Nuyorican Movement
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The Nuyorican Movement is an intellectual movement involving poets, writers, musicians and artists who are Puerto Rican or of Puerto Rican descent, who live in or near New York City, and either call themselves or are known as "Nuyoricans".
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[edit] Literature and Poetry
Some of the best known "Nuyorican" writers and poets who have written about their experiences of being a Puerto Rican in New York and who have been responsible for the "Nuyorican Movement", directly or indirectly, are:
- Jesús Colón, "Father of the Nuyorican Movement" and author of A Puerto Rican in New York
- Giannina Braschi, leading lady of Nuyorican poets, author of "Yo-Yo Boing!"
- Esmeralda Santiago, author of "When I was Puerto Rican"
- Piri Thomas, author of Down These Mean Streets
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe, a non-profit organization in Alphabet City, Manhattan founded by Pedro Pietri, Miguel Piñero and Miguel Algarín, is a bastion of the Nuyorican Movement. Edwin Torres, a well-known Nuyorican poet, is a regular at the cafe.
[edit] Music
"Nuyorican" music became popular in the 1960s with the recordings of Tito Puente's "Oye Como Va" and Ray Barretto's "El Watusi" and incorporated Spanglish lyrics.
Latin bands who had formerly played the imported styles of Cha-cha-cha or Charanga began to develop their own unique Nuyorican music style by adding flutes and violins to their orchestras. This new style came to be known as the Latin Boogaloo. Some of the musicians who helped develop this unique music were Joe Cuba with "Bang Bang", Richie Ray and Bobby Cruz with "Mr. Trumpet Man", and the brothers Charlie and Eddie Palmieri.
Subsequently, Nuyorican music has evolved into Latin hip hop, Freestyle music, rap and reggaeton.
[edit] Playwrights
Among playwrights who pioneered the Nuyorican movement were Luis Rafael Sanchez, author of "La Guaracha Del Macho Camacho" and René Marqués whose production of "The Oxcart" (La Carreta) traces the life of a Puerto Rican family who moved from the country to San Juan and then to New York, only to realize that they would rather live a poor life in Puerto Rico than face discrimination in the United States.
Miguel Piñero became an acclaimed playwright with "Short Eyes", a drama about prison life which received a Tony Award nomination and won an Obie Award. Judge Edwin Torres wrote Carlito's Way, the saga of a Puerto Rican drug dealer which eventually became a Hollywood film.
Puerto Rican actress Miriam Colon founded the "Puerto Rican Traveling Theater" which gives young actors the opportunity to participate in its productions. Some of the productions, such as "Simpson Street" concern life in a New York's ghettos.