Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Payazo






I had such a great time at my host grandma’s birthday party last week. Five of her eight kids, three of their spouses and three of her grandchildren were here to celebrate and it was so much fun for me to sit with everyone and feel so much like a part of this family. I see my host grandma almost every weekend, but it was great to see her so very, very happy. Before she went home I asked if we could take a picture together and she very proudly put down her cane and stood up especially tall. In the picture that’s me, Domonique, abuela, my host mom and three of the other siblings.

Saturday was Dia de los Cruces and even though I still don’t know what Granada was celebrating it was fun to walk the city and see all the people. Every major neighborhood here gets together to decorate a huge cross and then judges select winners based on different categories (best cross in a plaza, best cross by a school, etc.). What was most surprising to me was seeing so many baby girls, little girls, women my age, older women all wearing flamenco dresses. I knew Spain was proud of its flamenco, but people were dancing to music all over the city and it was incredible to see groups of people my age standing in the street and clapping the rhythms so their friends could dance.

Then Sunday was Spanish Mother’s Day so our host mom made salmorejo, a special and very typical Spanish dish, and the whole family and a family friend sat around the table and ate together. After lunch Domonique and I brought out the flowers we bought for Araceli and she was just so happy that we had thought of her.

Later that night I went with our program director, who is also my theater professor, to a local club/bar because a small theater company was putting on a short performance. In true Spanish style the performance started 45 minutes late, even though the three company members are from Argentina, Italy and France, but fortunately it was worth the wait. It was a unique performance because the dialogue was entirely replaced by music and sounds generated by a live musician and the other two performers did all sorts of funny and bizarre tricks involving a large box, pies, a mattress. You had to be there to really understand what I’m trying to say. Anyway, I laughed very hard and thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to sit and watch very talented and imaginative actors in a cool venue.

I’ve been very fortunate to be in this theater class that has offered me so many unique opportunities here in Granada. This week our theater class was visited by an actor and teacher of a clown class here in the city. One of the workers here at IES bought red, squeaky clown noses for all of us and we spent about two hours with Alex doing acting exercises that he does with his group of payazos (payazo is the Spanish word for clown). We were all so embarrassed because each of us had to do each of the activities, which involved doing improve in front of the whole class, but we all laughed so much and really had fun. The picture of me rocking the red nose was during a game he called dancing musical chairs. We had to dance around and when the music stopped find a chair. The person who lost (which that round was me) had to make some sort of sad noise, pound on his chest and yell like Tarzan and then stand in front of the class and do something. For my big moment I told the broken pencil lead joke Clare taught me years ago and fortunately all but two people laughed really hard, which kept me in the game. Of the two people who didn’t laugh one didn’t speak English (Alex, our instructor, is from Brazil) and someone who didn’t get it. But to her credit, and mine, or maybe Clare’s, when she understood she laughed pretty hard too. At the very end of class Alex taught us the song that his students sing at the end of every class and we had a blast belting it out. It goes like this "Sale el sol por la manana, por la manana sale el sol, sale el sol por la manana y por la noche salgo yo". We loved it.

All of our classes are winding down so we have a ton of work the next couple days to prepare for the end of the semester. But for my flamenco class I think the most stressful part of this week is our dance performance on Thursday. Granted our choreographed dance is short and very basic, but we just finished learning it last week. So last night we all met at Maria’s dance studio to practice with our live musicians, I know, no pressure right. Actually it was great and for whatever reason really helped us get our act together and it’ll be so neat to dance to live music in a theater for all the other IES students Thursday night.
bss

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Happy birthday Abuela!




Happy May Day! In the states my mom usually gives Clare and I a little May Day present, usually including a pair of socks. Here however it’s the Spanish equivalent of Labor Day so the entire city is off of work and essentially closed down. Between today, the festival el Dia de la Cruces on Saturday and Mother’s Day on Sunday Granada has a big weekend, which means I had only three days of classes.




And to top things off it’s my host grandmother’s 91st birthday today so my host family is throwing a party and judging by the Coke, Fanta and six pack of beer in the fridge it’s gonna be quite the fiesta.

It’s been another eventful week here in Granada. On the 20th of April a group of IES students met for the Seder, which was hosted by a few of the Jewish students in our program. It was quite the success and it was a great experience for everyone. Two of the students led us through the service, explaining everything and sharing stories and then the whole group ate a dinner together that they had prepared. For me the highlights were listening to the daughter of a professor sing for us in Hebrew and watching the kids tear apart the library looking for the hidden matza.

This week a few of the Arabic and Islamic Art and Architecture professors hosted a calligraphy workshop for their students, which fortunately some others got to sit in on. After the short presentation the wife of one professor and a calligraphy expert gave us a short lesson in the techniques of writing Arabic. Granted we didn’t have much time, but she wrote my name for me in two different styles of Arabic writing and then I got to try writing my name with the traditional tool and ink. It was so different and really hard, but so much fun.

This past weekend my theater class took a trip to Madrid to see a contemporary work called La Paz Perpetua that we had just finished reading and discussing in class. Getting to see the play itself was incredible because it was written just last year and went the second night and we went to a beautiful, old, opera house style theater to see it. The piece itself is unique because it discusses rather deep topics like the existence of God, war, terrorism, torture, but the three main characters are dogs. Anyway, it gave me a lot to think about, strangely, or maybe not so strangely, the issues seem much more profound coming from the mouths of animals. We had such a great weekend in Madrid and we played the role of the tourist and walked through the Palacio Real, the Reina Sofia and the Parque Retiro.

Since we are getting down to the end I have a lot of work so I’ve spent a lot of time writing lately. This Monday I had my last Mediterranean Ecosystems class and on Monday we already have our final. Crazy, but it’ll be so nice to have one class out of the way for my last month here. We went on our last MedEco field trip last Friday, though it turned out to be more like a mountain climb than a leisurely walk with discussion about plants. We actually climbed to the peak of this mountain in the Sierra Nevada and through the climbing part was brutal the view was incredible. On one side we saw part of the Sierra Nevada that is still covered in snow and the other way the land just stretched forever.

I feel like there is so much more to tell, I’ve been going to quite a few live concerts, plays and have been trying to go to new places and restaurants. It’s a busy life. Alright grandma’s here, gotta get ready for birthday party!

bss