- Ana María Simo
Ana María Simo is a New York playwright, essayist and novelist. Born in
Cuba , educated inFrance , and writing in English, she has collaborated with such experimental artists as composerZeena Parkins , choreographer Stephanie Skura and filmmakers Ela Troyano and Abigail Child. [http://scholar.library.miami.edu/archivoteatral/review/viewPlaywrights.php?creator_ID=395 Ana María Simo] , Playwrights: Cuban/Latino Theater Archive of the University of Miami, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-11-14 ]She has also made important contributions as a lesbian activist, co-founding projects such as Medusa's Revenge, the first lesbian theater in New York, the direct action group The
Lesbian Avengers , Dyke TV, and [http://www.thegully.com The Gully online magazine] .Career
Writer
Ana María Simo was born in
Cienfuegos , Cuba in1943 , and moved toHavana with her grandmother on the eve of the 1959 revolution. She was 15 when she began working as a journalist and 18 when her first book was published: "Las fábulas (The Fables)", a short story collection. The book was published byEdiciones El Puente , a literary and publishing project (1961 to 1965) which Simo co-directed ] along with its founder, the poet José Mario Rodríguez.Simo immigrated first to
Paris (Dec. 1967), where she attendedRoland Barthes ’ seminar and studied sociology and linguistics at the University of Paris VIII-Vincennes (1968-1972). In the mid-1970s she settled in New York, where she began her career as an English-language writer. Her association with playwright/directorMaria Irene Fornes ’ theater workshop [Peterson, Jane T. and Bennet, Suzanne, 1997. "Women Playwrights of Diversity: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook", Greenwood Press. p. 19.] throughout the 1980s was pivotal in her development as a writer.Some of her most notable works includes her 1990 play "Going to New England" produced at the INTAR theater. [" [http://scholar.library.miami.edu/archivoteatral/review/performances.php?IDplayPerformance=519 Production Information: Going To New England] ", Cuban Theater Archive, University of Miami, 2005.] The New York Time's Stephen Holden gave the production mixed reviews, but also wrote that the play itself succeeded as "a study in physical and emotional claustrophobia" examining the traditions of Latin American machismo, Roman Catholic values, and erotic taboos. [Holden, Stephen. (90-03-09) [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE1D61139F93AA35750C0A966958260 Reviews/Theater; Primal Emotions When Sex Runs Amok] , "New York Times"] Simo's "The Bad Play," a 1991 dance-theater collaboration with choreographer Stephanie Skura, also reviewed in The New York Times, was described as "a very broad and very funny parody" of the Hispanic soap opera with philandering doctors and cantankerous mothers-in-law. [Anderson, Jack. (91-10-28) " [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CE7DA123CF93BA15753C1A967958260 Dance in Review] ", "New York Times".]
Her 1989 short film, "How to Kill Her", with Ela Troyano, premiered at the Lesbian and Gay Experimental Film Festival and later went on to win first place in The Latino Film and Video Festival.
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