How would you like a free 2-night/3-day stay for two adults and up to two children, ALL INCLUSIVE, at Marina El Cid?
How about helping those in need in our community at the same time? It’s a combination that can’t lose!
Desayuno de los Pollos, “Breakfast of the Chickens,” is this Saturday, December 7th, at 8:30 am. Tickets are 150 pesos each. Buy tickets from anyone selling them, from us, or purchase them at the English Lending Library downtown or Post-N-Ship in the Golden Zone. You can also donate some money (100% goes to buy food for the needy) using this link.
There are many more gifts than those below. Please join me in THANKING those businesses who have donated to support those in need in our community. Mention your appreciation to them next time you visit, won’t you? Let’s support the merchants who support our community!
Click on the photo to visit the business’ website.
All inclusive two days/three nights for two adults and up to two children at the luxurious Marina El Cid.
Two nights in the beautiful Casa Buena Vista at La Rosa de las Barras, on the beach in Barras de Piaxtla.
One gift certificate for a one-hour massage and a facial, and a second for a pedicure, at the luxurious Athina Spa. You deserve it this holiday!
A beautiful woven scarf/shawl/wrap, in a gorgeous print, from Casa Etnika.
Two gourmet breakfasts with a view for two people at the elegant Las 7 Maravillas.
A delicious breakfast for two people at Lauren’s restaurant in the chic Hotel Jonathan.
Original artwork of an ulama player by Armando Nava
A 300 peso gift certificate to Tippy Toes Salon or Marrakesh Spa
300 peso gift certificate to Il Mosto
Two facials and massages from María José Wong Loubet
Two beautiful handmade baby quilts
A handpainted wooden school desk
Click on any of the photos in the collage below to enlarge it or to view a slideshow of other prizes and auction items.
Three one-year agendas that includes a weekly photo of Historic Mazatlá
100 peso certificate for Cafe Allegro
Five certificates for 30 kg of gas from GasPasa
20 one month subscriptions to the Noroeste newspaper
A car wash from Joaquin and company
Several haircuts from Kaly
2 hamburgers and drinks at Beach Burguer
Gift certificate for 200 pesos worth of dry cleaning from Imperial Cleaners
One specialty pizza from La Rustica
Five certificates for chiropractic treatment from Diego Martin López
Many times I’ve seen the photos, from Italy, I believe, of waiters running through the streets carrying trays full of things. I’ve always wanted to see one. A few years ago I remember hearing about and attending one here in Mazatlán, just prior to the Marathon, but it wasn’t that exciting.
This past week, Tuesday October 22, was the “Traditional Day of the Waiter,” and a party was hosted at BoraBora to honor these terrific people who make all our lives so much better. One of the events was a race, beginning at Bora Bora, running down the heavily trafficked Camarón Sábalo AGAINST traffic, I might add. They ran all the way down to Panamá restaurant, then turned around and ran back. The winner won a big-screen TV and some money, so it was quite the competition. Photos are below; click on any to enlarge or view a slideshow.
Sponsors of the event
Waiting to get started
Loaded up and ready to go
Ready to get started
Feeling in tip-top shape!
Posing for photos
More paparazzi
Valentino’s in the background
The botargas or mascots
Nice t-shirts, guys.
Rarin’ to go!
On the starting line
Take off!
Oops, my stuff spilled…
Running back in
We can win this!
What a load of fun! We are really glad we showed up to watch, as it was a hoot! The photos and video aren’t the greatest, as it was dark and the area is not exactly well-lit. A few botargas or “mascots” also joined in the festivities and had their own race. It was hysterical as they tried to flag down buses, cabs and cars.
We are all very proud of the success of the Mazatlán International Center. That Teachers’ Union really knows what it’s doing! The convention center has brought huge groups of people to our port, and seems to be a resounding success.
Yesterday (Tuesday), I was privileged to watch as 89 busloads of employees —3000 people in total — arrived from Sigma Alimentos/Sigma Foods, Mexico’s largest producer of refrigerated and processed foods (brand names FUD, San Rafael, Noche Buena, and others, as well as licensing Yoplait and Oscar Meyer).
The 3000 gathered in front of that gorgeous mosaic on the northern wall of the convention center, for a group portrait. Group portrait?! Of 3000 people?! How many risers and bleachers would they have to have so that you could see everyone?
My photography teacher, Salvador Herrera, had told me about the event on Monday. He said he had rented a crane (in the States we would call it a cherry picker, but this really was a crane, retrofitted to accommodate a cage to stand in), and would be taking the portrait the following afternoon. Eager to learn, and to witness, Greg and I drove up there.
Neither of us have ever seen Mexican people so orderly and obedient! They gathered in color-coded regional groups, they stood in straight lines. They carried sparkly signs and cheered and waves non-stop for about 30 minutes, yet they were quiet and smiling when it was time for the formal portrait.
Salvador tells me this is a first, taking a group portrait of 3000 people. I will say it was extremely cool! Thank you for letting us know! Photos below; click to enlarge or see a slideshow.
