
""While we try to navigate the adversity of the current times, what we can control is how much we let that to affect us. So we hope that by coming here and sharing laughter, because laughter is healing and when it is done in a community it is more powerful," Garcia said."
""Here we continue telling our stories, here we have a space for you.""
""Pero es healing, cura el alma," Badú said."
""This is just the window of a way of people being able to visually start cataloging the fact that sometimes there's a lot more diversity that comes from Mexico," Sanchez-Cruz said."
Teatro Visión presents the 13th annual Día de los Muertos production La Muerte Baila at the Mexican Heritage Plaza in San Jose, running through October 19 with pay-what-you-can tickets. The production blends music, dance, and storytelling to honor the dead and uplift Latino cultural traditions during periods of isolation. The staging centers on communal healing through shared laughter, forgiveness, opening hearts, and releasing past sorrows. Costumes draw inspiration from Veracruz to highlight regional diversity within Mexico. The narrative follows Alejandro and creates a space for continued storytelling and cultural connection across communities.
Read at ABC7 San Francisco
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