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STORYTELLING SHOWS

Angel performs stories from his award-winning books: The Corn Woman, Stories and Legends from the Hispanic Southwest; The Eagle on the Cactus, Traditional Stories from New Mexico; Riding Tall in the Saddle; and The Cowboy Fact Book.
"The contributions he has made and the cultural impact on the genre of storytelling are beyond belief. Angel has made Latino storytelling come alive." - Carl Ruby, President of the Rocky Mountain Storytelling Conference

Stories from the Homeland (Cuentos de Aztlan)

Traditional Stories of the Hispanic Southwest

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Historic Park Summer Lecture Series, Frisco, Colorado (Summit County Television) For generations Latino families have had cuentos, traditional stories and legends, at the center of their family experience. Their cuentos expressed their dreams, their hard learned lessons about life, their religious and spiritual yearnings, the teaching of their elders and their great warm sense of humor. Stories From the Homeland, Cuentos de Aztlan, is an engaging and illuminating journey into the Latino soul as expressed in traditional and modern stories. The show features fascinating tales from Angel’s vast repertoire of stories. The show includes morality tales explaining the lesson of right and wrong, instructive animal fables, chistes, short comics tales guaranteed to amuse, as well as amazing tales of wonder, transformation and magic.

el vaquero

Stories and Legends of the Spanish-Mexican Vaquero, America’s First Cowboy
Presenting the origins of cowboy and ranch culture in the American West, this show traces cowboy culture’s roots from the open plains of Spain to the establishment of ranching culture in the New World, Placing the historical and fictional lore of the origins of the American cowboy within the context of the Spanish/Mexican vaquero, America’s first cowboy, it describes the role of the vaquero in the development of cowboy and ranching practices in the American West. The show includes stories from the lives and adventures of the vaqueros, presentations of the tools of the working vaquero, and demonstrations of bullwhip cracking and trick roping. A special feature of the show is the historically accurate costume worn to represent the Spanish Colonial Vaquero of the 1700s. This show is part of the Colorado Humanities Council Chautauqua Series.

el conquistador

Stories and Legends of the Spanish Conquistador, America's First Explorer
In their exploration of new lands and quest for glory and wealth, conquistadors brought the essential elements of western culture to the New World. This show tells bold stories of epic adventures and astounding discoveries. It covers the time period from the old ditty of “In 1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue,” through the challenging adventures of discovery and to the firm establishment of Spanish culture in the New World. A special feature of the show is the historically accurate conquistador costume worn to represent the Spanish soldier from the conquistador era of the 1500s. The George H.W. Bush Presidential Museum specially commissioned the show and costume for its History of America storytelling series.

Talking Tongues

Stories and Legends of the Supreme God of the Aztec People
The Aztec show features creation tales from indigenous pre-Hispanic Mexico. These stories are from a variety of indigenous Mexican Indian groups and represent a sampling of their creation legends. The legends tell the story of the origins of the Aztec world. The stories include naming tales depicting the creation of sacred and common objects as well as imaginative tales giving reason and understanding to the origins of human practices. Often they are comforting tales explaining frightening natural events.
The stories offer explanations for many natural occurrences, from the grand story of why the world exists to the simpler story of why an animal looks and acts as it does. Included in the creation stories are legends about the creation of people, the creation of the sun and the moon, how music came into the world and how fire came to people.
A special feature of the show is the historically accurate costume worn to represent Tezcatlipoca, the Supreme God of the Aztec People. The Denver Museum of Natural History and Science specially commissioned the show and costume for its exhibit "Aztec, the World of Moctezuma."

Mucho Macho Muchacho

An American Story

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These stories illustrate three generations of American life across two centuries. They are a living history guaranteed to entertain with the recognition of your own family.
The lives of six amazing men in Angel's family are told—six men spanning three generations in an Hispanic family. The stories are deeply insightful, touchingly sentimental, profoundly loving, comically funny, quietly philosophical, surprisingly universal and always honest. They give voice to the inner lives of Hispanic men as they lived out all the roles possible in a family as sons, brothers, cousins, uncles, fathers and husbands. Living on the margins of American society the men lived the decades from the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, The Great War, the Hippie Generation, the Civil Rights era through to the to the hyper-modern high tech, social media and internet age.

listen to angel telling stories

La Llorona, The Weeping Woman

The legend of La Llorona, the Weeping woman, is one of Mexico’s most powerful and enduring stories. The story of La Llorona exists in many variations throughout the Americas, extending northward into the United States Southwest. The origins of the tale are lost in antiquity. Hispanic parents use the story to warn their children to be good little boys and girls, or else “La Llorona will get you!” In this manner it is a classic “boogie man” story used to lightly scare and entertain children. (4 minutes)

One for You. One for Me.

Like Father Like Son

These first two are chistes, short anecdotal tales, with a comic twist at the end. This type of story is a great favorite of the Hispanic people of the Southwest. (5 minutes)
© Copyright 2025 Angel Vigil All rights reserved.

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