With support from the California Arts Council, the LUKE MADRIGAL INDIGENOUS STORYTELLING NONPROFIT will Produce and oversee the touring production of Isabella Madrigal’s new play “Skywomen,” a semi-autobiographical multi-media performance piece that explores Anishinaabe and Cahuilla water and migration stories passed down by a mother to her daughter. This project is designed to support Indigenous cultural revitalization and arts-based climate justice efforts. We will perform the play at a minimum of three venues in the Southern California Riverside/San Bernardino Area: the Dorothy Ramon Learning Center (an Indigenous cultural center in Banning, CA), Noli Indian School, and Sherman Indian High School. Following each performance, this interactive play will feature community talkbacks that allow audience members to imagine a future where Indigenous peoples, specifically Indigenous women, are centered in climate conversations.
We support a wide range of storytelling modalities, including theater, film, and arts workshops, to amplify Indigenous voices and foster community healing, balance, and resilience. Founded in 2020 by Sophia Madrigal (Cahuilla/Chippewa) during the COVID-19 pandemic to honor her father’s legacy, the organization began with virtual workshops titled Healing Through the Indigenous Art of Storytelling. In that same period, Sophia wrote and released Wildflower: Indigenous Spirit, a film exploring grief and loss in Native communities, which has reached over 10,000 viewers online.
Her sister, Isabella Madrigal, writer of the acclaimed play Menil and Her Heart, serves as co-director of the organization. Menil and Her Heart first began as a grass-roots effort to highlight Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit People. The theater ensemble that performs Menil and Her Heart consists of eighteen community members, mostly Indigenous people. The winner of the 2020 Yale Young Native Storytellers Contest, Menil and Her Heart has been performed at 16 venues across the nation and was featured at the United Nations’ Girls Speak out Event in 2019 and at the California State Capitol in 2022 for legislators. In 2024, Isabella received a grant from the Center for Cultural Power to go towards the creation of a short film version of Menil and Her Heart.
Since Menil and Her Heart, we have produced the play Dragonfly, which explores the harmful legacy of boarding schools, and the multimedia performance piece Skywoman, which centers Indigenous women in climate justice conversations.
We also offer arts and culture workshops, which have been hosted in educational spaces, including Noli and Sherman Indian Schools, as well as at the Dorothy Ramon Learning Center, a Native American community center. Additionally, the LMISN recently served as the Master of Ceremonies for the Tribal Ecological Knowledge Region Nine Tribal EPA Conference.

