Tag Archives: Teatro Libertad

Teatro Libertad: Reflection and Discussion / Program, October 1, 2013

Special Collections, University Libraries

September 25, 2013

Join us on October 1 from 6:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. in Special Collections for an evening of reflection and discussion with members of Teatro Libertad, a local street theatre company from the 1970s. A viewing of select scenes from La Vida Del Cobre (The Life of Copper), one of the group’s plays, accompanies the talk.

Former members of Teatro Libertad together again

Click here to see videographer Brenda Limon’s filmed version of highlights of the program.

Teatro Libertad is featured in a new exhibit on display from Sept. 3, 2013 – Jan. 12, 2014 at the UA Main Library. Formed in 1975 by seven local actors and musicians – Scott Egan, Barclay Goldsmith, Teresa Jones, Arturo Martinez, Pancho Medina, Arnold Palacios, and Sylviana Wood – the group was influenced by the tradition of teatro Chicano, the Chicano movement of the 60s and 70s, and with inspiration from El Teatro Campesino – a group formed by Luis Valdez in the early 1960s.

Former Teatro member Scott Egan

Teatro Libertad tackled real life, everyday issues as experienced by the Chicano community in Tucson and the Southwest. Using satire, comedy, and music, the group wrote and performed their plays with the goal of getting people to think about issues such as unemployment, union organization, race, and cultural identity. Among the plays written and performed by Teatro Libertad were Los Peregrinos, El Vacil de 76, Los Pelados, La Jefita, Semilla Sembrada and La Vida Del Cobre.

It was a packed house

The bilingual, multicultural group relied on simple stage sets and props – old boxes, masks, and signs – when performing in local neighborhood centers throughout Tucson and in Mexico City, San Diego, Santa Barbara, and New York. The group also performed – sometimes from a flatbed truck – in Arizona’s mining towns for striking miners or farmworkers.

Audience members included a who’s who of the Chicano community

More than 25 performers participated in the all-volunteer Teatro Libertad during the group’s 14-year run. Additional members included Pamela Bartholomew, Olivia Beauford, Bob Diaz, Lilliana Gambarte, Pernela Jones, Jean McClelland, Juan Villegas, and a host of others.

The event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served.

Barclay Goldsmith and Teresa Jones, former Teatro members

Click here to see the entire program, recorded on camera by Antonio Arroyo.

Arturo Martinez and Silviana Wood
Teatro Libertad members on the cover of La Estrella de Tucson
Another write up about the group, by Ernesto Portillo, Jr.

Teatro Libertad and Chicano Theater in Tucson / Exhibition, September 3, 2013-February 20, 2014

I was a member of Teatro Libertad from 1983 to 1985. Putting this exhibit and program together was one of the highlights of my career in librarianship. It took many months of planning to bring over 25 former members together, but I managed to pull it off. Teresa Jones flew in from Seattle, Pamela Calla joined us live from New York via Skype, and other members just seemed to pop out of the woodwork. The reunion was a memorable occasion, and putting the exhibit together was a blast.

Promotional material designed by Marty Taylor

From the UA News Service: “A local street theater company from the 1970s, Teatro Libertad, is featured in a new exhibit on display from Sept. 3, 2013 – Jan. 12, 2014 at the UA Main Library.
Formed in 1975 by seven local actors and musicians – Scott Egan, Barclay Goldsmith, Teresa Jones, Arturo Martinez, Pancho Medina, Arnold Palacios, and Sylviana Wood – the group was influenced by the tradition of teatro Chicano, the Chicano movement of the 60s and 70s, and with inspiration from El Teatro Campesino – a group formed by Luis Valdez in the early 1960s.


Teatro Libertad tackled real life, everyday issues as experienced by the Chicano community in Tucson and the Southwest. Using satire, comedy, and music, the group wrote and performed their plays with the goal of getting people to think about issues such as unemployment, union organization, race, and cultural identity. Among the plays written and performed by Teatro Libertad were “Los Peregrinos,” “El Vacil de 76,” “Los Pelados,” “La Jefita,” “Semilla Sembrada” and “La Vida Del Cobre.”

Teatro Libertad’s first full length play, Los Peregrinos


The bilingual, multicultural group relied on simple stage sets and props – old boxes, masks, and signs – when performing in local neighborhood centers throughout Tucson and in Mexico City, San Diego, Santa Barbara and New York. The group also performed – sometimes from a flatbed truck – in Arizona’s mining towns for striking miners or farm workers.


More than 25 performers participated in the all-volunteer Teatro Libertad during the group’s 14-year run. Additional members included Pamela Bartholomew, Olivia Beauford, Bob Diaz, Lilliana Gambarte, Pernela Jones, Jean McClelland, Juan Villegas and a host of others.

Semilla Sembrada was written and performed in the early 1980s


The exhibit, “Teatro Libertad and Chicano Theatre in Tucson,” is a retrospective review of the societal and cultural context in which the group performed. Original scripts, promotional materials, photographs, newspaper articles, reviews, and other original documents recreate the work of Teatro Libertad. Bob Diaz, associate librarian in Special Collections, curated the exhibit, with material on loan from former members. A permanent archive of Teatro Libertad will also be established for the benefit of future academic research and scholarship.

A selection of plays and other materials on Chicano theater