July 12, 2017 Page 9 Mississippi Alberta North Portland Vancouver East County Beaverton photo by J enny g raham Disguised as a male actor, Viola (Jamie Ann Romero) sneaks a moment of tenderness with Will (William DeMeritt) in “Shakespeare in Love,’ one of the diverse plays this season at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland. Beyond White Culture Diversity at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival The Oregon Shakespeare Festival has opened all but one of its eleven shows for 2017. Why should you travel down to Ashland to partake? For all the challenges that living in this state -- and, in- deed, traveling to southern Oregon specifically--presents for people of color, some of the best theater anywhere is happening at OSF. We have the opportunity to see the stories of people of color, written by people of color, and featuring artists of color who, as in other fields, other- wise disproportionately struggle for work. Increasingly, o PinionAted J udge by d arleen o rtega OSF is a place where theater casts the vision for living beyond white supremacy culture. My favorite of this season’s plays, unfortunately, closed on July 6 -- but I write about it first because the production will be re-mounted by Portland Center Stage this fall, Its name, “Mojada,” is a racial epithet--in En- glish, it would be “wetback,” a derogatory term applied to people crossing the southern U.S. border without pa- pers. But the playwright, Luis Alfaro, himself the son of Mexican-American farmworkers, is known for lifting up the voices of the marginalized with sensitivity and respect, and this play goes deep in its exploration of life among Mexican immigrants in Los Angeles. The subtitle of “Mojada” is “A Medea in Los Ange- les,” and Alfaro has taken the ancient Greek story of Me- dea and located it among immigrants fighting to build a c ontinued on p age 13