John Leguizamo set out to write a great American play about a Latino family
Briefly

"When you want to do the classics, it's always Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, Edward Albee, Arthur Miller - and they're all White plays and White culture. I love them; I mean, they made me who I am today. But you never see a Latin person, a Latin family."
"John does not know how to hold back. He does not know how to measure anything. He is full force all the time. He puts his heart on the line."
"But difficulty is where great things are made. The process broke me, but it’s worth it to create something that will stand the test of time."
Read at Washington Post
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