Events
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Start: 7:30 pm
Oksana Marafioti’s parents performed in a traveling Romani
ensemble until she was 15, when they moved to America. Growing up, she saw the
Mongolian deserts and the Siberian tundra, watched her father get into bar
fights with Nazis, learned about sex by sneaking into illicit movies, and
endured the hostility of school bullies who would stick pieces of paper on her
back that read “Gyp.” But in America, Oksana had a whole new life to get used
to, which included rifling through curbside trash in Beverley Hills and
wondering if it belonged to George Michael, reading Harlequin romances and
using her Russian-American dictionary to decipher the phrase “burning loins,”
and trying desperately not to make one of those typical mistakes immigrant
families make -- like confusing cat food for canned tuna. In AMERICAN GYPSY, she takes us through family revelations,
cultural misunderstandings, and gives us a never-before-seen look at the
realities of what it’s like to be a gypsy – and offers a fine look at the clash
of two very different cultures. Oksana Marafioti was recently
awarded the BMI-Kluge Fellowship in partnership with the Library of Congress, a
nine-month fellowship program offered to published writers and public
intellectuals whose work ranges away from the American experience and into
international terrain. Trained as a classical pianist, Marafioti has also
worked as a cinematographer. She lives in Las
Vegas.
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