INTIMAN EXCLUSIVE
By Joann Natalia Aquino
Intiman Theatre, September 2018

“Theater is about community… and when it really works it’s about communion.”

Born in Mexico to a family of poets and artists, Karen Zacarías is one of the most produced playwrights in the U.S. “A writer of comedic skill” (as described by Variety Magazine), Zacarías’s award-winning plays include the sold-out/extended comedy THE BOOK CLUB PLAY, the sold-out world premiere drama JUST LIKE US (adapted from the book by Helen Thorpe) at Denver Theater Center, the Steinberg – citation award play LEGACY OF LIGHT, the Francesca Primus Award winning play MARIELA IN THE DESERT, the Helen Hayes Award winning play THE SINS OF SOR JUANA, the adaptation of Julia Alvarez’s HOW THE GARCIA GIRLS LOST THEIR ACCENTS, and her latest, NATIVE GARDENS, which to date has been produced in over a dozen theatres around the country from the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, The Guthrie Theater, to The Pasadena Playhouse, and its Pacific Northwest premiere produced by Intiman Theatre.

Here, Karen Zacarías reflects with Joann Natalia Aquino on NATIVE GARDENS, diversity and representation in theatre, and her advice to young playwrights.

​JNA: NATIVE GARDENS is currently one of the most produced plays in the U.S. since it premiered in January 2016 at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. What are you most proud of about the play?
KZ: I am delighted how it’s bringing people together to laugh… and then think. I love how many actors across the country are simultaneously playing these characters and bringing their unique spin.

JNA: Were there any outcomes that you did not expect?
KZ: It’s interesting to watch this play perform in so many different communities… and for so many audience members to find a commonality. I never expected a Latinx comedy would end up being performed at so many theaters.

JNA: What needs to happen to ensure more diversity and representation in theatre?
KZ: Hold your local theaters accountable. Ask them to give you a banquet of stories. Ask them to make all people feel comfortable in their space. Theater is about community… and when it really works it’s about communion.

JNA: What advice would you give to a young playwright?
KZ: See a lot of theater. Write. Rewrite. Find your voice. Do not tame it.


About the author: Joann Natalia Aquino (she/her) is a Pinay, a publicist, an arts marketer, and a ​traveling ​freelance writer covering lifestyle including arts and entertainment, fashion, food, indigenous arts and the tattoo culture​. She is currently working on a screenplay based on her seven-year nomadic adventures and reconnection to her ancestral past and traditional ways.