Milcha Sanchez-Scott

Milcha Sanchez-Scott (born 1953) is an American playwright of Indonesian, Chinese, Dutch, and Colombian heritage.

Quotes

 * There's so much Aztec in the Chicano culture that you feel in California and even here in New Mexico. But the rest of South America has so many European blends. Europe is really the old continent and corrupt.  I think that that's what makes Mexico so much more interesting.
 * On her interest in Mexico in “Language as a  Cure:  An Interview with Milcha  Sanchez-Scott “ in Latin American Theatre Review (Spring 1990)


 * Immediately after you get into that stage of relaxation, think of a situation before you were ten years old. Let's just say there's somebody sick in your house, and you go into your memory to see what happened.  When I do that, I remember the kind of shoes I was wearing. You remember your favorite shirt, your favorite dresses and things that you wore and how it felt. That someone   was   sick   in   your   house absolutely connects you to whatever relationships you had. You don't really "think" about it. In this way, what comes out is really true.
 * On using visualization in order to draw upon memories to create true writing in “Language as a  Cure:  An Interview with Milcha  Sanchez-Scott “ in Latin American Theatre Review (Spring 1990)


 * The term "Hispanic," to me, encompasses everybody that has a history, a background with the Spanish Language. The  problem  with  the label  is that "Hispanic"  is going to be stretched and stretched  to  cover a whole range of things-Chicanos in the Southwest, Puerto Ricans in New York, Cubans in Miami-until I don't know what good the label is…
 * On how she interprets Hispanic in “Language as a  Cure:  An Interview with Milcha  Sanchez-Scott “ in Latin American Theatre Review (Spring 1990)


 * A smart-alecky boy threw a pebble at me and said “This isn’t the Mexican bus stop. You have to go to the Mexican bus stop…I had never experienced racial tension, but in La Jolla we saw incredible—to us—prejudice.
 * On experiencing prejudice during her childhood and how that affected future writings (as quoted in the book Necessary Theater: Six Plays about the Chicano Experience)