Actor
and spoken-word poet Joe Hernandez-Kolski ’96 hosts
open-mic nights for Los Angeles high school students. (Courtesy
Joe Hernandez-Kolski ’96)
March 21, 2007: PROFILE — Joe Hernandez-Kolski
’96 Empowering
teens through poetry
Every other Tuesday night at Santa Monica’s Miles Playhouse,
Los Angeles students line up to participate in Downbeat 720, an
open-mic showcase for high school poets, singers, and dancers hosted
by actor Joe Hernandez-Kolski ’96.
Since 2002 Hernandez-Kolski has served as the students’
mentor, master of ceremonies, and unofficial guide to the world
of spoken-word poetry. A regular on the Los Angeles poetry scene,
he has performed on HBO’s Def Poetry — a premiere spotlight
for poets who perform their pieces before a live audience.
In the past two years, Downbeat’s reputation has grown.
Hernandez-Kolski has co-produced two seasons of Downbeat Showdown,
a locally televised competition among nine poets, nine singers,
and nine bands that was awarded an Emmy for Outstanding Youth Programming
in 2006.
Hernandez-Kolski and his fellow organizers have worked to make
Downbeat 720 as welcoming an environment as possible. Before each
show, which is open to any Los Angeles high school student, he offers
feedback on new pieces and calms jitters.
Hernandez-Kolski encourages participants to draw on their own
experiences for their material. Many of the students focus on deeply
personal issues in their poems, from the shame of being sexually
molested as a child to the heartbreak of being abandoned by a parent.
“Joe makes it feel OK to be yourself,” says Desiré
Johnson, a 15-year-old sophomore from Santa Monica High School and
a regular Downbeat performer.
Hernandez-Kolski got his first glimpse of the spotlight
at age 6, when he landed his first community theater role. By 11
he was performing regularly with the Chicago Actors Ensemble. At
Princeton, he gravitated to Theatre Intime and BodyHype, while majoring
in history and earning certificates in theater and dance and African-American
studies.
Today, the themes of identity and ethnicity are central to Hernandez-Kolski’s
art. In 2004 he staged the one-man show “You Want a Piece
of Me,” a combination of comedy sketches, spoken-word poetry,
and dance exploring his mixed Polish and Mexican upbringing. He
has since toured colleges across the country with a modified version
titled “Refried Latino Pride.” In November he performed
it at Princeton during the Kaleidoscope alumni conference on race
and diversity. He currently is developing a sitcom and preparing
his next stage project, a politically themed solo show called “Where
Republicans Go to Read Their Poetry.”
Now in his fifth year overseeing Downbeat 720, Hernandez-Kolski
judges the program’s success on the authenticity of the students’
work and their evolution as artists. Several of his performers have
gone on to compete in spoken-word competitions, and alumni of the
program regularly return to take the stage during their college
vacations.
“I want these kids to be empowered in who they are,”
he says. “All they really need to succeed in life is the confidence
that comes from affirmation.”
By Tamar Laddy ’94
Tamar Laddy ’94 is a writer living in Los Angeles.