
Regional Vignette: John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
Regional Vignette: John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
Anusha Alikhan
Vice President of Communications
Wikimedia Foundation
@anushaa100
This article first appeared in The Racism Issue of Change Agent.
Last summer, a theater in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood faced backlash for presenting a Spanish-language play featuring a blackface character: a light-skinned actress painted brown with exaggerated red lips. After a story in El Nuevo Herald (the Spanish-language sister publication to the Miami Herald) triggered public outcry, the character was removed. Before that, the production had played to sold-out crowds for five months.
Half of Miami-Dade’s 2 million residents are foreign-born. Per the 2010 Census, Hispanics make up 68% of the population, and 18% of residents are black. In a place that rightly celebrates its diversity, the privilege that allows race parody—an overt dehumanizing of another’s experiences—to comfortably exist on stage still has deep roots.
Miami-based Knight Foundation was not involved in the theater controversy, but as the region’s biggest arts funder, we strive to make every community visible in the arts. For a decade, we’ve run an open call for arts ideas, marketed in English, Spanish, and Creole, and done on-the-ground outreach across city neighborhoods. We have chosen projects that highlight a range of voices and used communications to uplift them. Art in Miami has increasingly become a community connector, a platform to build shared experiences.
This is deliberate work. Knight is constantly thirsty for new ideas built by and for communities. Our practice of openness is driven by a desire to fuel the democratic values of participation and inclusion.
When culture remains insular, we lose these ideals. The theater incident is ultimately a powerful reflection of existing tensions within Miami’s mosaic of backgrounds and people. The conversation it sparked was ripe with diverse voices, triggering a deeper examination of race, privilege, and power. It underscores that narrowing racial divides demands connected action and communication.
Upcoming events
Join Circles, communities of practice for Network members to connect with colleagues based on the role you play, or issue/topic your organization focuses on or your shared identities.
Join Circles, communities of practice for Network members to connect with colleagues based on the role you play, or issue/topic your organization focuses on or your shared identities.
Join Circles, communities of practice for Network members to connect with colleagues based on the role you play, or issue/topic your organization focuses on or your shared identities.