Background
Manuel Martín, Junior., was born December 16, 1934, in Artemisa, Cuba.
Manuel Martín, Junior., was born December 16, 1934, in Artemisa, Cuba.
He attended Louisiana Inmaculada Concepción Grammar School and the Escuela Pública Number. 1 in Artemisa, and later finished three years in the Escuela Profesional de Comercio. He left Cuba for the United States on October 27, 1956, and graduated from Hunter College in New York with a Bachelor of Arts in theater and film.
With Magaly Alabau, Manuel Martín founded Teatro Duo in New York in 1969. This theater was dedicated to producing works in both English and Spanish, and Martín directed many plays for this theater. In addition to his theatrical direction, Martín is best known for his plays Rita and Bessie, Swallows, and Union City Thanksgiving, the latter of which was published in an anthology of Cuban theater by the Department of Cultural Affairs, Madrid, Spain (1992).
His plays have been produced at the Latino Festival, New York Shakespeare Festival, INTAR, and Louisiana Mama Experimental Theater.
His play with music for children, The Legend of the Golden Coffee Bean, was included in ¡Aplauso!, an anthology of Hispanic children"s theater (Arte Público Press, 1995). In New York and in Puerto Rico he was instructor of drama workshops and gave many conferences in New York, Miami, and Paris.
In 1992, he acted as translator and adapter for the program “Doctor Goodmouth” for Colgate-Palmolive, through the UnWorld Group, Incorporated.
Martín directed plays and musicals in New York, Argentina, and many other places. He resided in New York until his death on September 28, 2000.
Martin was a member of the INTAR Playwrights in Residence Laboratory, New New York