A DOOR OPEN TO THE SEA, play by Viviana Marcela Iriart: excerpt

 









The stage is barely lit. “Porque vas a venir” (Because you’re coming), a song by Carmen Guzmán and Mandy, sung by Susana Rinaldi, is played until the characters speak. 

Dunia enters from the right side. She is excited and nervous. She sits down, stands up, walks from side to side. She is thrilled. She can barely hold her laughter. 

Sandra appears on the left side. She is nervous and excited, but she moves slowly, in a controlled way. She stops at the large window, which is softly lit with a warm glow. She looks inside but sees no one: Dunia has left the stage at that point. She moves towards the proscenium. Dunia enters and does not see her. She goes to the proscenium. 

Until indicated, Sandra and Dunia behave as if they were in a dream. They never touch or look at each other. When they speak, it seems like they are talking to themselves. 


SUSANA RINALDI

“Because you’re coming my old house

unveils new flowers throughout the railing.

Because you're arriving, after so long,

I cannot tell if I'm crying or laughing.

 

I know you're coming, though you didn't say it,

but you'll arrive one morning.

There's a song in my voice, I'm not so sad,

and a ray of sunlight is coming through my window.

 

Because you're arriving, after a long journey,

there's a different hue, a different landscape.

Everything shines a different light and has changed its way,

because you're arriving after all.

 

Because you’re coming, from so far away,

I've looked at myself in the mirror once again.

And how will they see me, I asked myself,

the eyes of this day I was waiting for.


Because you're arriving I wait for you,

because you love me and I love you.

Because you're arriving I wait for you,

because you want it

and I want it too.”




SANDRA (As if she were alone, without noticing Dunia)
And then I thought, will she have changed much? Have I changed so much?

DUNIA (With the same attitude as Sandra)
I was waiting impatiently. I looked at myself in the mirrors and wondered what look you’d give to these wrinkles that have surrounded my eyes without yours. Would you recognize me with these gray hairs I didn't tell you about?

SANDRA
The street in front of your house seemed to be the same. The orange tree in the corner where the greengrocer's was, the paving stones at Don Giuseppe’s store - still broken -, the magnolia tree that would never bloom. But above all, the smell of the orange tree announcing your house was nearby. It all looked the same.

DUNIA

Your voice on the phone, cheerful and teasing, here and not there once again, the same old voice, and I swear I could have eaten up the receiver to eat your voice so that you’d never be gone again.

SANDRA (She turns her back on her)

I admit it - I was scared. The doorbell was there, tiny and glossy. It looks like a nipple, I thought, a nipple inviting the erotic—but no, this little nipple-doorbell was inviting me to the past and I was saying: should I touch it, should I not? I would stretch a finger and stroke it slowly, without pressing, in case I could excite it and make it ring. My finger was bringing you back to my memory.


DUNIA (She turns her back on her)
I looked at you through the peephole, which of us did I see? Years flashed by in the glass eye and did not let me see you.

SANDRA (She comes forward slowly with her back to Dunia)
My finger was still on the doorbell. A door was coughing weakly and I listened to it. The little moaning nipple would not need to be touched. I crossed the doorstep and rested my chest, my whole body, on the door.

DUNIA (She comes forward slowly with her back to Sandra)
I saw you and I pressed my body on the exact same place as you had placed yours. A door divided us and bound us. I was drowning and I thought: there’s no shore near here or any lifeguard in this place.

SANDRA
Your breathing in my ear was suffocating me, it didn't let me think. I was going crazy, I was fainting.

DUNIA
The air from your mouth made me warm, and I was getting filled with sweet old memories. The air from your mouth was burning me, immolating me.

SANDRA (Stands very close to Dunia’s back, without touching it)
Your fingers scratching the wood, scratching and moaning like a stray cat about to give birth to dead memories.

DUNIA
I felt you were sliding down the door to the floor and I reached out to stop you from hitting it.

SANDRA
Your back was sticking into mine, piercing me. I felt pain, I felt pleasure.

