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Aguirre makes Blue Box red hot

Sexy, funny, smart performance merges political and personal

Blue Box

At Vancity Culture Lab at the Cultch until May 12

Tickets: 604-251-1363

thecultch.com

Dont take advice from Granny. Specifically, dont take advice from a four-foot- something, deceased Chilean grandmother when it comes to men and when it comes in the form of a vision.

Playwright/novelist/performer Carmen Aguirre, recent winner of CBCs Canada Reads for her autobiographical novel Something Fierce: Memoirs of A Revolutionary Daughter, did listen to gran and she ended up on a sexy wild ride with a hunky Chicano Hollywood star who she refers to in Blue Box as Vision Man.

But there were other rides in Aguirres life that were much wilder and utterly terrifying. An anti-Pinochet revolutionary in Chile in her late teens and early 20s, Aguirre was watched, stalked and constantly threatened by Pinochets henchmen. Eventually, the situation got so bad she had to disappear and she ended up in Los Angeles where she met Vision Man. With his six-pack abs, he was, she thought, looking back on her grannys prediction, The One. He had, she says saucily, a really bigheart. Ah. That.

Lets just say upfront that Aguirre is the hottest, most luscious performer you can imagine. Wavy, raven hair frames sparkling dark eyes and a killer smile. Guys melt and when she throws in a couple of sinewy salsa moves the temperature in the room goes through the roof. Shes been described as a hot tamale but that doesnt go far enough. Tamales arent, as far as I know, smart, funny and sexy and Aguirre is all of these.

Alone on stage, Aguirre weaves several stories together and, at times, we think were following this track only to discover shes circled back on another story, another time. But throughout it all, Aguirre, under Brian Quirts direction, is mesmeric.

If youre able to tear your eyes off her, that isnt blood in your veins, its ice.

The deadly serious (revolutionary times) swings easily to such hilariously sexually explicit stuff (with Vision Man) that my own, long-gone grandmothera Scottish Presbyterian governesswouldnt even know what Aguirre was talking about some of the time.

Pussy to my old grandma meant a Persian or a tabby. The titular Box is itself a euphemism for a female body part that my granny would deny even having.

Aguirre pokes fun at we Nordic dwellers with our sexual inhibitions and she translates for us several songs from Spanish that illustrate the difference between chilly Norte Americanos and steamy Latinos.

Produced by Nightswimming Theatre and Neworld Theatre, lit by Itai Erdal with sound design by Joelysa Pankanea, Blue Box is an intimate merging of the political and the personal (why do womenand especially Aguirre who seems to make a habit of itfall for the wrong guys?)

And for closing lines, Blue Box takes the prize, hands down.

Unforgettable.

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