Taking the photo
Salvador in the cherry picker with his camera
Sigma Foods
89 busloads of 3000 people
Blue team cheers
Green team cheers
Red team cheers
Purple team cheers
White team cheers
View of part of the group, the mural, and the cherry picker
All in position…
Giving instructions via microphone
The crane
View of the full group; doesn’t work so well with my vantage point!
Coming into the Angela Peralta Theater on Saturday, October 12, the doors to the theater remained closed. I asked my girlfriend if we were late, as I wasn’t wearing a watch. I knew we were 10 minutes before curtain time. “You are fine,” said the usher. “Just walk down here and turn right.” As we walked down a long, dark hallway, I wondered if this was some sort of early Halloween or Day of the Dead prank. But, no, we were being ushered ONTO the stage!
What a feeling! I of course turned around, looked out at that gorgeous theater, and hammed it up a bit. My moment of fame on the stage! The stage was set up very simply, with several folding tables, a few props, a large television screen and video camera, and hooks hanging from the catwalks overhead. There were bleachers set up on the stage, facing this smaller performance area. Cool! We took a seat.
As we waited, a guy dressed as a painter used a roller on an extension pole to paint some very cool scenes. Then, just before the play started, he painted over it all. Heartbreak. But very interesting. (Video below) They ended up using the white wall as a projection screen during the performance. And the dog that just happened to be wandering around the stage before the play, dovetailing seamlessly with the evening’s performance—pure serendipity.
The play we were about to see was entitled, “Baños Roma,” by the internationally renowned theater troupe, Teatro Línea de Sombra. I knew it was the story of José Ángel (Mantequilla) Nápoles, the famous Cuban-Mexican boxer (career of 78 wins and 7 losses, with 55 wins by knockout), interwoven with the story of the horrible violence and cultural illness that took over Ciudad Juárez and the “Baños Roma” neighborhood. I am most interested in the latter, so was looking forward to the play. It did not disappoint. In fact, the actors and production company received a standing ovation! We were all so incredibly moved by the performance that people hung around, talking, watching. The ushers actually had to ask people to leave!
What made this performance so incredible? Of course, the narrative: both stories are incredibly powerful and emotive, and they were woven together seamlessly, dovetailing and building on one another. What really stood out to me, however, was the unbelievable creativity of the performance. With an extreme minimalism of props and sets, we were taken inside the experiences of the “lost women” of Ciudad Juárez. Sawdust on the floor served first as a dance floor, then as a map of the city on which to draw the layout of streets. A punching bag was filled with fabrics; unpacking it showed clothing and memories. Actors took turns in extreme closeup to a camera, and spoke to us via large screen projection. Scales were laid down on the floor to represent weigh-ins and weight categories for boxers. We listened to the metamorphosis of an amazingly talented throat-voice actor, and then he also played the sax. A live band came in at one point, during a drinking party on stage. A can of white spray was shot into the air to represent snow falling on a dead dog, the memory of a woman in the story. Another woman died, or was killed, in front of us, and the dramatic simplicity was heartbreaking. Punching bags hung from the catwalk transformed into poles for exotic dancing. It was the best of a Mexican performance—raw, poetic, ferocious—and the best of creative minimalism. (Photos below)
Talking sideways to a camera, with a huge screen facing the audience
Using a boxing bag as a pole for dancing
Adding artefacts to an overhead projector screen, to trace experiences of a lifetime
“Snow” in Mazatlán
The life assembled, on a simple stage
Voice actor and sax player
Singing karaoke, to mimic nightlife in Cd. Juárez
The real Nápoles
Bright light on a dark stage to indicate a cruel death
Thank you, CULTURA Mazatlán, for bringing this here! And for 120 pesos a ticket, you permitted me to pay for my friend!
Línea de la Sombra is a traveling troupe, so if you get a chance to watch them, don’t miss it!
The theater festival this year was wonderful, as usual. We are so blessed with terrific arts in this small city! What really capped it off for me was the “pasacalles,” an ambulatory “theater in the streets.” It was Sunday October 13 at 7:00 pm. starting at the Glorieta Sanchez Taboada and winding its way around to the Machado.
35 students from the Municipal School of the Arts theater workshop participated, along with two terrific singers—Flor Estrada and Jorge Echeagaray, plus a few wonderful dancers. It was directed by Jorge Gorostiza Zatarain.
What a fun event! There was live singing and dancing (“Perfume de gardenia”, “Personalidad”, “Luna lunera” e “Historia de amor” “La Tombola”), dramatic acting, and a really cool “theater-on-feet”—the students held a sheet as they danced, and a projector showed clips of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema onto the white sheet. How creative is that?
Looking at the costumes, you can tell what most of the participants are dressed as, right? Come on…. Label them… (Mouseover a photo to cheat, click on it to enlarge and view slideshow.)
La Araña, La Estrella, y El Sol also
El Katrin
El Valiente
La Mariposa
El Borracho
La Sirena
Help me with this one. El Negrito? El Músico?
Lotería, of course, in this most Mexican of fiestas! Once we entered the Plazuela, Lotería was called, and the “board”—in the center of the street—was filled in with live people. It was great! Once that was complete, four luchadores put on an exciting show. The fight saw “El Santo” and “Blue Demond” against “El hombre lobo” and “Los vampiros.” You can view my 1-1/2 minute video of the event below.