a Spanish, english, & ASL Musical for Children

Mamá Goose

Mamá Goose

by Beth Murray & Irania Macias

by Beth Murray & Irania Macias

Suggested Age: 3-7 years old. A trilingual Spanish and English musical for the whole family! Four actors sing, play, and discover that the best things in life are meant to be shared. Presented by UTA Department of Theatre Arts & Dance.

Suggested Age: 3-7 years old. A trilingual Spanish and English musical for the whole family! Four actors sing, play, and discover that the best things in life are meant to be shared. Presented by UTA Department of Theatre Arts & Dance.

35 Minutes

a Spanish, english, & ASL Musical for Children

Mamá Goose

by Beth Murray & Irania Macias

Suggested Age: 3-7 years old. A trilingual Spanish and English musical for the whole family! Four actors sing, play, and discover that the best things in life are meant to be shared. Presented by UTA Department of Theatre Arts & Dance.

35 Minutes

Overview

Mamá Goose is a children’s play loosely adapted from Mamá Goose: a Latino Nursery Treasury/Un Tesoro de rimas infantiles. The show opens with fours actors playing and singing: “Cantamos! Jugemos! Cantamos y jugemos! Let’s sing! Let’s play! Let’s sing and play!” After a series of escapades revolving around the discovery of an extraordinary egg, each child wrestles with the desire to keep the egg for themselves. The children’s Abuela teaches them the value of sharing and the children come to the conclusion that the egg wasn’t one person’s, but everyone’s: “Compartimos. We share. It’s ours. Es nuestro.”

Mamá Goose is a children’s play loosely adapted from Mamá Goose: a Latino Nursery Treasury/Un Tesoro de rimas infantiles. The show opens with fours actors playing and singing: “Cantamos! Jugemos! Cantamos y jugemos! Let’s sing! Let’s play! Let’s sing and play!” After a series of escapades revolving around the discovery of an extraordinary egg, each child wrestles with the desire to keep the egg for themselves. The children’s Abuela teaches them the value of sharing and the children come to the conclusion that the egg wasn’t one person’s, but everyone’s: “Compartimos. We share. It’s ours. Es nuestro.”