Associate artistic director Luis Alfaro announces departure from Center Theatre Group

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Luis Alfaro announced his resignation as associate artistic director at Center Theatre Group on Facebook Nov. 2.

In his social media announcement, Alfaro shared the letter he sent to CTG staff several weeks prior. In the letter, he called on the theater institution to push forward with change.

“We have a long way to go in our pandemic recovery AND in our commitment to equity and diversity,” he wrote in his post. “A training does not make change, change makes change. Making art is making tension, so keep pushing against all that we know needs shifting.”

Alfaro has been CTG’s associate artistic director since late 2021 following Michael Ritchie’s retirement from the position. Alfaro’s last day with the institution was Nov. 1.

Alfaro wrote that if he didn’t leave now, he would have remained with CTG for 10 years. “I don’t always know where I am going next, as is the case here, but I do know when to move on,” he wrote.

In the letter, he said he believes there is a better place to utilize his gifts. He also reminisced about the company’s accomplishments during his brief time in the position.

“There is lots to be proud of, including midwifing ten new plays by women playwrights from Los Angeles, into the American theatre through our Writers Workshop,” he wrote. “To be with these playwrights every other Saturday for over a year, (we are still meeting!) digging into idea and poetry, is something I always want to do.”

Alfaro first worked as an usher at CTG, then as a performer. He ran the Latino Theatre Initiative with Diane Rodriguez for 10 years and also led New Play Development.

When his role as associate artistic director was first announced in 2021, Alfaro told The Times that he dreamt about CTG representing the diversity of his native city. His resignation letter points to a few productions he considers successes in this regard: opening the Kirk Douglas following a two-year pandemic shutdown with “Alma,” a play written by Whittier-raised Benjamin Benne, and a season of works by all women and nonbinary artists.

Alfaro expressed concerns about inclusivity when he took on the role, saying, “The architecture [of the company] itself, has to be shifted in order to reflect the city.”

While his resignation comes abruptly in the middle of CTG’s 2022-23 season, Alfaro has said in the past that change is native to theater.

“I’ve always said with any job I’ve ever had that it could end tomorrow or in a year or it could end whenever it ends,” he told The Times in 2021. “I’m OK with all of it. I think it’s important to think about the theater with that kind of fluidity because if you’re going to have a life in the theater, you have to be willing to accept how things move and change.”

The Times reached out to Alfaro and CTG for comment. Neither replied by the time of publication.

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