With support from the California Arts Council, Cornerstone Theater Company in collaboration with choreographer Ana Maria Alvarez will create a new movement-based narrative theatrical project that functions as an activist intervention. Marrying Cornerstone’s and Alvarez’s creative engagement practice with the community organizing of partners in the activist community, this collaboration will ignite new dialogue and incite artistic response to social change movements.
Community engagement is at the heart of what we do; we collaborate with non-professionals in a specific context to create vivid, living theater. The process – sharing story, experience, and expertise across lines of difference – is as vital as the performance. The notion of community itself is a creative question defined anew in each Cornerstone project. Recent collaborating communities include: public housing residents; Indigenous peoples in Los Angeles; veterans and military families; people impacted by the prison system and residents of LA’s port community San Pedro. Upcoming projects engage communities whose vote is being suppressed, communities whose neighborhoods have been impacted by the LA fires, and citizens, activists and grassroots organizers in LA County. We reach communities and establish authentic engagement by building relationships across time, and rooting those relationships in solidarity, resource sharing, deep listening, collaboration and presence. It takes time to earn just one person’s trust; it takes time to map a creative container for vulnerable collaboration – and we invest the time it takes.
We believe in building community power and centering community voices, with and for low-income and systemically excluded and disinvested communities. Our audiences and co-creators are first-time theatergoers, speakers of non-English languages, elders, children, families, people impacted by the prison system, current and formerly unhoused people. We conceive and develop community collaborations together with a broad range of partners from community service, advocacy and action organizations like Homeboy Industries, Westside Food Bank, MEND and Gabrieliño/Tongva Springs Foundation, to public agencies like HACLA (Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles) and Metro.

