"Similar to Eduardo's other plays which document the unique complexities of the Cuban-American experience, The Cook is a revealing and heartbreaking examination of faith and fidelity set within the margins of Fidel Castro's regime-and the price paid by Cubans on both sides of the revolution-in 1958 and forty years later," said Godinez. "As someone who, like Eduardo, was born in Cuba and shares some of this history, I am particularly excited and proud to direct this Chicago premiere." Equal parts bittersweet drama and searing portrait of the reality of a political movement, The Cook is particularly timely as Cuba now braces for another potential change in leadership.
On New Year's Eve, 1958-the eve of Fidel Castro's march into Havana-a young Afro-Cuban cook, Gladys, is entrusted to care for the house of her fleeing aristocratic employer. As four decades pass, and her marriage is rocked by her husband's infidelity and his rise and fall through the ranks of Castro's government, Gladys resolves to remain faithful to her long ago promise-no matter how agonizing this difficult choice becomes.
Playwright Eduardo Machado was born and raised in Cuba until 1961, when he and his younger brother were sent to the United States during "Operation Peter Pan." His plays include Havana is Waiting, The Floating Island Plays, Cuba and the Night, Stevie Wants to Play the Blues, Rosario and the Gypsies, Across a Crowded Room and Don Juan in New York City. His plays have been produced at Actors Theatre of Louisville, the Mark Taper Forum, the Long Wharf Theatre, Hampstead Theatre in London, American Place Theatre and Repertorio EspaƱol, among many others. He is the artistic director of INTAR Theatre and is currently part of the faculty of New York University.
The Cook runs October 20 - November 18 and tickets may be purchased online at GoodmanTheatre.org, at the Goodman Theatre Box Office, 170 North Dearborn Street, or charged by phoning 312.443.3800.
