The Mission Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/the-mission/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Mon, 05 Apr 2021 19:04:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Herbert Sigüenza And His 55-Year Journey with Picasso https://culturalattache.co/2021/03/04/herbert-siguenza-and-his-55-year-journey-with-picasso/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/03/04/herbert-siguenza-and-his-55-year-journey-with-picasso/#respond Thu, 04 Mar 2021 20:01:04 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=13356 "I love the quote where a lady says to him, 'That drawing only took you three minutes.' Picasso responds, 'No, it took my whole life.' This film took me my whole life to do."

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Photographer David Douglas Duncan first met artist Pablo Picasso in 1957 in the South of France. The first photo he took was of Picasso as he was bathing. Years later one of his books about Picasso was published and a then seven-year-old Herbert Sigüenza sees the book in a dentist’s office and a life-long passion for Picasso was born.

Sigüenza, best known as a member of Culture Clash, would take that passion and turn it into a one-man play called A Weekend with Pablo Picasso. His play fittingly opens with Sigüenza, as Picasso, taking a bath in the South of France in 1957.

“I was doing Culture Club for years. I was acting, painting, but in the back of my mind I always knew when I turned 50 I was going to write that play,” he told me earlier this week by phone. “And sure enough that’s what happened. It was something I had to do. I love the quote where a lady says to him, ‘That drawing only took you three minutes.’ Picasso responds, ‘No, it took my whole life.’ This film took me my whole life to do.”

After debuting his show at San Diego Rep, Sigüenza has performed A Weekend with Pablo Picasso hundreds of times leaving satisfied audiences and critics in his wake. In conjunction with San Diego Rep a film of the play is making its way around the world. Beginning on Saturday, CaltechLive! will be streaming the play for one month. (You can get the details in our preview here.)

The film was created ten years after the play’s debut. And Sigüenza thinks that’s all for the best.

“I just feel as one ages, one gets wiser and understands the philosophies that he’s talking about,” he said. “To be an artist you have to be an artist 24/7. It’s not a job, it’s a lifestyle. As I’ve aged I’ve gotten better as an actor, as a painter and a lot of it has to do with this play. This play has reaffirmed for me that I am an artist. So one has to create every day. That is our job. That is our life – to create. I’ve aged into the play in a good way.”

His role as a painter is crucial to the success of this film. While the work seen resembles Picasso, it was all done by Sigüenza. He creates several new works on screen and he does it quickly. Just as Picasso is forced to do when asked to deliver six paintings and three vases over one weekend in the play.

“I’m approaching the canvases a lot like how he taught me – to do it fearlessly and freely and to accept mistakes and not to worry about the outcome. I’ve always been a fast painter, as was he. I don’t labor a lot on a painting. I create it and I move on.”

Sigüenza says that 80% of A Weekend with Pablo Picasso is “direct quotes from Picasso or things people said he said.” Knowing that, I wanted to get his response, as a writer, as a painter, as an artist, to some of the most provocative things Picasso said:

Every act of creation is first an act of destruction: “That’s a good quote. I think you have to approach the art with no mind. In other words, you go in with no preconceptions, no predetermined ideas. You go in with a vague idea and then you start creating. You destroy it if you don’t like where it’s going. You destroy it, change your mind and take another road. What I love is the process is not precious.”

Pablo Picasso (Courtesy CaltechLive!)

Inspiration does not exist: “He didn’t believe in inspiration. He believed in the act of doing it. As a playwright I can’t create a play unless I sit my butt down on a chair and type on my laptop. In other words, there’s no magic to creating art of a play. It’s the action of doing it. Action creates energy. The inspiration is caused by you doing it.”

Art is a lie that makes us recognize the truth: “It comes down to what is real? What is the truth? Is the truth the model in front of you or is the truth the image on the canvas? When you think of yesterday, think of what you ate. It’s an image in your mind, isn’t it? If someone drew that lunch for you and you had it framed, what is more real? The framed image of your lunch or the memory of your lunch? I would say the image is more real. It has more permanence than the so-called reality of your memory.”

One memory that came up in our conversation was about Culture Clash’s first play, The Mission. Sigüenza brought it up in relation to the Golden Globe Awards that had taken place the night before we spoke and the lack of Latinos amongst the nominees.