DUNIA

You were crying—and you never cried—in a way that was new to me.


SANDRA
You were crying and in your tears was the same old pain I always remembered.

DUNIA
I heard you say: you’re back at last.

SANDRA
And I heard you answer: at last I’ve returned.

(...)

A DOOR OPEN TO THE SEA by Viviana Marcela Iriart




Dr. Susana D. Castillo, University of San Diego, United States:

“…...the play explores the uprooting of its two characters on different levels. On one level, the play deals with the anxious reunion of two women separated for ten years…

Aptly, the initial encounter is choreographed as a slow dance in which the two women try to find each other—as if in a mist—while simultaneously suppressing the outward expression of their conflicting emotions… Thus, they will move—with caution and restraint—from reminiscence to laughter, from song to nostalgia, from distance…to the tango!...

(...) It is worth adding that Viviana Marcela Iriart—novelist and journalist—sought refuge in the Venezuelan Embassy at the age of 21, a period that marked the beginning of her exile, which would take her to various parts of the world before she settled in Venezuela…”





Available for sale on Amazon


 




Viviana Marcela Iriart (1958) is an Argentine-Venezuelan writer, playwright, and interviewer.


She has published 
"La Casa Lila" ( novel), "Interviews" (interviews with cultural figures, in English), and "¡Bravo, Carlos Giménez!" (biography). She compiled the free-to-read book "María Teresa Castillo-Carlos Giménez-Festival Internacional de Teatro de Caracas 1973-1992", a collaborative work with José Pulido, Rolando Peña, Karla Gómez, Carmen Carmona, and Roland Streuli.


"A DOOR OPEN TO THE SEA", as well as her forthcoming novel "Lejos de Casa", is based on her experiences with the Argentine dictatorsh






A DOOR OPEN TO THE SEA, play by Viviana Marcela Iriart, available for sale on Amazon

 






 

Play. Argentina, early 1990s. Sandra and Dunia, childhood friends who were detained and disappeared by the dictatorship in a concentration camp for being pacifists, reunite after Sandra's years in exile.

The emotional reunion gives way to the shocking realization of how the dictatorship managed to separate them and create two communities: one for those who stayed and one for those condemned to exile.

Suddenly, an abyss opens before their eyes, leaving them on opposite shores.

Can they build a bridge to unite them?

 

Dr. Susana D. Castillo, University of San Diego, United States:

“…...the play explores the uprooting of its two characters on different levels. On one level, the play deals with the anxious reunion of two women separated for ten years…

Aptly, the initial encounter is choreographed as a slow dance in which the two women try to find each other—as if in a mist—while simultaneously suppressing the outward expression of their conflicting emotions… Thus, they will move—with caution and restraint—from reminiscence to laughter, from song to nostalgia, from distance…to the tango!...

(...) It is worth adding that Viviana Marcela Iriart—novelist and journalist—sought refuge in the Venezuelan Embassy at the age of 21, a period that marked the beginning of her exile, which would take her to various parts of the world before she settled in Venezuela…”





Available for sale on Amazon


 


Viviana Marcela Iriart (1958) is an Argentine-Venezuelan writer, playwright, and interviewer.


She has published 
"La Casa Lila" ( novel), "Interviews" (interviews with cultural figures, in English), and "¡Bravo, Carlos Giménez!" (biography). She compiled the free-to-read book "María Teresa Castillo-Carlos Giménez-Festival Internacional de Teatro de Caracas 1973-1992", a collaborative work with José Pulido, Rolando Peña, Karla Gómez, Carmen Carmona, and Roland Streuli.


"A DOOR OPEN TO THE SEA", as well as her forthcoming novel "Lejos de Casa", is based on her experiences with the Argentine dictatorship and exile.

