Minor D’Tales
Like D’Lo’s first solo show “Ramble-Ations”, this show interweaves 2 story lines, one using D’s imaginary friends and the other through personal narrative. “Minor D’Tales” highlights the lives of immigrants, queer people of color and as all always, speaks on present day issues with “out” and “out there” humor.
D’Lo talks about ‘Minor D’Tales’ at the Brava Theater SF
by Hyphen magazine on Tuesday, November 17, 2009 at 5:48pm
For those of you who were at Mr. Hyphen on Saturday night, you know exactly what I am talking about when I say that D’Lo rocked it as emcee! D’Lo brought out the best in the contestants, the judges, and the audience.
Don’t miss the solo performance this coming weekend at the Brava Theater in San Francisco. The show, Minor D’Tales, runs this Thursday, November 19 through Saturday at Brava Theater in San Francisco. Written and performed by D’Lo, and directed by Adelina Anthony, the show is a series of excerpts from larger works-in-progress which include story-telling and character monologues.
In the midst of a hectic rehearsal schedule at Brava, I got to talk with D’Lo about the creative process behind the show. Check out the interview:
What is your show about, and what got you to this point, to create something this ambitious?
This particular solo show, called Minor D’Tales, present excerpts from one of my larger pieces. The show touches on everything, and the characters deal with a lot. It is all comedically done. But it touches on serious topics that we don’t get to openly talk about. I can’t get away from comedy. That is my primary mode. The wonderful thing about these characters, is that they possess so many inner contradictions.
Who are the characters you inhabit and present in Minor D’Tales?
I am presenting four new characters who are more dramatic, less comedic than the other ones in my older show. I have a character who is going up for parole, I have a character who is a public defender, I have a character who is the angel of death. I have a character who is a Sri Lankan nurse. I have a special character who doesn’t say anything, and then I have voiceovers in between presented as an interview. These are more like interviews with my Jekyll side. I am looking forward to it, looking forward to seeing how I can work the characters better. This show is a testament to be being and actor who doesn’t get cast in fixed roles. It’s my way of saying, “Since you don’t write roles for me, I am writing these roles for myself!”
I got to work with Adelina Anthony, I direct her stand up full shows, and she directs my theater work. She is absolutely incredible. It is all love going around.
What role does your standup comedy play in Minor D’Tales?
A lot of people know me only for stand up. I do the university college circuit only as a stand up and some solo theater. So, I’m out there as a comedic person, but this is a set show, this is theater, this is what I go and do regional theater with. It’s a whole different crowd that usually sees this. I am really happy and excited to be showing this work.
How do you feel about presenting here at the glorious Brava Theater in San Francisco?
I want to come with my best, especially because since this is Brava theater. The people who work at Brava raise the stakes for you to come with your best, because that is the way for you to show your appreciation and respect.
In your prior work you present a character that emulates Mahatma Gandhi. How do you tackle the mythology and saintliness that surrounds him in your work?
In much of my work, I try to pull on characters that resonate with the audience. The Gandhi I present in my older work is not actually Gandhi, he is more neo-Gandhi. He is most based on my father and my uncle. He comes with the politic of peace and non-violence, but he has grown up only with violence. When you have somebody like Mahatma Gandhi, who is read as being so holy, so down for the people, it can take away from the fact that he was a real human being. He possessed a lot of contradictions, and he also had a lot of fucked up shit, as with all of our great leaders.
What I am trying to discuss is that if we keep trying to emulate and keep these people on a pedestal, we are never going to understand the leader in ourselves. Because we think we are not perfect like they are. We have to expose the truth and realities of these leaders. Of course we can have people in power and we do need leaders, but we have to accept them for their contradictions, and question them while they are in our presence. I’m not saying we need to stop them from their work, but we should constantly be behind them, and question them on how they are getting things done. So, in that way, the Gandhi based character in my show is very wise, because he comes from a legacy of understanding violence, but he doesn’t care what others think. He drinks, he smokes, and he talks crassly, but he also has this love for his granddaughter who had to give this eulogy over her friend who died. He accepts everyone for who they are, he looks at them funny, but loves them for who they are.
In my show, I tend to have these people who seem super fucking holy, but who are saying the most whack shit. All of these characters are drawn upon my real life.
For example, I present this clairvoyant character who is trying to tell me that all spirits have a gender. What book or religion is that even true? She is telling me that I have to change, that it was my karmic path to be born into a female body, but I am really a male. The pieces that I write are about reclaiming your spot at the community table. I am not just saying I belong at the table, but I am actually supposed to be running shit. Not in a cocky bastard way, but in a self reliant way. When you put down the people who are supposed to be at the table, then you are denying your community growth.
The show also talks about spiritual places for gay and queer people, as well as the gatekeepers, the people who are supposed to meditate on the role of relationships on this planet, and them telling us how it should be. There is no attachment to being tied into a typically male role or female role. I am discussing that this is what we are doing wrong.
You travel extensively presenting your ideas on gender and identity through characters and stand up. Is it challenging facing so many diverse audiences?
People gravitate towards the goofiness in the way that these subject matters are presented.It is always a challenge, because I see my performances as a way for me to be an infiltrator. In the Bay Area, there has been such a huge conversation that has been scholarly and academic around gender and sexuality, but the characters I present are so far from that academic world, that it provides something else, another layer to deconstruct.
Performing in character is the only medicine I know to give. It may not be much, but if I know this is what I got to give, why not keep dishing it out?
Minor D’Tales is part of a series of works from local writers: the Me, Myself and I series, running November 19 through December 3. The series boasts D’Lo as the featured performer, but also several rotating works from local writers. On Saturday, D’Lo’s Minor D’Tales will be paired with Bare Knuckle by Anthem Salgado. Does Anthem’s name seem familiar? That’s because he was a Mr. Hyphen contestant in 2007.
Robin Sukhadia
Mr. Hyphen 2006/2007
Past Performances
2009
- San Francisco, CA, Brava Theater Center, November 19-22

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