Climbing the
Stairway to Culture
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The Teatro walls were crumbling, the
courtyard given over to dust and dismay, and a historic part of Old Mazatlan doomed
to fade into distant memory. With vision, perseverance and pesos, volunteers rennovated
the Grand Old Dame and today, tucked into a corner of the Plazuela Machado, the
Angela Peralta Teatro thrives, a cultural landmark in Historic Old Town.
Kathy, Richard and I recently
attended an orchestral performance at the Angela Peralta conducted by world-class
Jan Latham-Koenig. We climbed to the cheap seats, up in the third balcony. The
balcony might be two and a half meters deep. The chairs appear to be old-style
kitchen chairs with cloth coverings. Comfort it is not. Squished it is. The marble-columned
lobby is open to the stars, the balcony up three flights of marble stairs. We took
our seats early to people-watch.
As tourists we wear our best beach-bum togs. No matter, we watch
the beautiful women sweep in, and all are beautiful, regally dressed and coifed
and jeweled. Each man looks dashing, no matter his age, proud of the woman on
his arm, the children by his side.
I could have all night to Pablo
Garibay on Spanish acoustic guitar, accompanied by the orchestra listened. But,
for me, the most memorable performance at the Angela Peralta was a ballet. I
don’t remember the name. It was skillfully choreographed with a huge cast, many
of them students at the Teatro. The costumed cast doubled as greeters and
seat-ers. After the ballet the cast rushed to the courtyard where they were
congratulated, hugged, and showered with flowers by family and admirers. Just
being part of the throng that night made me celebrate, made me feel like a
distant relative come to visit.
While restoring the Teatro, a many
years project, the company also built classrooms for teaching music, dance, and
art. Day and night the building is alive with activity, rehearsals, classes,
exhibits and performances.
Everyone in Mazatlan
seems to be a musician. Men stroll the streets, singly or in groups, to
serenade for a few pesos. Heavy on the brass, entire “Oom-pah” bands gather,
perform and pass the hat. (“Oom-pah” is my made-up term, based on the
underlying beat.)
Friday night Kathy, Richard and I toured several galleries near
and around Old Town as part of a monthly ArtWalk. The historic buildings,
Spanish or southern European in style, have beautiful wooden and wrought iron
doors. To enter one must high-step over a ten to twelve inch threshold to the lobby
or hallway. I was told the step keeps water out during seasonal torrential
rains. In China, the same style riser is to deter evil spirits from entering
the home. Same thing, I suppose. Or maybe the steps were designed to keep
livestock out and babies in.
Most of the galleries presented a
staircase or two or three to climb. Some were over living quarters, others
included multiple stories. These buildings are ancient structures, two and
three hundred years old and more. Personally, I prefer stairs built to code
with a good solid railing. One does not always get one’s way. Gamely I
clambered up staircases with eight, nine and ten inch risers. Most treads were
built for smaller people with smaller feet. Gamely, one must take one’s courage
in hand and carry on. After all, I wanted to eye-feast on sculptures in rock,
wood, copper and silver, oils and watercolors and prints and drawings, jewelry
and photography, mosaics, papier-mache and leather, fiber and stained glass.
Whew! I was plumb tuckered before we’d seen all the places we’d
marked on our map. Kathy and Richard wanted to see one more gallery, just a
couple long blocks down that way or maybe to the left a bit, hard to tell with
a map which leaves out some cross streets. I opted to walk back to the Plazuela
Machado, find a bench where I could rest my weary feet and listen to musicians
in the square.
Couples of all ages meandered around the square, hand in hand.
Small coveys of young men and young women ambled around, eyeing one another
warily or provocatively. Street vendors quietly offered their wares, all manner
of foods and crafts, in tune with the crowd, not pushy. I made myself invisible
to quietly view the walking artistry in front of me, no stairs to climb.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
December 12,
2013
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