MARÍA TERESA CASTILLO-CARLOS GIMÉNEZ -FESTIVAL INTERNACIONAL DE TEATRO DE CARACAS 1973-1992, compilación de Viviana Marcela Iriart, prólogo de José Pulido, portada de Rolando Peña-Karla Gómez, producción Carmen Carmona, Roland Streuli, fotografías. Diciembre 2023

 



©Rolando Peña-Karla Gómez


El libro María Teresa Castillo-Carlos Giménez-Festival Internacional de Teatro de Caracas 1973-1992 homenaje a los 50 años del primer FITC, a los 30 años de la muerte de Carlos Giménez y a los 11 años de la desaparición de María Teresa Castillo, esos seres mágicos que fueron quienes lo inventaron y lo dirigieron durante 20 años, es el resultado de la unión de un equipo de personas maravillosas que se unieron para hacerlo posible, donando su arte, su tiempo y su dinero: el poeta José Pulido (prólogo); el artista multimedia Rolando Peña y  la directora de arte Karla Gómez (portada);  la gerente cultural  Carmen Carmona (producción general);   el fotógrafo  Roland Streuli (fotografías)  y la escritora  Viviana Marcela Iriarten idea, edición, entrevistas y producción general.

El poeta José Pulido, en una parte de su magnífico prólogo, nos cuenta:

“María Teresa parecía un terremoto de entusiasmos. Nada era imposible para su voluntad de generar actividades que semejaran siempre una siembra fundamental. Ella se desvivía por demostrar la espiritualidad del país, la inteligencia del país, la fertilidad intelectual del país.

 Es de imaginar lo que ocurrió cuando ella y Carlos Giménez se conocieron y se juntaron en torno a un objetivo, amando el destino del arte.

 Porque Carlos Giménez era un terremoto de entusiasmos: nada era imposible para su voluntad de generar actividades. Él la miró y le dijo: “Hagamos buen teatro, señora María Teresa”. Y ella también lo miró y de una vez le dijo: “hagamos eso, muchacho querido”.

 


“Ephémere”, Ko Murobushi Company, Japón, 1992. ©Roland Streuli

 

El libro cuenta con catálogos del FITC, textos de Carlos Giménez y María Teresa Castillo y valiosos testimonios de personalidades de la cultura mundial: la dramaturga y escritora Elisa Lerner; el director del diario El Nacional, Miguel Henrique Otero; el dramaturgo José Gabriel Núñez; el director y dramaturgo fundador del Theja, José Simón Escalona; el escritor y crítico Rodolfo Izaguirre; el diseñador de iluminación y gerente cultural mexicano, Ángel Ancona; la cofundadora de la Compañía Nacional de Teatro y gerente cultural, Elaiza Irizarri; el cineasta y escritor Alberto Ferreras; la actriz, directora y productora Teresa Selma; el actor y docente Roberto Moll, la dramaturga Indira Paez; la ex directora general del CONAC y escritora, Norka Valladares; el dramaturgo y director Elio Palencia; el actor y productor Karl Hoffman; el artista multimedia José Augusto Paradisi Rangel; la actriz y docente Francis Rueda; el director y gerente cultural José Luis Montero Conde; la gerente cultural francesa Bernardette Chaudé; el actor y cofundador de Rajatabla, Juan Pagés; el director de Rajatabla, William Lopez; el director y fundador del Theatron Centro Dramático, Rodolfo Molina; el director y dramaturgo José Dominguez; la consejera académica y gerente cultural Marta Queralt Vila; el dramaturgo y director Daniel Uribe; el actor y director Aníbal Grunn; el productor y escritor Armando Africano; el actor y productor Ángel Acosta; el actor argentino Alvin Astorga; el ex director de la Casa del Artista, Juan José Bartolomeo; el gerente cultural Marcos Belisario; el director y fundador del grupo Bagazos, Gerardo Blanco; el músico cubano Juan Marcos Blanco; el actor Roberto Calvarese; el realizador de escenografía Esmeiro Herrera; el diseñador de iluminación Jose Jimenez; el actor Vito Lonardo; el fotógrafo Nicola Rocco; el actor Gerardo Luongo Zoppi; el actor y director Alfonso Rey; el actor Manuel Villalba; la ex empleada del Ateneo de Caracas, María Magdalena Leseur Maldonado y testimonios del equipo realizador.

