Francisco Arriví


Francisco Arriví, a.k.a. Paco, was a writer, poet and playwright known as "The Father of the Puerto Rican Theater."

Early years

Arriví was born in Santurce, a section of the City San Juan, Puerto Rico, to a Spanish father and Puerto Rican mother. He loved to read books, a habit which he acquired at the age of six. His grandmother, who used to take him to the theater every week, inspired his interest in theatrical works. He built a small stage in the backyard of his house on Calle Wilson when he was 10 years old where, together with his friends, he would make presentations of children's tales.
He received his primary education at the Padre Rufo and Rosendo Matienzo Cintrón public schools, and his secondary high school education at the Escuela Superior Central. He became interested in writing poetry during this period of his life. After he graduated from high school, he applied for admission to University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras where he continued his education. He wrote one of his first musical compositions, Himno al Alma Máter, which is the official hymn of said educational institution and in 1938 earned a degree in Spanish and Latin-American literature.

Theatrical career

Upon his return to Puerto Rico, and under the direction of Leopoldo Santiago Lavandero, Arriví joined the Sociedad Dramática de Teatro Popular, who called themselves Areyto. Arriví used his experience with Areyto in his later theatrical presentations.
Arriví earned a living as an educator at the Escuela Superior de Ponce where he founded the school's student drama club, the Tinglado Puertorriqueño. In 1940 he began his career as a playwright at the school, after staging his original play Club de Solteros.
Arriví actively collaborated with an educational program sponsored by the Department of Education called Escuela del Aire broadcast over WIPR Radio. His show, From the Jungle to the Skyscrapers, presented many radio plays and was considered the best radio show on the island. These plays included Hacienda Villareal, Alma de Leyenda, Heroes de Guerra and Pajinas de Nuestra Historia, all written by Arriví.
In 1949, in New York City, Arriví was granted a scholarship from the Rockefeller Foundation and earned his master's degree in Radio and Theater from Columbia University.
In 1951, Arriví had the distinction of writing Ayer y Hoy, the first television program transmitted in Puerto Rico. During the two years that he spent behind the T.V. cameras, he wrote the script for El Niño Dios and Luis Muñoz Rivera.
In 1955, Arriví presented one of his greatest works Bolero y Plena at the University Theater and, in 1958, he presented Vejigantes in the First Festival of Puerto Rican Theater. These were followed by Sirena and Medusa en la Bahía. In addition, Arriví gained international recognition and his plays were presented abroad.
In 1959, Vejigantes presented by Frank Dauster received an award from the Institute of Literature. That same year he was named director of the theater program of the Puerto Rican Institute of Culture.
In 1961 he organized the First Playwright's Seminary. In the seventh celebration of the Puerto Rican Theater Festival, Arriví presented a new version of his first play Club de Solteros, now titled Coctel de Don Nadie. His other acclaimed works include: Acto de Fe, Cantico Para un Recuerdo and Absurdos Contra la Muerte.

Poet

In 1958, Arriví published his first book of poems titled Isla y Nada which was awarded the first place prize of the Círculo Cultural Yaucano.
In 1960, he published another book of poems titled Frontera which was also awarded the first place prize of the Círculo Cultural Yaucano, in addition to a first place prize from the Puerto Rican Institute of Literature.
Arriví was also the author of many essays dealing with the theater. Amongst these were Entrada por las Raíces,, Conciencia Puertorriqueña del Teatro Contemporáneo, and Areyto Mayor.

Written works

Amongst Arriví's published works are the following:
In Spanish
In English
The following are the lyrics to Francisco Arriví's 1938 Himno de la Vida, the anthem of the University of Puerto Rico at Río Piedras:
Spanish
English
translation
¡Cantemos unidos
un himno a la Alma Máter;
Cantemos con fuerza
el Himno de la Vida
que anuncie Juventud,
Amor y Libertad,
dé gloria al luchador,
honra de la Universidad!
Let us sing together
an anthem to the Alma Mater;
let us sing with strength
an Anthem of Life
which proclaims of Youth,
Love, and Liberty,
and that gives glory to he who fights,
he is the honour of the University!

Later years

Arriví, who was also the cousin of Dr. Ricardo Alegría known as the "Father of Modern Puerto Rican Archaeology", played an instrumental role in the establishment of the Centro de Bellas Artes Luis A. Ferré in Puerto Rico.
On February 8, 2007, Arriví died of cardiac arrest at the Ashford Presbyterian Community Hospital. A vigil was held at the Teatro Francisco Arriví, an old restored theater which the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture named in his honor. He was buried in the Cementerio Los Angeles cemetery of the city of Guaynabo. Arriví was survived by his son Francisco Arriví Cros and two grandchildren.
There is a commemorative plaque in the lobby of Ponce's Teatro La Perla that reads: "Francisco Arriví: Poet, Playwright, Essayist, perennial promoter of Puerto Ricanism and of the eternal values of the universal man." It was placed there by the administration of mayor Jose Dapena Thompson.