Esperanza Rosales Balcárcel (she/they) is a trans Guatemalan playwright and educator, born in Guatemala City and raised in Norwalk, CT.
Her works are spiritual and choreographic narratives that give Queer and Trans BIPOC voices a space to interrogate core wounds and offer them a path towards healing.
Esperanza’s plays have been supported by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley, Roundabout Theatre, Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts, the Stanford Department of Theater and Performance Studies, the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center, the Breaking the Binary Theatre Festival, and New York Theater Workshop. Esperanza is the recipient of the Princeton Ward Prize for Fiction and Outstanding Achievement in Theater Prize, the Eugene O'Neill Memorial Scholarship from the Yale School of Drama, and the Paul Greene Award from the National Theatre Conference. Their play, Color Boy, received the Kennedy Center's Latinx Playwriting Award, an Honorable Mention from the Relentless Award, as well as a nomination for the Playwrights’ Center 2025 Venturous Playwright Fellowship. Her play Lupe Finds Me in the Garden of Dreams was a finalist for the Leah Ryan Prize, the O’Neill Playwrights Conference, the Van Lier Fellowship for New Voices at Rattlestick Theater, was developed through New York Theater Workshop’s 2024 Summer Dartmouth Residency, and will be presented at the 2024 Breaking the Binary Theatre Festival at Playwrights Horizons. She is a two-time nominee for the Ollie Award, as well as the Weissberger New Play Award.
Along with writing, Esperanza is an active producer and was one of the 2022 Producing Artistic Directors of the Yale Summer Cabaret, where their collective commissioned and produced an entire season of new plays by Queer BIPOC writers, including Maia Novi’s Invasive Species (Vineyard Theater) and a.k. payne’s BurnBabyBurn: An American Dream (Atlantic Theater Company). Her monologue, Soledad’s Journey, was featured in Breaking the Binary Theatre Festival’s Bliss: A Collection Commissioned Scenes and Monologues, where it was performed by Indya Moore at the Public Theater.
She is currently a Teaching Artist for the Public Theater, an IB Theater Advisor at Brooklyn Prospect Charter High School, and a Lecturer in Playwriting at the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale, where she produced the 2024 Carlotta Festival and the Langston Hughes Festival of New Plays.
BA: Princeton, MFA: Yale.
Esperanza is currently unrepresented and seeking representation.
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RECENT ACHIEVEMENTS/POSITIONS
Honorable Mention for Color Boy → 2024 Relentless Award
Artist in Residence for Lupe Finds Me → New York Theater Workshop, August 2024
Lecturer in Playwriting & Producer of Langston Hughes Festival of New Plays → Yale School of Drama, Fall 2024
Featured Play: Lupe Finds Me in the Garden of Dreams
Estrella is a young trans playwright at a spiritual crossroads. She becomes the Old Hollywood actress Lupe Velez on the night of her passing to find the answers she needs, and the two people who hold them are Anna May Wong and Gary Cooper, her greatest lifetime relationships. Lupe Finds Me spans years in cinematic history to raise the questions: what are the costs to being a queer artist of color in today's industry? What would happen if we found a way of creating ourselves outside of it?