No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveGrim reality explored in “Calladito más bonito”

Grim reality explored in “Calladito más bonito”

From the print edition

The latest production by the National Theater Company (CNT), “Calladito más bonito” (“The Most Beautiful Silence”) brings the audience into very real and uncomfortable situations seen across borders and socio-economic levels. A homeless man’s fantastic imaginings. A construction worker’s separation from the family he supports. A young girl’s deception by her own family. 

The six actors playing those roles are directed by Argentine actress and dramaturge Heidi Steinhardt in scenes that do not overlap, though all of characters could live within the same neighborhood, and some ride the same train. Instead, their situations are private, and they suffer behind closed doors.

Prior to the play’s opening, Steinhardt spoke about its conception, which began before her arrival in Costa Rica this May. Since then, she has been researching Costa Rican culture and identity, and while “Calladito más bonito” is not related specifically to Costa Rica, it retains many features of her study.

Actors Andrés Montero, Eric Córdoba, Adriana Víquez, Winston Washington, Pablo Caravaca and Vivian Rodríguez are skillfully supported by stage design and directing. Poignant lighting, stage positioning and minimal props deliver each actor’s message simply and clearly, most of the time.

Disappointingly, in numerous instances throughout opening night, the audience did not react as intended. In moments of great tragedy or seriousness, in which grief and pain overwhelmed the characters, individual sections of the audience burst into untimely laughter. This gave way to shameful, uncomfortable silence.

The production was thankfully wrought with moments of comic relief. A cat named Nietzsche and the common frustration of a spotty cell phone signal alleviated the theater’s contained intensity. While it maybe be heavy, “Calladito más bonito” is also interestingly orchestrated and representative of universal situations.

“Calladito más bonito” opened Saturday, July 28, in the Teatro de La Aduana and it will run till September 2. Arrive early to get seating near the front and center. From the back and sides of the theater, the view of the floor-level stage is obstructed.

The play, which is in Spanish, runs Thursday to Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. General entrance is ₡4,000. Thursdays are 2-for-1. Call 2257-8305 for reservations.

Trending Now

Costa Rica’s Piangua Mollusk Threatened by Pineapple Farm Runoff

Costa Rica’s Térraba-Sierpe National Wetland, a 33,000-hectare haven of mangroves and rivers, is under siege from an unlikely source: pineapple farms. A study by...

Costa Rica Hunts for Nicaraguan Hit Squad After Exile’s Assassination

Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) is investigating whether a hit squad tied to Nicaragua’s Ortega-Murillo regime is targeting exiled critics on its soil....

Why Costa Rica Feels Like a Safe Haven for This Longtime Expat

If someone asked me to sum up why I live in Costa Rica in 5 words or less, my answer could well be: “It...

Costa Rica’s Cutris Mining Bill Threatens Massive Environmental Damage

Costa Rica’s government is pushing a controversial bill that could open the entire Cutris district in San Carlos—848 square kilometers—to open-pit gold mining. The...

Costa Rica’s Top Court Bans President Chaves from 2026 Election Campaign

Costa Rica’s Supreme Electoral Tribunal on Thursday barred President Rodrigo Chaves from participating in the 2026 election campaign, ruling that he "illegitimately used" his...

An Expat’s Take: 5 Burning Questions About Life in Costa Rica Right Now

Have you been keeping up with the various events taking place in Costa Rica? There is always something interesting going down, and here are...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica