Signature Stories Vol. 16 | Page 11

the spirit of playwrights past and present bounces through the Signature walls. It’s moving to be part of that tradition. S: The characters in the play all have different visions for their community and how it can be improved. Where does this interest in community activism come from? QAH: It’s a legacy I inherited. My mother worked for the American Friends Service Community, which is the service arm of the Quakers in Philadelphia. As a Latina woman working there, she was an ambassador to non-Quaker communities where service work was needed. She also co-founded a women’s resource center in North Philly called Casa Comadre. My aunt helped create a program where community members could buy abandoned lots from the city for one dollar and turn them into community gardens. S: Why did you want Thomas Kail to direct Daphne’s Dive? QAH: Tommy and I were young artists at the start of our paths, and we made In the Heights together. It was time to get back in the room, and this time with a play – a new and different challenge. I’ve seen a lot of his work now and one of my favorite components of it is how fully the actors come alive. This being a bar, where lots of stories are told and lots of life convenes, I wanted that fullness of humanity in the performances. Tommy enables actors in a profound, rich way. S: You’ve spoken elsewhere about your passion for teaching. What do you try to impart to your students? QAH: That art is not indulgent or soft, but rigorous and explosive. The value of self-critique. The components of language – meter, rhyme, grammar, punctuation – and how they build a dramatic world. The tug-of-war between art and technique, between relaxation and control. The importance of generosity and self-humiliation. Those are a few of the things on my syllabus. n (opposite page, clockwise from top left) Armando Riesco in Page 73’s production of Elliot, A Soldier’s Fugue, 2006; Lauren Vélez and Tony Plana in Second Stage Theatre’s production of The Happiest Song Plays Last, 2014; Armando Riesco and Annapurna Sriram in Second Stage Theatre’s production of The Happiest Song Plays Last, 2014; Socorro Santiago and Bethany Anne Lind in Alliance Theatre’s production of 26 Miles, 2009. (right) Bill Heck and Liza Colón-Zayas in Second Stage Theatre’s production of Water by the Spoonful, 2013. 10