THEATRE PREVIEW
“CLOUD TECTONICS” BY JOSÉ RIVERA AT LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine June 1995
You may have some familiarity with plate tectonics, but have you
ever heard of Cloud Tectonics? Not very
likely, since the term was invented by José Rivera, whose latest play of the
same name gets its West coast premiere at the La Jolla Playhouse this month (June
20-July 16).
"It's really a meaningless term," claims the 40
year-old, pony-tailed playwright.
" I was on an airplane, looking down. And I was thinking, 'What would you call the study of the shape
of clouds and how they form?' And I
thought, 'How ridiculous to even attempt it.' And that became a metaphor for
me, for studying love, and what makes people fall in love. It can never really be fully
understood.'"
In “Cloud Tectonics”, which is set in L.A. against "the noise
of earthquakes, the screams of a dying culture," an airplane baggage
handler picks up a pregnant hitchhiker who's searching for the guy who knocked
her up two years ago. When they arrive
at the baggage handler's apartment, time literally stops, and neither can ever
think of time, space or love as they did before.
The piece is apocalyptic, but much less so than Rivera's last La
Jolla venture, the brutal, provocative, mythical “Marisol”, which won seven
Drama-Logue awards and an Obie for Best Play in New York. The director of the La Jolla production of “Marisol”
and “Cloud Tectonics” is Tina Landau.
“Marisol's” New York airing was directed by La Jolla Playhouse artistic
director Michael Greif, who says Rivera "writes plays with large, timeless
and universal themes, asking big questions and putting them in recognizable,
contemporary frameworks. In “Cloud
Tectonics”, he takes affectionate jabs at life in Los Angeles,... living on the
edge of disaster, and explores questions of cultural identity in the urban
setting."
Rivera himself grew up culturally "schizophrenic," as
one of the first Puerto Ricans in central Long Island. "We moved there in the late '50s, when
he was four. It was very attractive to
my parents. Very under-developed. It looked to them like Puerto Rico."
His Suffolk County home was "very Puerto Rican, with rice and
beans every night, and Puerto Rican music.
Outside, everything was America:
rock and roll, the sixties, Kent State, JFK, Vietnam. After awhile, the folk ballads of Puerto
Rico didn't have as much power as the Stones.
I was hungry for American culture; I couldn't get enough of it. I wanted to be an American teenager more
than anything else. At the time, I
thought Puerto Rican culture was quaint and old-fashioned. Since I became an adult, I appreciate my
culture... I grew up with no literary
culture from my parents; they were virtually illiterate. I discovered writing on my own as an
adult."
Rivera's writing has been widely appreciated. He won a Rockefeller Foundation grant, a
National Endowment for the Arts grant, and a Fullbright Arts Fellowship in
playwriting, which included a year at the Royal Court Theatre. Of his London experience, Rivera says: "The paradox was, I took away a profound
new respect for American playwrights.
The British criticize Americans for excessive emotions and neurotic
behavior. They're just the
opposite. British plays are often
witty, but soulless. American writing
is about the creator and his obsessions.
I find that more dramatic. New
American playwrights have more vitality, more chutzpah. It made me proud to be an American
writer."
In 1989, Rivera studied screenwriting at the Sundance Institute
under Nobel Prize-winner Gabriel García Márquez. ("A wonderful man,"
Rivera reports. "Very earthy,
unpretentious, very humble"). Not
surprisingly, in its recent debut at Louisville's Humana Festival for New
American Plays, “Cloud Tectonics” was described as "a Marquesian
fable" (Ben Brantley, New York Times) laced with magical realism.
"Magical realism," explains Rivera, "is more an
outlook on life than a literary style.
It's a belief system. [In Latin
cultures] there's a very thin line between life and death. The dead are among us. Supernatural forces have day-to-day
reality. That's so un-American. But that's what I got at home. There's a rational part of me that dismisses
it. But there's still a part of me
that's gullible... There's at least one
unbelieving, skeptical character in everything I write. Someone who says, 'Get out of here with that
magic.' But that character's is always
the minority view."
Magic notwithstanding, Rivera doesn't deny his focus on impending
disaster. In “Cloud Tectonics”, there
are "a lot of threatening signs, a lot of discussion about the Big
Earthquake. A feeling of dread and
uncertainty in the air." That's a
direct reflection of his life in L.A. with his wife and two children, ages 3
and 7. "That's what life can be like here. We do have beautiful days, but
there's a constant, subconscious fear."
Because of his cataclysmic themes, Rivera feels that audiences
often misunderstand his work. "My
plays are always comedic. Some critics
take them very seriously. Part of it
may be cultural. The humor is very
Latin, exaggerated, far-fetched. It's a process of education, exposure. People
have to know it's okay to laugh."
©1995 Patté Productions Inc.