El libro María Teresa Castillo-Carlos Giménez-FITC 1973-1992, de lectura gratuita, edición de Escritoras Unidas & Cía. Editoras, 22 de diciembre de 2023, fue realizado sin subsidios ni aportes de la empresa privada.  Solicítalo sin cargo a: edicioneschoroni@gmail.com












JOSÉ PULIDO in the book INTERVIEWS (2025) by Viviana Marcela Iriart “I'm like a castaway clinging to his tongue”

 

José Pulido. Photo: Vasco Szinetar


José Pulido was part of one of the most beautiful and beloved traditions in Caracas: Sunday, buying the papers, having breakfast at the bakery, going up the Ávila, enjoying the blue butterflies and the singing of Quebrada Quintero, spreading the papers among the stones and then… José Pulido and his interview completed the happiness of the day. It did not matter who he interviewed, because the real pleasure was reading him. And my friends would go: what does Pulido say? Have you read what Pulido said? Pulido is so wonderful! Pulido was the main character. Then came the person being interviewed. Because reading José Pulido is good for you. It gives you joy. It makes you think. Because José Pulido writes with humor, tenderness, compassion, intelligence, love. José Pulido the poet, the writer, the journalist. The interviewer who created a new style. The kind, simple and tender man who creates bridges for people to meet, to cross, to discover the other side of their side.

 

José Pulido, who does not deserve to be exiled like he is today, walking around Genoa while he goes around Caracas.

 

And José Pulido is also Carlos Giménez, who he and I love so much, and that beautiful article he wrote: Carlitos sin olvido (Carlitos without oblivion). And he is that marvelous interview he just made to another wonderful and beloved figure from Caracas: Rolando Peña.  An interview that is like a story written with four hands.  An interview that is like a love letter.

 

And José Pulido is this poem of his, which I find while I'm writing this and then I'm out of words.

 

 

THE OLD SONG

 

Before antiquity arrived

the birds that died

turned into carnelian and tourmaline

John claimed in the Book of Revelation that the face of god was made of jasper and carnelian

birds probably made one of their best graveyards in that face

 

All mountains have been built out of birds' ancestors

 

From a yellow, blue and green bird

who dies when put in a cage and sings in beautiful fury

the mountain of Caracas was born creating ripples of water and branches

 

the Ávila of stones and roots, spit with Pleiades

is our most concrete mountain

 

I wish I could sweep its pathways with a broom of dreams

clean them up of all miseries

 

It is so big it could only fit into the universe once

when the heavens dilated

so that mangos could bloom

 

hummingbirds in the Ávila seem as if they were invented by Borges:

they fly backwards because they care more about the beginning than the end

 

the Ávila is huge but it is not so hard to carry in a bag

it is completely portable when carried as a feeling

especially if you have looked at its mermaid-like curves,

its crests resembling a resting animal

Or if you have ever heard the waters talk in Quebrada Quintero

about how to go down to the Caribbean Sea without having to ask for

directions in the valley

 

In the afternoon the mountain opens its eye made of sun

An eye that falls asleep on the voracious head of dry trees

at night it crouches with its breath of burning plants

ready to jump again on the fearful valley with its rabbit heart

this is the mountain that feeds on looks

that on the beach side is the Ávila of Reverón

deranged by light

and on the Caracas side is the Ávila of Cabré

borrowing the iridescence of the sparkling hummingbird

and all Pleiades sneeze with love when molasses grass stirs,

the delicious herb

and at the top and the bottom it is the Ávila of everyone and no one

a mountain that is like the Virgin of Coromoto and the Virgin of the Valley

like La Chinita and the Divina Pastora

because you do not have to know its pathways

to believe it represents our customs

 

The mountain was a bedroom for clouds a million years ago

and it still is.

The mountain was there making guacharacas

before anyone even thought of building the wall

that we would call town;

this ancient air is what comforts me.

The Ávila is a bird with apple mint in its wings,

it is the pain of fires kept within a case made of roots.

The Ávila is like saying amen when you pray for Caracas.

