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Marina Martinez-Bateman

Marina Martinez-Bateman

Marina Martinez-Bateman (they/them) is an equity and communications consultant and ghost tour guide who moved to Portland in 2014. Read More

a couple stands in front of a large theater painted orange with a sign reading “En Centro Milagro” a couple stands in front of a large theater painted orange with a sign reading “En Centro Milagro”
i
Since 1985, Milagro in the Central Eastside has been a hub for dynamic theater, Latine culture, arts education experiences and more.
Credit: Ben Martinez-Bateman
Culture / Arts / Portland Theater

Latino Arts Shine at Milagro in Portland

Milagro in Portland’s Central Eastside has been home to Latiné-American arts and culture for over 30 years.

Updated Oct. 3, 2024 4 min read Central Eastside
Marina Martinez-Bateman

Marina Martinez-Bateman

Marina Martinez-Bateman (they/them) is an equity and communications consultant and ghost tour guide who moved to Portland in 2014. Read More

Smackdab in Portland’s Central Eastside, just a few blocks from a rooftop watering hole, several popular food cart pods and an interactive art museum, is the region’s only Latine theater production company, Milagro. This low-slung umber building hosts some of the most innovative projects in the Latin American diaspora and represents one of the longest-lasting pillars of the Portland Latino community. Its projects include an oral history documenting Latiné Oregonians, microgrants for local Latiné artists (like rising rapper Karma Rivera and visual storyteller Mika Martinez), and Portland’s longest-running Día de Muertos festival.

At 14% of the state’s population, Latin Americans are the largest ethnic group in Oregon, about 11% higher since Milagro was founded in 1985. “We showcase the diversity of Latin America; we elevate Black and Indigenous Latinos. People tend to think we’re all Mexicans, or we get called criminals and drug dealers. But here we tell the positive stories of the community,” says Artistic Director Dañel Malán.

Editor’s Note: We use Latinx and Latine in place of Latino or Latina to remain gender-inclusive.

Milagro Theatre FAQ

When is Milagro open?

Milagro Theatre is open Monday through Friday. Show times and summer and holiday hours may vary.

When is the Milagro Dia De Los Muerto Festival?

Milagro hosts a Dia de Muertos Festival from late October to early November every year.

How much are tickets to Milagro?

Tickets range from under $25–$35; tickets under $10 are available to anyone with an Oregon Trail Card.

Where is Milagro Theatre?

Milagro is located in Portland’s Central Eastside at 525 SE Stark St., Portland, OR 97214.

Is Milagro Theatre accessible?

All the public areas of the theater, including the bathroom, are fully ADA accessible. The sidewalks around the theater feature curb cuts, as well. The basement rehearsal space, activity room and prop room are inaccessible.

History of Teatro Milagro

Founded in 1985 by Executive Director José González and Dañel Malán, the theater originally produced Greek tragedies, beginning with their debut show, “Oedipus Rex.” They also founded the Ancient Greek Theatre Festival, hosted annually until the early 1990s.

People tend to think we’re all Mexicans, or we get called criminals and drug dealers. But here we tell the positive stories of the community.

Dañel Malán, Milagro Artistic Director

Out of nostalgia for his Southwest roots, González led the creation of Portland’s first Hispanic Cultural Festival, headlined by Illapu, the internationally celebrated Chilean folk-rock group who popularized the nueva canción Chilena music style. The inaugural festival in 1989 presented two plays, “Roosters” by Milcha Sanchez-Scott and “Burning Patience” by Antonio Skarmeta.

Milagro also used this festival to introduce its very first bilingual children’s production, “Perez y Martina,” by Thom Jenkins. “Children’s stories can be forgotten; it’s so important for the youth to see themselves on stage,” says one of Milagro’s actors, Enrique Andrade. “Maybe we plant the seed for them to say, ‘Hey, maybe I can be an actor, or maybe I can be a playwright someday.’”

In 1995, Milagro retired the Hispanic Cultural Festival and produced its first Día De Muertos Festival, which was then referred to by the more popular English-speaking malapropism Día De Los Muertos.

More Latine Culture

From shops to events to top-notch eateries, experience Portland's rich Latinx culture.

