#^^ guy who is currently doing all their missing digital humanities assignments for the semester
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why is python so goddamn illegible. too many periods and parentheses and brackets what happened to a good old fashioned for loop. the humble if else statement
#and so many made up words!! what the fuck is a 'glob' and why should i want my computer to do it!!#^^ guy who is currently doing all their missing digital humanities assignments for the semester#tbf i did not pay enough attention and i'm doing these assignments months after they were due#so. whatever i did learn (not much) is a distant memory at this point#txt
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I recently came across a bunch of press articles and photos about Oscar Isaac that are so old, theyĀ appear to be out-of-print and pre-date social media.Ā Considering they were probably never digitally transcribed for internet access,Ā Iām guessing thatĀ the majority of current fans have never seen this stuff.
Even though a lot of these digital scans are challenging to read because they are the original fuzzy news print, I think there some gems worth sharing with you guys. Over the next several weeks, I will transcribe and share those gems on this page. Hope you enjoy them!
Letās start with this fantastic 2001 profile piece done before Oscar was accepted into Juilliard:
South Floridaās rising starĀ isn���t just acting the part
By Christine Dolen - [email protected]
February 4, 2001

As fifth-graders at Westminster Christian School in Miami, Oscar Isaac and his classmates were asked to write a story as if they were animals on Noahās Ark. Oscar turned in a seven-page play ā with original music ā from the perspective of a platypus. Then he starred in the production his teacher directed.
He hasnāt stopped expressing himself creatively since. Today, Isaac is one of South Floridaās busiest young theater actors, and certainly its hottest. And not just because heās a slender five-feet nine-inches tall with an expressively handsome face and glistening brown eyes.
Since making his professional debut as a Cuban hustler in Sleepwalkers at Area Stage in July 1999, he has played an explosive Vietnam vet in Private Wars for Horizons Repertory, a pot-smoking slacker in This Is Our Youth at GableStage, another Cuban on the make in Praying With the Enemy at the Coconut Grove Playhouse, the entrancing narrator of Side Man at GableStage, a Havana-based writer in Arrivals and Departures for the new Oye Rep and, most recently, a young Fidel Castro in When Itās Cocktail Time in Cuba at New Yorkās Cherry Lane Theater.

Beginning Wednesday, heāll be juggling five roles in City Theatreās annual Winter Shorts festival, first at the Colony Theatre in Miami Beach, then at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts. But that is not all: During the two weeks he is doing Winter Shorts, heāll also be playing dates with the punk-ska band The Blinking Underdogs (www.blinkingunderdogs.com), which features him as lead singer, guitarist and songwriter.
Oh, and he just got back from auditioning for New Yorkās prestigious Juilliard School of Drama.
All this for a guy a month shy of his 22nd birthday.
Sure, you could hate a guy whoās that talented, that charismatic, that transparently ambitious. But the people who have worked with Oscar Isaac donāt. On the contrary, theyāre all sure he has it ā that magical, canāt-be-taught thing that transforms an actor into a star.
Playwright Eduardo Machado, who put in a good word for Isaac at Juilliard, says āhe does have that star quality that makes your eyes go to him. Itās great that someone with that talent still wants to train.ā
āHe has a star quality thatās rare in a young actor,ā adds Joseph Adler, who directed him in Side Man and This Is Our Youth. āWithout a doubt I expect to be hearing great things from him.ā
āI JUST LOVE CREATINGā
Isaac, who also makes short films, canāt say exactly why he was attracted to acting. He just knows it makes him happier than anything, that itās what he was meant to do. And heās been doing it since he was a 4-year-old putting on plays in his familyās backyard with his sister Nicole.
āI just love creating, whether itās music or films or a character on a stage. I love taking people for a ride,ā he says. āIn Side Man, every night I would love being that close to the audience. I felt like I was talking to 80 of my closest friends.
āI could feel what the audience was feeling.ā
His powerful, mournful-yet-loving monologue near the end of the play, he said, āworked every night. I knew it would get them. Iād hear sniffles.
āBut it had less to do with me than with the atmosphere [created by the playwright and director].ā
You could understand if Isaac, surrounded as he is by praise and possibility, had an ego as burgeoning as his career. Instead, he channels the positive reinforcement into confidence about his work.
āHe has such a charm and an ease onstage, but heās very modest,ā says New York-based actress Judith Delgado, who shared the stage with Isaac in Side Man. āHeās hungry. Heās got moxie. I was blown away by him.
āHe saved me a couple of times. I went up [forgot a line] and that baby boy of mine came through. Heās a joy.ā
FORGING HIS OWN PATH
The son of a Cuban-American father and a Guatemalan mother, Isaac was never a stellar student. But he found ways of turning routine assignments ā like the Noahās Ark story ā into creative challenges.
His science reports were inevitably video documentaries underscored with punk music. He acted through middle and high school, though he had a falling out with his drama teacher at Santaluces Community High in Lantana over his misgivings about a character. When she refused to cast him in anything else, he got his English teacher to let him play the dentist in Little Shop of Horrors his senior year.
His skepticism about authority and love of playing the devilās advocate have long made him resist doing things the usual way. His post-high school ātrainingā consisted of one semester at Miami-Dade Community Collegeās South Campus (where he met his girlfriend, Maria Miranda), touring schools playing an abusive character in the Coconut Grove Playhouseās Breaking the Cycle, and working as a transporter of bodies at Baptist Hospital, where he absorbed the drama of people in emotionally intense situations.
āIt was the most magnificent dramatic institute I couldāve attended,ā Isaac said. āI was able to observe the entire spectrum of human emotion, people under the most extreme duress. I was mesmerized watching the way people interacted with each other in such heightened situations.
āI learned everything about the human condition, and it was real and harsh and brutally honest.ā
Yet even given his propensity for forging his own path, something nudged him another direction while he was in New York making his Off-Broadway debut in December. Walking by Juilliard one day, he impulsively went in to ask for an application. Though the application deadline had passed, Isaac persuaded Juilliard to accept his, noting in his application essay that most of the exceptional actors he admires had acquired āa brutally efficient techniqueā to enhance their talent by studying at places like Juilliard.
Though he wonāt know whether he has been accepted until the end of this month, his audition last weekend went well, he says. He did monologues from Henry IV, Part I and Dancing at Lughnasa, adjusting his Shakespearean Hotspur to a more fiery temperature at the suggestion of Michael Kahn, head of Juilliardās acting program ā though not without arguing that Hotspur wouldnāt be speaking to the king that way.
Isaac, not surprisingly, loves a good debate.
Adler, GableStageās artistic director and a man who is as liberal as Isaac once was conservative, savored the verbal jousting they did during rehearsals for Side Man.
āHe knows exactly how to pull my chain,ā Adler says with a laugh. āIntelligence is the cornerstone of all great actors, and heās bright as hell.
āHe has relentless ambition but with so much charm. Heās very hard to say no to. He has incredible raw talent and magnetism that is very rare in a young actor along with relentless energy, perseverance and ambition. I see his growth both onstage and off. Heās mature in both places.ā