 

 

 
José Pulido, Salamanca, España.
 
 Carlos Giménez, Barbarito Diez, María Teresa Castillo,
Pablo Milanés,Miguel Henrique Otero, José Pulido...
"Macondo", María Teresas`s house


José, how has coronavirus treated you? What did you do during the quarantine?

 

I don't think coronavirus has treated anyone well. Fortunately I haven't got it because I'm always shut in writing and I only go out to walk up to the nearest mountain. I visit populated areas when I have to read poetry somewhere.

 

What was the first thing you did when the quarantine was lifted?

 

For me, it hasn't been lifted. I go out to walk but I wear a mask. Here you are fined if you don't wear it in the street. I haven't had any plans for when we get to the end of this. Beer tastes as good at home as it does in the bar.

 

Are you writing anything? What?

 

Poetry. I do some interviews for amusement. Poetry is my constant passion.

 

What are your plans for the mid-term?

 

Not dying yet to see what things have changed.

 


(...)


Excerpt from the book INTERVIEWS by Viviana Marcela Iriart, graphic design by Jairo Carthy, sold on Amazon





On sale on AMAZON






Un cuento del libro AVENTURAS CON LAS REDES SOCIALES de Jairo Carthy, ilustraciones de Lisardo Rico: "BLANCANIEVES Y LOS SIETE ENANOS EN LA RED"

  



 

Había una vez…

Una joven muy bonita llamada Blancanieves. Aunque su nombre hacía referencia a su piel tan pálida como la nieve, su verdadera belleza radicaba en su bondad y su curiosidad por el mundo. Blancanieves vivía en una gran ciudad, donde las redes sociales eran el pan de cada día y todos estaban conectados a través de sus dispositivos.

 

Un día, mientras navegaba en su celular, Blancanieves se topó con un grupo de siete amigos que compartían su vida a través de un canal de videos llamado “Los Enanos Digitales”.

 

Estos siete amigos eran muy diferentes entre sí, pero todos compartían una pasión por la tecnología y la creatividad. Se la pasaban cantando y subiendo muchas cosas en las redes sociales.  Tal era su pasión que asumieron unos nombres muy originales. Estos eran  “ROMY”, por Memoria Rom, siempre estaba tomando selfis y compartiendo consejos de fotografía; “SOFTY” por software, un experto en programación que siempre tenía un gadget nuevo que mostrar; “DATA” por los datos que se utilizan, hacía videos de comedia y siempre lograba sacar sonrisas; “HARDY” por el disco duro, siempre tenía sueño, pero le gustaba grabar relajantes sonidos de la naturaleza; “BLOGY” por los blogs que se publican en las redes sociales, siempre de mal humor, daba reseñas de videojuegos; “GADGY” por el uso de gadget, el más tierno de todos, hacía manualidades; y “NET” obviamente por la red, se dedicaba a enseñar como sacar mejor provecho a las redes sociales.

  

Blancanieves comenzó a seguirlos y se sintió inmediatamente atraída por su contenido y las bellas y contagiosas canciones y videos que subian, y pronto se convirtió en una de sus seguidoras más leales, a través de sus videos aprendió sobre la importancia de la amistad, la creatividad y, sobre todo, la autenticidad. Sin embargo, no todo era color de rosa.

  

Había una famosa influencer, llamada la Malvada Reina, que era hermosa y talentosa, pero también muy celosa. Cada día, revisaba sus estadísticas y se ponía furiosa si alguien lograba más “me gusta” o “seguidores” que ella. Cuando vio que Blancanieves comenzaba a ganar popularidad por sus interacciones con los siete enanos, se llenó de envidia, por lo que decidió usar su magia para deshacerse de Blancanieves. Así que, un día, publicó un video viral lleno de rumores maliciosos sobre ella, asegurando que Blancanieves estaba robando ideas y seguidores de otros. El video se volvió viral, y pronto, la reputación de Blancanieves estaba en peligro. La gente comenzó a dejar de seguirla y a criticarla sin conocer la verdad.

