NEW YORK, NY.- It was an improvisation to begin with. In 1996, a recording session was scheduled in Havana combining Cuban and Malian musicians, but the Africans had visa trouble and didnt arrive. So instead, an assemblage of veteran Cuban musicians, some coming out of long retirement, recorded a collection of classic Cuban songs. This was Buena Vista Social Club, which became not just the bestselling Cuban album ever but also a defining artifact of Cuban culture beloved around the world.
More albums followed: outtakes, offshoots, live recordings of performances like the one at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Wim Wenders made a documentary film. And now, almost 30 years later, there is a stage musical: Buena Vista Social Club, in previews at the off-Broadway Atlantic Theater Company.
This newest project started a few years back, when a producer with the theatrical rights to the album approached Cuban American playwright Marco Ramirez (The Royale).
The first question, Ramirez recalled after a recent rehearsal, was Do you know this record? And for a Cuban kid who grew up right around the time the record came out, the answer was, Of course. The next question was, Do you think theres a piece of theater here?
The search for an answer to that question sent Ramirez to Cuba, where he interviewed some of the surviving participants. It was about finding the emotional truth at the center of it, he said. To me, its ultimately about a bunch of people who were given a magical opportunity to do a second take on their past, to make something right or just relive their youth.
Thats the story that this Buena Vista tells. It dramatizes the making of the album in getting-the-old-gang-back-together fashion, but also, through flashbacks, recreates the pre-revolution, Golden Age 1950s Cuba of the musicians youth, suffused with nostalgia and regret.
This is the emotional truth behind the factual truth, Ramirez said. Its all inspired by real people and events, but Im definitely taking many, many liberties in order to tell the best possible story.
Where no liberties are taken is with the music. The dialogue is in English, but the songs drawn from the broader Buena Vista catalog remain in Spanish. Old songs bring up old feelings, a character in the show says. Given these lyrics, given the moods evoked by this music, what is the story that can emerge? Ramirez said. At the beginning, I felt that I was communicating with the songwriters, who have been dead for 80 years or more, that my collaborators were ghosts.
Eventually, living collaborators joined him. The show, scheduled to run through Jan. 7 at the Linda Gross Theater, is directed by Saheem Ali (Fat Ham) and choreographed by the married team of Patricia Delgado and Justin Peck (Steven Spielbergs West Side Story). Casting was a challenge, doubly so since the flashback structure necessitated finding two people (one older, one younger) to play each of the distinctive real-life Buena Vista personalities.
We had to find performers who could sing and play like the originals, Ali said. But the Venn diagram of who also needed to act or dance was quite intense. They each do something with excellence, but theyre having to challenge themselves to do something different because of the thing were building together. We put on an international search for people who can embody the music in a way that felt truthful.
The common denominator, Ramirez said, is that everyone has a connection to the Buena Vista album. His comes through his Cuban grandparents, who played the songs in his Miami home, so that when the record came out he already knew them; it was exciting for several generations of his family to talk about a new album together. The bittersweet irony is that they were nostalgic for Havana, and now I listen to this record and Im nostalgic for them, he said.
Playing the older Ibrahim Ferrer who was shining shoes for money when he was recruited to supply his golden voice to boleros for the Buena Vista recordings is Mel Semé. He was a teenager in Cuba at the time of the albums release.
It became popular outside of Cuba first, he said. But then we fell in love with this music again, and it became the music many of us aspired to play.
After graduating with a degree in classical percussion from the University of Arts, Semé moved to Europe, slowly building a career as a drummer, guitarist, singer and bandleader. Since his acting experience was limited to commercials, he initially told the Buena Vista musical team that maybe he wasnt the person they were looking for.
Ive been feeling like a teenager again, learning a new skill, he said. Echoing a phrase used by many other cast members, he said that playing Ferrer is a huge responsibility, but he has been helped by a deep connection with the singer, who found worldwide acclaim in his 70s and died in 2005.
Even though my story is not exactly his story, I also found a little bit of success late in life, he said. I always saw Ibrahim as a role model. No matter how late in life he got his chance, it was done with such grace.
Renesito Avich plays Eliades Ochoa, the cowboy-hat-wearing musician who brought a more rural sound into the original Buena Vista group. The music, he said, has been the background of my whole life. He was born in Santiago de Cuba, Ochoas hometown, and even met him once. A successful musician who specializes in the tres, a version of guitar at the heart of Cuban music, Avich is also an acting novice. He said that he feels the musical is truly honoring what the music means for Cuban people like me.
Or like Leonardo Reyna, who was born and raised in Havana before pursuing a career as a classical pianist in Europe. The Buena Vista album had a tremendous significance for me, Reyna said, helping me rediscover forgotten figures like Rubén González the virtuoso pianist Reyna plays as a young man.
The show feels authentic, Reyna said, even from a writer and director who are not from the island, because of its cultural sensibility and an attention to musical details that he finds affecting. Emotions arise from the distance many of us have had to travel, the separation of families, but also a sense of identity that is being reconstructed somehow, he said. It is healing.
Among the cast members who arent Cuban, Natalie Venetia Belcon is a Broadway actress who doesnt speak Spanish. But when she was preparing to audition for the daunting role of Omara Portuondo, Buena Vistas diva, the songs sprang a flood of memories of her Trinidadian musician parents. Kenya Browne, a Mexican-born singer who portrays the young Omara, knew the music as something that her grandmother used to play. Her mother told her that Dos Gardenias, a bolero she sings in the show, is one her great-grandmother sang often.
Peck and Delgado her parents were born in Cuba have long loved the album. They chose a track from it (Pueblo Nuevo) for the first dance at their wedding. As soon as they learned about the musical project, they asked to be involved.
Since the songs are in Spanish, Delgado said, a lot of times our responsibility is to make the audience feel something through the universal language of dance, and you dont even have to understand whats being said.
The variety of dance in Cuba, Peck noted, includes ballet, contemporary, Afro-Cuban, an array of social dances. We wanted to create a dance language that honors that, so its not one thing, he said. And we also want to allow for our imaginations to come into play, our personal touch, so it doesnt feel like documentary dance but alive.
Peck recalled the experience of walking through Havana, hearing music playing and seeing people move to it. And then as soon as that sound starts to fade, another sound is in the distance rubbing up against it, he said. That energy is something we want to weave through.
Ali added: Its not a show where one thing stops and another begins. It all hands off to each other. Were not following a template of what a musical is, but letting the music lead and allowing the songs to dictate how the story should evolve.
Creating in this fashion required much trial and error, Peck said. All of us have had this huge process of building a lot and throwing stuff away. But thats the only way to find the final recipe.
Ramirez likened the process to that of Juan de Marcos González, the musician behind the original "Buena Vista recording: He was the fixer, the guy who knew everybody involved, who knew where to find Omara and the right bass player. Like many young Cubans in that time the Special Period of economic collapse following the dissolution of the Soviet Union he wasnt going to let go of an opportunity. To me, hes the hero.
Im not a jazz musician, Ramirez continued, but I feel like weve been improvising, making this up on the fly, building it as we go. I cant think of a more Cuban thing to have done.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.