THEATRE REVIEW:
“BANDIDO!” at the Southwestern
College Theatre
KPBS AIRDATE:
It’s been a
long road for Tiburcio Vasquez. All he
did was steal some horses, rob a few stores, kiss a few women. He maintained to the end that he never
killed a soul. But in 1875, he was the
last man to be legally and publicly hanged in
But back to
Tiburcio. He was hunted down by an
anti-Mexican vigilante group called a posse comitatus. And he hasn’t been
hailed a hero by Mexicans or Mexican-Americans, since he was a Californio, born
into a landed family: dashing, educated,
fully bilingual, a poet. He was therefore
felt to be a Spanish aristocrat, and therefore aligned with the despised,
imperialistic conquistadors. So even
though he was a freedom fighter, a California Robin Hood who stole from the
Anglos who stole land from the Mexicans, he hasn’t held a prominent place in
local history.
Along comes
Chicano playwright Luis Valdez, he of “La Bamba” and “Zoot Suit,” founder and
artistic director of the politically charged Teatro Campesino. He does a workshop of a new play,
“Bandido!”, a revision of the history of the Old West, an American melodrama of
a notorious
Enter William
Virchis, professor and artistic director of
For the role of
Tiburcio, he brings in the charismatic Gabriel Romero, who was so dynamic in
the recent Centro Cultural production of “Roosters.” Romero bears a rather frightening resemblance to Tiburcio
Vasquez, and from every pore, he exudes the suave, irresistible charm of the
notorious bandit. The musical
powerhouse of the evening is the familiar voice of Laura Preble, who plays the
worldly-wise madam of Tiburcio’s favorite brothel.
The other
ladies of the evening flirt with the audience.
An onstage guitar plays mournful Mexican melodies. Virchis crams in everything he can from his
bicultural background. There’s hokey
vaudeville and Mexican carpa. There’s a melodrama within a melodrama, and
revisions of revisionist history.
Things get a bit unfocused; sometimes Virchis is true to his comic
vision of a ‘tortilla Western,’ but sometimes things get too serious. Yet some of the stage pictures are
beautiful. The story is very
intriguing, and it needs to be told.
The script still needs reworking, but it has potential. Maybe Virchis will bring in a fourth
regional college finalist. Maybe
I'm Pat Launer,
KPBS radio.
©1995 Patté Productions Inc.