 

 

Desesperada y triste, Blancanieves decidió alejarse de las redes sociales. Se encerró en su habitación, sintiéndose sola y perdida. Fue entonces, que recibió un mensaje inesperado de los Siete Enanos. Ellos le recordaron lo especial que era y le ofrecieron su apoyo incondicional.

—No dejes que la Malvada Reina te afecte —dijo RE—. La autenticidad siempre brillará más que cualquier rumor.

—Podemos ayudar a que la verdad salga a la luz —propuso SOL— . ¡Vamos a hacer un video juntos!

 

Blancanieves, con el apoyo de sus amigos, decidió regresar a las redes sociales y todos juntos crearon un video sincero donde compartieron su experiencia, hablaron sobre la importancia de la amistad y la verdad, y expusieron la manipulación detrás del video de la Malvada Reina. Con su carisma y autenticidad, el video se volvió viral por las razones correctas y rápidamente, sus seguidores comenzaron a regresar.

  

La Malvada Reina, al ver que su plan había fracasado, se sintió aún más celosa y frustrada, por lo que decidió en un intento de derribar a Blancanieves, que tenía que actuar de manera más astuta y creó un perfil falso tratando de sembrar la discordia entre ellos y comenzó a acosar a sus seguidores,

 

Pero, Blancanieves y los Siete Enanos no se dejaron intimidar. Utilizaron su plataforma para hablar sobre el acoso en línea y cómo enfrentarlo. Con cada publicación, su comunidad se hizo más fuerte y unida.

 

Compartieron historias de apoyo y amistad, y comenzaron a recibir mensajes de agradecimiento de personas que habían pasado por experiencias similares.

  

Al final, la Malvada Reina se dio cuenta de que su magia no podía competir con la autenticidad y la bondad. Un día, mientras revisaba los comentarios de su último video, se dio cuenta de que la comunidad de Blancanieves había crecido tanto que se sentía parte de algo especial.

 

Por primera vez en mucho tiempo, la Malvada Reina, sintió un destello de esperanza y deseos de cambiar,  por lo que decidió hacer un video en el que se disculpaba con Blancanieves y reconocía que había estado equivocada. Al principio, los seguidores de Blancanieves estaban escépticos, pero Blancanieves, con su gran corazón, aceptó la disculpa y extendió una mano amiga.

—Todos cometemos errores —dijo Blancanieves en su video—. Lo importante es aprender de ellos y crecer juntos.

 

La comunidad se unió para apoyar a la Malvada Reina en su camino hacia la redención. Así, de la unión y la comprensión, surgió una nueva amistad. Con el tiempo, la Malvada Reina también se convirtió en una aliada y comenzó a trabajar junto a Blancanieves y los Siete Enanos en proyectos que promovían en línea ideas para mejorar la comunidad.

 

Y así, en un mundo donde las redes sociales podían ser un campo de batalla, Blancanieves y los Siete Enanos Digitales demostraron que la verdadera magia reside en la amistad, la autenticidad y el apoyo mutuo.

(...)



Del libro AVENTURAS CON LAS REDES SOCIALES de Jairo Carthy, ilustraciones de Lisardo Rico.


El escritor y actor venezolano Jairo Cathy, que recientemente nos sorprendió con un divertidísimo libro de humor contando sus anécdotas como actor de teatro y cine, Cómo soportar la vida con Humor, nos sorprende ahora con un inteligente y entretenido libro infantil para las niñas y niños del siglo XXI: Aventuras con las Redes Sociales, con ilustraciones maravillosas a todo color de Lisardo Rico.


Este libro, además de presentar cuentos originales del autor, nos sorprende con una original versión de cuentos clásicos de la literatura infantil, como Blancanieves La Cenicienta, ambientados en la época actual.


Un libro inteligente, divertido, educativo, lleno de dibujos para colorear con los personajes del mismo, que enseña valores positivos sin por ello evitar la risa, la picardía, el humor.


 

Un libro para las niñas y los niños de hoy,  en versión papel y e-book,  de venta en AMAZON