Politics, Philosophy, Rock, and Tamales The students at Cal. State San Marita want to take on big-money developers. They ask their political philosophy professor to run for office, after all, he seems to know about grassroots empowerment. Powered by Grandma’s tamales and books by Paulo Freire and Gloria Anzaldúa, they find a winning message about community when the community is patchwork of different ethnicities and blended races. But getting a foothold only turns up the pressure. Will they play ball with the bare-knuckled Governor? Is grandma right about Brenda’s good-looking but overly-ambitious boyfriend? Is winning everything, or just better than losing? What happened to all those ideas in Pedagogy of the Oppressed? Maybe the bottom-line political question isn’t how to win, but how to change the game. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll earn graduate credit.
Videos
RACHMANINOFF AND THE TSAR
South Coast Repertory (2/19 - 3/2) | ||
Wish You Were Here
South Coast Repertory's Julianne Argyros Stage (1/12 - 2/2) | ||
Batiashvili Plays Beethoven
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/3 - 1/5) | ||
Cody Fry with Orchestra
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/10 - 1/10) | ||
FARM HALL by Katherine Moar
Promenade Playhouse (1/10 - 1/26) NEW PLAY | ||
New Year's Eve with D-Nice & Friends
Walt Disney Concert Hall (12/31 - 12/31) | ||
KODO
Walt Disney Concert Hall (2/4 - 2/4) | ||
Millennium Magic 2025
Theatre West (1/24 - 1/26) | ||
Benavides’ Neruda Songs
Walt Disney Concert Hall (1/14 - 1/14) | ||
Back to the Future
Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Segerstrom Hall (12/26 - 1/5) | ||
Pacific Jazz Orchestra
Bram Goldsmith Theater at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts (5/29 - 5/30) | ||
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