdez; Oratorio: Canción de San Juan, written and performed by Daniel Valdez, and directed by his brother, Luis.
  • The workshop production of Valley of the Heart written and directed by Luis Valdez (2013-14).

She will design the world premiere of Valley of the Heart at San Jose Stage Company in 2016.

a man holding a knife on stage while others surround him
(Left to right) Steven Young, Randall Nakano, Justin Min, Christina Chu, and Cara Mitsuko in Valley of the Heart. Photo by Robert Eliason.

 

two women holding a child on stage
(Left to right) Christina Chu and Cara Mitsuko in Valley of the Heart. Photo by Robert Eliason.

 

Bookmark this page

Log in to add a bookmark
Thoughts from the curators

In La Esquinita, designers and artisans share their process and production work, plus overall thoughts on dynamic collaboration. This series provides glimpses of the off-stage world where you will find these master artisans, technicians, and designers remembering and retelling their experiences in creating the evocative theatrical landscapes we see today. 

La Esquinita

Comments

3
Add Comment

The article is just the start of the conversation—we want to know what you think about this subject, too! HowlRound is a space for knowledge-sharing, and we welcome spirited, thoughtful, and on-topic dialogue. Find our full comments policy here

Newest First

This is so great and makes me so happy! Our world consumes way too much clothes for no reason. Thrift stores are great because we can then use these clothes, that are fully usable, without having more and more and more clothes made. Finding an outfit from what you have at home or from what you can build from what nature has to offer, it enables the environment to spare resources. As well as the sometimes harsh labor that is used by the big clothing companies. Creating an outfit from scratch takes creativity -- but if you have an eye like Lupe Valdez, go for it!