The Wash

GALA’s ‘Héctor, El Niño’ empowers D.C. youth

Young artists find their voice as GALA Theatre hosts the world premiere of the musical Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico.

At GALA Hispanic Theatre in Columbia Heights, rehearsals are underway for the world premiere of ctor, El Niño Eléctrico on Saturday. 

GALA, short for Grupo de Artistas Latino Americanos, celebrates 50 years of productions on its professional stage with its 2025-2026 season and continues its commitment to nurturing the next generation of artists.  

Ixchel Hernández, who portrays Héctor, listens as director Mauricio Pita gives notes during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)
Ixchel Hernández, who portrays Héctor, listens as director Mauricio Pita gives notes during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)

Since 1976, the theater has been a beacon of Latino performing arts productions in D.C., founded by Argentinian-born theater director Hugo Medrano and Executive Director Rebecca Read Medrano. 

What makes you different, makes you special 

GALA’s production of ctor, El Niño Eléctrico — directed by Mauricio Pita — is empowering for young audiences, Pita said.

ctor, El Niño Eléctrico follows Héctor, a shy boy who spends much of his time in his imagination, escaping into comic books. Over the course of the musical, he learns that the qualities that make him feel “different” are actually his strengths — his superpower. 

In Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico, Héctor escapes into his comic books. The production uses a prop comic book of Superman. (Kelly Doyle)
In Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico, Héctor escapes into his comic books. The production uses a prop comic book of Superman. (Kelly Doyle)

Pita worked closely with playwright Cornelia Cody, meeting every Saturday over the past summer to refine the script. He said he personally relates to Héctor, played by actress Ixchel Hernández, and believes many children will, too. 

“The show gives kids a chance to see themselves reflected back at them,” Pita said. 

As part of GALA’s outreach efforts, the theater will host student matinees for schools across the DMV. During the performances, children in the audience can participate, including in a musicalchairs moment on stage with the actors. 

Pita said the interactive element helps young people understand how theater works and challenges them to use their imagination in a way film and television don’t demand. 

From left, cast of Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico: Camilo Linares, Camila Cossa, Delbis Cardona, and Nadia Palacios during rehearsals at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)
From left, cast of Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico: Camilo Linares, Camila Cossa, Delbis Cardona, and Nadia Palacios during rehearsals at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)

“Theater forces people to suspend their disbelief and buy into what’s happening on stage as if it’s real, even though we all know it’s not,” he said. “There’s a contract between the actors and the audience. If you believe it, they believe it.” 

Pita, who previously directed GALA’s after-school arts program for teens, the Paso Nuevo program, said that even the simplest prop can become something extraordinary for young audiences. 

“We have a garage on stage, and there are supposed to be three cars,” Pita said. “There aren’t three cars — one of them is a dinner table that turns, lights come out of it, and wheels get put on. It’s the illusion of a car, but if the actors treat it like a car, then the audience believes it’s a car. 

Director Mauricio Pita gives notes to actress Ixchel Hernández, who plays Héctor, during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico. (Kelly Doyle)
Director Mauricio Pita gives notes to actress Ixchel Hernández, who plays Héctor, during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico. (Kelly Doyle)
Director Mauricio Pita steps onto the stage to demonstrate a scene for his actors during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico. (Kelly Doyle)
Director Mauricio Pita steps onto the stage to demonstrate a scene for his actors during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico. (Kelly Doyle)

Creativity carries itself through all corners of GALA Theatre, where students from the after-school program Paso Nuevo sometimes help backstage during professional productions.  

The arts build confidence 

Students crowd the basement — el subtefor Paso Nuevo. 

The program offers high school students a free arts education in creative writing, music, and theater. 

Actress Camila Cossa listens to director Mauricio Pita during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)
Actress Camila Cossa listens to director Mauricio Pita during a rehearsal for Héctor, El Niño Eléctrico at GALA Hispanic Theatre. (Kelly Doyle)

Since joining Paso Nuevo in May 2024, high schooler Balaria Rodríguez has made new friends, discovered a love for acting and writing, and gained a newfound confidence. 

“I have learned how to control myself,” Rodríguez said. “I don’t get nervous.” 

The program gives students hands-on experience in technical theater, including lighting and sound design, for those who prefer working behind the scenes. 

“A lot of people who come here do costumes and backstage, because they don’t like to do acting,” Rodríguez said. 

Balaria Rodríguez, next to friend Scarlet Serrano Santos, works on a graphic design flyer for Dia de Muertos on her laptop (Kelly Doyle)
Balaria Rodríguez, next to friend Scarlet Serrano Santos, works on a graphic design flyer for Dia de Muertos on her laptop (Kelly Doyle)

About 35 students currently participate in Paso Nuevo, led by Program Director Chris Ríos. He said the program helps students gain emotional intelligence that extends beyond the theatre. 

“Even if the students don’t want to be professional actors or anything, providing education in the arts helps give them key resources to develop emotionally and mentally as they grow into adulthood,” Ríos said. 

The program is bilingual — just as GALA’s professional productions upstairs are. 

Costumes and props are stocked on shelves from 50 years of GALA productions. (Kelly Doyle)
Costumes and props are stocked on shelves from 50 years of GALA productions. (Kelly Doyle)

“We get a good pool of students who speak no Spanish, who speak no English, who speak some English and some Spanish, and we find a way to marry the two in our productions,” Ríos said. 

Paso Nuevo students have free access to GALA’s professional performances, giving them a first-hand experience of GALA’s mission of sharing Latino arts and cultures through bilingual productions. 

ctor, El Niño Eléctrico runs Oct. 18–Nov. 1. Tickets, $10 to $12, are available online.

Paso Nuevo Program Director Chris Ríos talks with student participant Balaria Rodríguez and student intern Lorenzo Cruz before the students split into classes. (Kelly Doyle)
Paso Nuevo Program Director Chris Ríos talks with student participant Balaria Rodríguez and student intern Lorenzo Cruz before the students split into classes. (Kelly Doyle)

Kelly Doyle

Kelly is a journalist and graduate student in the International Journalism and Public Affairs program at American University in Washington, D.C. She studies international human rights laws and received the Pauline Frederick Robbins Scholarship, awarded to an outstanding female student in broadcast journalism. At The Wash, she covers politics as well as Columbia Heights, U Street, and Mount Pleasant on a neighborhood beat.

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