Victor Garcia (director)

For other people named Victor Garcia, see Victor Garcia (disambiguation).

Victor Garcia (1934–1982), was an Argentine award-winning theatre director.

He directed a production of Jean Genet's The Balcony at the Ruth Escobar Theatre in São Paulo in 1969, which Genet saw in July 1970.[1] The production was staged under the new regime of Brazil's military dictator General Garrastazu Médici; the actress who played Chantal, Nilda Maria, was arrested for anti-government activities and her children were sent to Public Welfare, prompting Genet to petition the wife of the city's governor for their release.[2] In Garcia's production, the audience observed the action from vertiginous balconies overlooking a pierced 65' plastic and steel tunnel; the actors performed on platforms within the tunnel, or clinging to its sides, or on the metal ladders that led from one platform to another, creating the impression of animals driven insane within the cages of a zoo.[2] The aim, Garcia explained, was to make the public feel as though it was suspended in a void, with "nothing in front of it nor behind it, only precipices."[2] It won 13 critics' awards in the country and ran for 20 months.[2]

He won the 1973 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director and the Award for Outstanding Set Design for his production of Federico García Lorca's Yerma.[3]

References

  1. Savona (1983, 72), Dichy (1993, xxix), and White (1993, 621-622).
  2. 1 2 3 4 White (1993, 621-622).
  3. See the Internet Broadway Databases's article.

Sources

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