Part of his growth, of course, will necessarily involve dealing with the rejections that are part of any actorās life. His career is still too new, his string of successes solid, so itās anyoneās guess how failure will shape him. But director Michael John GarcĆ©s, who picked him for When Itās Cocktail Time in Cuba after Isaac flew to New York at his own expense to compete with a pool of seasoned Manhattan actors for the role, believes his character will see him through.
āOscar is realistic, but heās so willing to go the whole nine yards,ā GarcĆ©s says. āHe didnāt go out when he was in the show here. His focus earned the respect of the other actors, some of whom have been working in New York for 30 years.
āHe hasnāt had a lot of blows yet, when the career knocks the wind out of you. But he has talent, determination and focus, and if he has perseverance ā my intuition is that he does have it ā he could achieve a lot.ā
FAMILY TIES
His father and namesake, Baptist Hospital intensive-care physician Oscar Isaac Hernandez, couldnāt be more proud. (Isaac doesnāt use the family surname in order to avoid, in his words, being āput in that Hispanic actor box.ā)
āIām ecstatic that heās probably going to be going to the most prestigious drama school in the United States,ā he says. āSchool will help him focus his energies and give him discipline. Heās got the raw material and the drive.ā
Isaacās mother, Maria, divorced from his father since 1992, is a kidney-transplant recipient who acknowledges that sheāll miss her son if he moves to New York. But, she adds, she wants him āto live out his dreams. He amazes me every day. He calls me every day. Iām very proud of him.ā
Even the other guys in The Blinking Underdogs are fans of Isaacās acting, though it could take him away from South Florida just as the band appears to be, Isaac says, on the brink of signing a recording deal (it has already put out its own CD, The Last Word, with songs, lead vocals and even cover photography by Isaac.
āOscarās the leader of the band, a great musician who amazes me and motivates us,ā says sax player Keith Cooper. āIāve been to see every one of his plays. Heās a phenomenal actor.
āI completely buy into his role in every play. As close as I am to him, I forget itās Oscar.ā
His South Florida theater colleagues credit that to Isaacās insatiable desire to learn and grow.
Gail Garrisan, who is directing him in Donnie and One of the Great Ones for Winter Shorts, observes, āItās not often that you find a young actor who is willing to listen and who doesnāt think he knows everything. He loves the work.
āHe really brought the young man in Side Man to life. When I saw it in New York, it seemed to be the fatherās play. When I saw it here, I felt it was his [Isaacās] play.ā
Oye Repās John Rodaz, whom Isaac calls āthe best director Iāve ever worked with,ā gave the actor his first important job in Sleepwalkers at Area Stage. They met when Isaac came to see Areaās production of Oleanna and the actor, knowing Rodaz ran the theater, introduced himself.
āHe has so much energy and such a sparkling personality,ā Rodaz says. āHe knows how to move in the world. He seems to take advantage of every situation in a good way; heās not a cold, calculating person whoāll stab you in the back.
ā[But] he wants it so badly. Everything he does, heās the leader. When I was 21, I was taking naps.ā
Rodaz coached Isaac on his Juilliard monologues and found the experience energizing.
āI got chills just watching him. That happens so rarely. I was so exhilarated when I came home that I just had to go out and run. You just know heās got all the tools.ā
Christine Dolen is The Heraldās theater critic.
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#oscar isaac#vintage#juilliard#blinking underdogs#area stage company#john rodaz#gablestage#when it's cocktail time in cuba#side man#arrivals and departures#this is our youth#praying with the enemy#sleepwalkers#private wars#winter shorts#the miami herald
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