“Our first play in 1988 was about the lack of Latinos in Hollywood,” he began. “I forget who examined it, but we’re between 1.3 and 3 percent of the total representation on tv and film. Yet we’re 18% of the population. The underrepresentation is amazing. We are seen as the other, as a foreigner usually. We’re not seen as Americans. Millions of people like me where English is the first language. I don’t see myself on TV hardly ever. I don’t see it changing. I think it’s something we’re really going to have to figure out or boycott or something. It’s going to have to change from the top down, not the bottom up.”

Which makes the realization of A Weekend With Pablo Picasso as a film that much sweeter for Sigüenza.

“I’m really happy with that permanent record. I think it captured the best performance, the best interpretation of that play for right now. In ten years I’m sure it would be different, not drastically different, but the spirit would be. It had to be written. It had to be done by me. It was just my fate. I wrote it ten years ago, but I would probably have to write it now, too.”

Photo: Herbert Sigüenza as Pablo Picasso side-by-side with Picasso

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Celebrating Ennio Morricone https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/07/celebrating-ennio-morricone/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/07/07/celebrating-ennio-morricone/#respond Tue, 07 Jul 2020 20:24:03 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9602 Ten of my favorite compositions of Morricone help celebrate his amazing career

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Composer Ennio Morricone was one of a kind. You knew within a few seconds when you were listening to one of his compositions. He composed the scores for dozens of films including The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, Days of Heaven, The Untouchables, Bugsy and The Hateful Eight.

He finally won a competitive Oscar for his score for Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight. He had previously been awarded an Honorary Academy Award in 2007 (only the second composer to receive an honorary Oscar.)

Morricone passed away at the age of 91 yesterday in Rome. He wrote his own obituary which was released yesterday.

“I, Ennio Morricone, have died.

I’m announcing my death to all my friends that have always been close to me and to those who I haven’t seen for a while. I salute them with great affection. Impossible to name all of them.

“I do want to dedicate a special mention though, to Peppuccio and Roberta, brotherly friends, extremely present in these last days of our life.

“There is only one reason that pushes me to send my farewell to all of you in this way, and for which I’ve decided to have a private funeral: I do not want to disturb.

“I say goodbye with great affection to Ines, Laura, Sara, Enzo and Norbert, thanking them for having shared with my family and me a big part of my life. 

“I want to remember with love, my sisters Adriana, Maria and Franca and their loved ones and let them know how much I’ve loved them.

“An intense, full and profound goodbye goes to my children Marco Alessandra, Andrea and Giovanni, my daughter in law Monica, my grandchildren Francesca, Valentina, Francesco and Luca.

“I hope they will understand how much I’ve loved them.

“Last, but not least, Maria to whom I renew the extraordinary love that has kept us together and that I really regret leaving.

“I send my most painful farewell to her.” 

Leave it to a composer to orchestrate his final words.

There’s no reason to offer additional words or thoughts on his music. Each and every score means something different to us all. So as we say farewell to the maestro, let me share with you some of my favorite music by Ennio Morricone.

“Harmonica” from Once Upon a Time in the West (1968)

You can stream this movie on Amazon Prime and HBO Max

“Theme” from Salo, or 120 Days of Sodom (1975)

Unfortunately, not currently available for streaming

“Romanzo” from Novecento aka 1900 (1976)

Available to rent on Apple TV and Amazon

“Cockeye’s Song” from Once Upon a Time in America (1984)

Available to rent on Apple TV and YouTube

“On Earth As It Is In Heaven” from The Mission (1986)

Available to rent on Amazon, AppleTV and DirecTV

“Love Theme” from Cinema Paradiso (1988)

Available on HBO Max and DirecTV

“Machine Gun Lullaby” from The Untouchables (1987)

Available on Starz and DirecTV
Available to rent on Amazon

“Theme” from Hamlet (1990)

Available on DirecTV

“1900’s Theme” from The Legend of 1900 (1998)

Available to rent on Amazon

“End Title” from Malena (2000)

Available to rent on Amazon and AppleTV

I cannot quantify how many hours I’ve spent listening to Morricone’s music. Endless hours of pleasure will continue to remind me of his genius.

Thank you, Maestro.

Photo: Ennio Morricone conducting in London in 2015 (Photo courtesy of EnnioMorricone.org)

Streaming information courtesy of JustWatch.com

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