Fiesta Latina returns to OCC
- Share via
Jim Carnett
Fiesta Latina returns to Orange Coast College next Tuesday morning
and evening, May 3. The popular event is being offered for the fifth
time on campus.
A dance and cultural heritage outreach to the local community,
Fiesta Latina will be staged in OCC’s Robert B. Moore Theatre, free
of charge. The colorful and energetic production offers striking
examples of Latin American culture, dance and music.
OCC students will present a pair of one-hour public performances,
at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., in the Moore Theatre. The public is invited
to attend.
Jose Costas, an OCC professor of dance, is Fiesta Latina’s
artistic director. Costas is a native of Puerto Rico and spent nine
years as principal dancer with Ballet Hispanico of New York. He
joined OCC’s faculty in 1999.
Orange Coast’s Fiesta Latina Company features more than a dozen
student dancers. Tuesday’s performances will showcase dances from
Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Brazil and the
Dominican Republic.
“When you learn about our dances, you learn something about who we
(Latinos) are,” Costas said. “The Latino community is a tapestry of
culturally diverse people who share deep historical roots. Their
social, cultural and spiritual values and myths are integrated into
some of the world’s greatest traditions of dance and music.
“These traditions, which emanate from European, Indian, African
and other indigenous influences, reach far back into time -- and far
across the globe -- to blend into a vivid kaleidoscope of dance and
music.”
The morning and evening concerts will include elaborately costumed
performances of the bomba, the salsa and the Spanish danza from
Puerto Rico; the mambo from Cuba; the samba from Brazil; the cumbia
from Colombia and Venezuela; the jarocho from Mexico; and the
meringue, the national dance of the Dominican Republic.
Costas said Fiesta Latina performances provide unusual insight
into Latino culture.
“The goal of our concerts -- which are open to school children,
high school and college students and adults -- is always to
demonstrate the relationship that exists between dance and everyday
life in Latino culture and to display the rich diversity of Latin
American cultural heritage.”
Costas says it’s important to note that there’s no single
definitive Latino culture.
“When you look at Central and South America on a map, it’s a huge
region with many different geographical influences, cultures and
ethnic groups,” he said. “We attempt to depict this diversity in our
OCC performances.”
A graduate of Catholic University of Puerto Rico, with a
bachelor’s degree. in biology, Costas turned his back on a career in
medicine to embrace the world of dance. He earned an master’s degree
in dance from NYU’s Tish School of the Arts in 1986 and was signed to
a contract by Ballet Hispanico.
Costas became the company’s principal dancer and remained for
nearly a decade. He created lead roles in many ballets and performed
with the company as it toured throughout the United States, Europe
and Latin America. He was special project assistant for Ballet
Hispanico’s outreach program and taught dance workshops in the New
York City public schools.
The OCC professor left Ballet Hispanico in 1995 to become a full-time lecturer in dance at California State University, Dominguez
Hills. He joined the Orange Coast College faculty six years ago.
Costas teaches classes in ballet, Latin dance styles, jazz dance,
rehearsal and performance and performing ensemble.
For information about Fiesta Latina, call (714) 432-5123, ext. 2.
PROMINENT KENYAN SCHOLAR TO SPEAK AT OCC
Ngugi wa Thiong’o, one of Africa’s most prominent and accomplished
writers and scholars, will speak Wednesday, April 27, at OCC.
Thiong’o will deliver an 80-minute address at 11:10 a.m. in Fine
Arts Hall 119. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend.
His presentation is titled “Cultural and Political Imperialism.”
A prominent Kenyan scholar and world-famous writer of African
literature, Thiong’o is currently a distinguished professor of
English and comparative literature and the director of the
International Center for Writing and Translation at UC Irvine.
He is a prolific novelist, playwright, essayist and critic and is
author of such works as “I Will Marry When I Want,” “Moving the
Centre; Struggle for Cultural Freedoms,” “Writers in Politics,”
“Pinpoints, Gunpoints and Dreams” and “The Trial of Dedan Kimathi.”
In 2003, Thiong’o delivered the Steven Biko Memorial Lecture in
Johannesburg, South Africa. He has lectured at Oxford and Cambridge
and in 2002 was elected an honorary member of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters.
CLASSIC CAR SHOW SUPPORTS SYMPHONY
OCC’s Foundation will host its Custom Classic Car Show on campus
this Sunday to raise funds for the college Symphony Orchestra and
Chorale.
The car show, presented by Off the Street Promotions, will run
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the athletic field adjacent to LeBard
Stadium.
Admission is $5. For more information, call (714) 403-0359.
OCC’s Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Ricardo Soto, is
in the midst of its 44th season of public concerts. The Symphony
offers four perform- ances a year. The 100-voice Chorale, also
directed by Soto, presents four concerts annually.
* JIM CARNETT is senior director of community relations at Orange
Coast College. He writes the biweekly On Campus at OCC Column. Reach
him at jcarnettocc.cccd.edu or by calling (714) 432-5725.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.