Explore Latine Culture
A sign reading \"Portland Mercado\" in front of a brightly painted mural showing a Latin American dancer and musician

Living Latine in Portland

Spend a day enjoying and buying from Latinx-owned businesses all over Portland.

two people dancing on stage

Portland’s Cinco de Mayo Fiesta

Shop for handmade crafts, snack on traditional recipes and enjoy entertainment straight from Guadalajara at this popular Cinco de Mayo festival.

groups of people at tables in an indoor market dining area

Great Latinx-Owned Eateries in Portland

Portland is home to authentic eateries from every corner of Latin America. Feast on tacos, tlayudas, pupusas and burritos; read on for some of the best Latinx-owned restaurants and food carts in Portland.

exterior of a colorful market

Portland Mercado

The Mercado is a food cart pod and also a hub of Latine culture and local entrepreneurship and may be one of the city’s most delicious destinations.

Actors dancing across a stage in long white dresses and skeleton makeup

Dia de Los Muertos in Portland

Honor passed loved ones and celebrate life with Día de Los Muertos in Portland, a Mexican heritage celebration featuring ofrendas, traditional foods, and folkloric dance.

someone orders at a restaurant that is colorfully decorated, people fill the chairs in the background

Taqueria Mis Tacones: Cultivating Community and Cashew Cheese

Located in Portland’s Alberta neighborhood, Mis Tacones serves up authentic vegan Mexican food and community support for trans POC visitors and locals.

Experience El Centro Milagro

Located beside the Next Adventure outdoor store, Milagro is a short stroll or roll from the Portland Streetcar’s B Loop and TriMet bus line #6.

When you arrive at the theater, you’ll find the main entrance on Southeast Stark Street, while the entrance to El Zocalo, their large flex space, is around the corner under a mural by award-winning local artist José Solis. Together, the theater and El Zocalo form El Centro Milagro, a Latiné arts and culture community center that hosts such diverse guests as Eastern European improv troupes, political leaders and aspirants, many hordes of school children, internationally renowned scientists, activists and everyone in between.

small red tables and folding chairs fill a cozy theater cafeteria
Southeast Portland’s Milagro is a bilingual theater offering plays, festivals, arts education programs and more.

Credit: Ben Martinez-Bateman

The theater has 121 seats around a three-quarter thrust stage, extending into the auditorium so the audience is seated around three sides. In a rare treat for a historic Portland building, the theater has air conditioning, making it a perfect escape on a hot summer day. It also has a functional hand-crank freight elevator still in use at over 100 years old.

Accessibility Fun Fact: The state-of-the-art curb cuts surrounding Milagro are so easy to navigate that Michelle’s Piano, located kitty-corner to the theater, regularly lends Milagro a grand piano by simply wheeling it across the two streets between them.

Portland Theater

Portland has a well-established network of venues and theater companies and an increasingly dynamic and diverse small theater scene.

Read More

Events and Shows at Milagro

Milagro Theatre has two primary spaces for community and performance: the 121-seat theater itself and the flex space next to the theater. Seasons run from September to May and include plays in a mix of Spanish and English. Plays presented in Spanish get English subtitles on two screens mounted on either side of the stage. Usually, one bilingual children’s play and at least one art show are featured each season. There are also frequent screenings, panel discussions, workshops and other community events.

two people sit next to each other in a theater with rows of empty red seats behind them
Dañel Malán and José González founded Milagro in the Central Eastside in 1985.

Credit: Ben Martinez-Bateman

Milagro is celebrating its 40th season in 2024, concluding with “Borderline.” An original play by Andrew Siañez-De La O, this teen tale inspired by borderland ghost stories is laden with real-world warnings. Milagro kicks off their 41st season during an election year in fall 2024 with “Celebrate the Changemakers,” which centers on themes of social injustice, changing gender norms and registering to vote.

Finally, to cap off the year, Milagro’s 29th Annual Día de Muertos Festival will explore gender identity through chosen family, followed by a bilingual portrait play about Frida Kahlo and Paul Olmos’ “A Home What Howls,” “a modern myth drawn from the real-life struggles of displaced communities around the globe.”

Arts, Cultural Communities, Latine Community, Theater

Dia de Los Muertos in Portland

Honor passed loved ones and celebrate life with Día de Los Muertos in Portland, a Mexican heritage celebration featuring ofrendas, traditional foods, and folkloric dance.

Read More

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