‘Vida’ Creator Tanya Saracho and the Beauty of Making Things Complicated — Awards Spotlight
To escape the storytelling of the dominant culture, Saracho knew she had to resist two-dimensional characters: “We are the thing we are portraying.”
To escape the storytelling of the dominant culture, Saracho knew she had to resist two-dimensional characters: “We are the thing we are portraying.”
It was a race to the finish line for Tanya Saracho’s lively series about Mexican-American identity, gentrification, and sexuality.
Starz is ending Tanya Saracho’s beloved LGBTQ series about a Mexican American family. Any network would be foolish not to snatch it up.
Confident, clever, and bursting with style, “Vida” offers more of what you love in a richer second season.
Mishel Prada and Melissa Barrera star in the series about two sisters trying to keep the spirit of their mother alive in the family-owned establishment they now run.
After recent reports of on-set practices at the Showtime series, Glen Mazzara is convening a panel at next summer’s ATX Festival.
The ‘Vida’ creator is no diversity hire; she’s creating a revolution in how the Starz drama was written, cast, and produced. Now the Chicago playwright admits she’s fallen in love with TV.
Two estranged sisters come together to fight gentrification in Tanya Saracho’s lively series.