Skip to content

Jimmy A. Noriega

Jimmy A. Noriega

area: Theatre

© Jimmy Noriega

© Jimmy Noriega

© Jimmy Noriega

© Jimmy Noriega

© Jimmy Noriega

© Jimmy Noriega

Key Facts

nationality

USA

area

Theatre

residence

Ohio

recommending institution

Fulbright Austria

time period

March 2022 - April 2022

Dr. Jimmy A. Noriega is Associate Professor of Theatre at the College of Wooster. He has directed over fifty theatre productions in English and Spanish, including invited performances at theatres and festivals in Mexico, India, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Romania, Colombia, Peru, Canada, Belgium, Ecuador, and across the United States.
He is the founder and artistic director of Teatro Travieso/Troublemaker Theatre (www.teatrotravieso.org) and is the current President of the American Society for Theatre Research.
He is the co-editor of the books Theatre and Cartographies of Power: Repositioning the Latina/o Americas and 50 Key Figures in Queer US Theatre. His research focuses on Latinx, Latin American, and queer theatre and performance.

Project info

“A Mexican-American in Vienna: A Multimedia Theatre Encounter” 

As a Fulbright-Q21/MuseumsQuartier Artist-in-Residence, I propose to develop and stage a multimedia theatre piece that seeks to present the intercultural and historical perspectives of two populations that are not often thought of as being in dialogue. This performance will be crafted as a way to present the Mexican-American identity and viewpoint to the people of Austria and will be influenced by site-specific research and interviews conducted and related to my work in Vienna. The performance will be inspired by the historical connections between Austria and Mexico, but will be told through the intermediary of Mexican-American identity (which at its core is a transnational and transhistorical construction). This investigation and performance will question the legacy and impact of Austria’s relations with Mexico and the United States and will present an audience with a performative response to the complicated history of US-race relations and the ways that the Mexican-American community has been represented and understood abroad.

Back to main navigation

Cookie Settings

This websites uses cookies to give you the best possible service. Detailed information can be found in our Terms of use and Data Protection Regulations.

Technically essential

Technically essential cookies used to ensure the basic functionality of the website.

Statistics

Functional cookies used to ensure the proper performance of the website.

Marketing

Target-oriented cookies used to improve user experience.