“When I evidence the years not so far in which communication required more care and dedication I feel some longing,” says Paula Morales in respect of “Letters of unforgettable love”, which premiered last night at the Multiescena Theater. Written and starring Marcelo Gallianonext to Morales Both make up a couple portrayed over six decades.
The work is produced by Emanuel Patalanonephew of the remembered Linen, And the work goes in the line of romantic events such as ‘scenes of marital life’, or ‘The diary of Adam and Eva’. Linen He died without being able to make ‘the Madison bridges’ with Susú Pecoraro and Imanol Arias”We talked with Paula Morales About the work presented every Wednesday at 20.30.
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Journalist: The work covers 60 years of romance and gives an account of some of the transformation of the world between the twentieth and twenty -first century, all in an epistolary way, what else can you say? Is there nostalgia for those past crazy years?
Paula Morales: Yes, there is always nostalgia for the past times but at the same time the relief of being able to send a message and that is instantly where it is. I grew up with the line phone, and to communicate with a little boyfriend I had to go through a series of filters such as speaking with one of his parents and vice versa. If someone wanted to write a love or friendship letter to be plasma, I was not going to grab the typewriter, I did it in handwriting. Now, although romanticism depends largely on the person in question, the most common is to send an email, a WhatsApp or even a message on Instagram. That causes me a bit of nostalgia, although I greatly value the comfort that technology has provided in our lives.
Q. Salman Rushdie with Padma Lakshmi. How do they prepare to compose this couple?
P.M: These iconic couples have inspired many of the great writers when telling love stories. Most of them are in the collective unconscious when we think of torments and passionate loves. They have art as a connection in common and although some of them have had a peaceful end and have achieved a friendship, many have ended in scandals, addictions and betrayal. Beatriz and Jorge’s couple, portrayed in letters of unforgettable love has a bit of all that. Its connection point was literature, through letters that became over the years almost a literary duel. A passionate and deep love relationship that was born in adolescence and lasted a lifetime, despite having had to separate for external causes. Through the letters we can experience with the protagonists from the purest love to the lowest feelings of selfishness and meanness, going through 60 years of relationship in which the world is changing but communication between them never ceases to be through letters, even when there is already technology and the possibility of writing via mail.
Q.: What public does the work point to?
P.M: To all types of audiences. Love covers all generations and is part of the lives of all people. This is a work that can be enjoyed by all, from adolescents to older adults, but especially by lovers of words, literature, romanticism and love and passion stories.
Q.: How do you see theater and culture today?
P.M: With more force than ever. Probably the theater is one of the most forceful forces when responding from art to what we have to live as a society over time. And while this country was always characterized by its theatrical culture, there are more and more proposals, both in Corrientes Street and in the most independent circuits with theater of all kinds. I feel and live the theater with passion and enjoy in any role, both of spectator and actress, and the enjoyment is greater when it is time to interpret a beautiful text like this.
Source: Ambito

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.