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  <title>2021 Zelda Fichandler Awardee Mark Valdez and Michael John Garcés In Conversation</title>
  <description>In this episode, the SDCF 2021 Zelda Fichandler Award Winner, Mark Valdez is interviewed by&amp;amp;nbsp;Michael John Garcés and they&amp;amp;nbsp;discuss everything from the most beautiful theater and how art can influence policy to rethinking the need for traditional performance spaces and leavening&amp;amp;nbsp;heavy themes with silliness and surprises. This podcast took place in early February 2022, Mark is now the current Artistic Director for the Mixed Blood Theatre. The Zelda Fichandler Award&amp;amp;nbsp;recognizes directors and choreographers who have demonstrated great accomplishment to date with singular creativity and deep investment in a particular community or region. The award was named after Zelda Fichandler who was the founding artistic director of the Arena Stage in Washington D.C. You can find this year's&amp;amp;nbsp;recipient and finalists here.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; Mark Valdez&amp;amp;nbsp;is&amp;amp;nbsp;an LA-based director, writer, and cultural organizer. His work has been seen at community venues and professional theatres across California, including a tomato field in Grayson, a de-commissioned Catholic cathedral in downtown LA, as well from the stages of La Peña Cultural Center in Berkeley to the stages of Ricardo Montalbán Theatre in Hollywood for a Center Theatre Group produced production. Nationally, Mark has worked at theatres such as the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, where he created&amp;amp;nbsp;A Road to a Dream, a community collaboration along a 10-mile stretch of the Buford Highway, to shed light on the toll our nation’s broken immigration policies have on families and communities; Arizona’s Childsplay Theatre where he adapted and directed Gary Soto’s book,&amp;amp;nbsp;Chato’s Kitchen, about a low-rider&amp;amp;nbsp;gato&amp;amp;nbsp;from East LA; and Trinity Rep in Providence, where he directed&amp;amp;nbsp;A Christmas Carol&amp;amp;nbsp;that included 85 community choirs. His play&amp;amp;nbsp;Highland Park is Here, won the Audience Award at the Highland Park Film Festival and will be featured in Re:Encuentro, the national Latina/o/x Theater Festival. He is a current Board member of Double Edge Theatre and Cornerstone Theater Company, and a former Board member of TCG. Mark is currently working on&amp;amp;nbsp;The Most Beautiful Home…Maybe, a multi-city project that aims to influence housing policy utilizing performance, cultural organizing, and creative community development strategies. </description>
  <author_name>SDCF Podcast Series</author_name>
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