Several events conspired to support Zacarías and the development of Destiny of Desire. She is one of the founding members of Latinx Theatre Commons, a national movement to update the American narrative with Latino stories. “Instead of just begging regional theatres to do our work, we were going to start working together, do more work and invite everybody to our table,” Zacarías says.
The playwright met director Valenzuela in 2012 at Arena Stage when the idea for LTC was forming. Zacarías says, “Our friendship and kindred aesthetic grew” during the first national LTC convening in 2013 at Emerson College in Boston. The LTC, what she calls a “place of abundance,” inspired her to craft her own telenovela in several ways. First, she recalls actress Sandra Delgado articulating a frustration that many, including Zacarías, share: Critics using “telenovela” as a blanket descriptor of many plays written by Latinas. “Critics think it’s a clever thing, but it’s dismissive and lazy; it’s always derogatory,” Zacarías says. The very specific telenovela genre, she concludes, has archetypes and conventions that should be examined, honored and tested.
Second, Zacarías was researching the emotional and psychological hold the telenovela format has on people. Despite the love-hate relationship many Latinos can have with the genre, she notes, it’s a touchstone. “About two billion people watch telenovelas every night in the world,” she observes, including productions created in Korea and Serbia. The format of the art form transcends language. She concluded that she had to write her own version. “I am going to try to write the best telenovela play that I can,” she recalls, “so that no other play by a Latina ever gets compared to a telenovela, unless it sounds and looks like this one.”
Zacarías argues that the telenovela is a source of pride. “We need to embrace it as part of our culture. We need to take popular art and elevate it to high art, and both celebrate and test the limitations of the genre.”
Destiny of Desire is both subversive and celebratory. “It’s unapologetically a telenovela, and it’s also really subversive and playful,” Zacarías says. “Nobody is who you think they are.” And the subversively powerful structure of the play itself is more potent than any overtly political statement. The protagonists are women and all the action is sparked by the decisions of women. “It’s a very subtle thing,” she concludes, “but as the play grows, it really is like a feminist manifesto about what happens when women take destiny into their own hands.”