National Hispanic Heritage Month kicks off as it does every year on Sept. 15. The start date for the celebration of Hispanic-American people, culture and art is a significant one. Sept. 15 marks the anniversary of independence for Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Mexico celebrates independence on Sept. 16 and Chile on Sept. 18.
To mark Hispanic Heritage Month, the City of Reno hosts Fiesta 2018 in Wingfield Park. The event is scheduled for the afternoon of Saturday Sept. 23 and will feature local mariachi bands, food trucks, family activities and salsa dancing groups teaching lessons. Changรผรญ Majadero, a five-piece Cuban outfit from Los Angeles, is scheduled to headline the event. City officials didnโt respond to interview requests regarding the event, but a press release states that it was spearheaded by city councilmember Oscar Delgado in โ2017 as another opportunity to celebrate Renoโs thriving arts and culture scene, and to recognize Hispanic Heritage Month.โ
Another Hispanic Heritage Month event is Fiesta on Wells. Like the one slated for Wingfield Park, it will feature music, art and food, but itโs an older event than the cityโsโand it takes place on Wells Avenue, a neighborhood thatโs long been home to many of Renoโs Hispanic families and businesses.
According to organizers and spouses Mario DelaRosa and Annamaria Cavallone, Fiesta on Wells has taken place a half a dozen times in the last decade. This yearโs event will take place one day after the cityโs, on Sept. 23โwith Wells Avenue closed from Casazza Street to Capitol Hill Avenue to accommodate vendors and entertainers.
DelaRosa said the fiesta is an event โorganized by the community for the community,โ of which both he and Cavallone are active members. DelaRosa is a journalist and owner of Renoโs Ahora Latino Journal, and Cavallone is the director of the bilingual theater group Brown Eyes Theater. DelaRosa said they want this yearโs Fiesta to provide not just entertainment for the community, but also resources. Among the vendors who will be present are health and life insurance brokers and businesses like Costco. And DelaRosa and Cavallone have also arranged for political candidates to be on hand to talk with community members, including Washoe County Sheriff candidates Darin Balaam and Heidi Howe.
โAnd there are many community organizations, also,โ said DelaRosa. โFor example, we have Catholic Charities, Childrenโs Cabinet, Silver State Housing. We have Washoe Foster, [Truckee Meadows Community College]. We have this organization called PLAN.โ
Cavallone and DelaRosa said theyโve also worked to secure a diversity of arts, culture and entertainment at this yearโs Fiesta on Wells.
โWe have a tango group participating,โ Cavallone said. โItโs an Argentinian group.โ
โTheyโre called Reno Tango Collective,โ DelaRosa said.
There will also be a Frida Kahlo lookalike contest, a DJ and a couple of local bands, including Connoy Extrema and an eight-piece band and called Fuerza Latina.
For both Cavallone and DelaRosa, the hope is that Fiesta on Wells will serve as more than a one-day good time to those who attend.
โWe know that these events create awareness in the community about the Hispanic community, who we are and the things that we bring to the table,โ DelaRosa said. โIn these times, itโs very important to come out and celebrate and be proud of who we are.โ
Part of that, DelaRosa said, is bringing awareness to the fact that Latino arts and activists groups and Latino-owned businesses are a part of the Truckee Meadows community year-round.
A Toda Madre Tattoos artist Josh Locke works on spouse Billie Jean Lockeโs tattoo.
Photo /jeri chadwell

He points to the nearly three dozen Latino-owned businesses in the area of Wells Avenue that will be closed for the fiestaโand to groups like Reno Little Theater, which works with Cavallone to present Brown Eyes Theater productions several times per year.
โWe have a new play about Frida Kahlo for October,โ Cavallone said. โAnd weโre the only Latino, bilingual theater group in Reno.โ
Frida the Play will run from Oct. 25 through Oct. 28. The Brown Eyes Theater group will also be presenting a Day of the Dead show for children that weekend, which according to Cavallone will be โlike a Muppets show,โ just โDia de Los Muertos Muppets.โ
โWe think itโs very important to maintain our traditions and to show the general community the contributions we bring to the community, including language, culture, arts, food and economics,โ DelaRosa said.
Promoting awareness of Latino residentsโ contributions toโand engagement withโthe broader community isnโt just a concern for the organizers of Fiesta on Wells. It also strikes a chord with some of the folks who will be performing there and those who run their businesses there every day.
Among the performers for Fiesta on Wells is Laura Zamora, a member of the band Fuerza Latina. Zamora, a vocalist, has been performing in places around Northern Nevada and California for about six years now. Normally, she said, the band gets hired for โQuinceaรฑeras or weddings, any kind of private party.โ
But, she said, โOur music is very popular. Our music is Cumbia and then Salsa. We do a bit of Bachata and Merengueโ and people โwho are non-Latinos, they love our music. The Fiesta just calls attention.โ
Sheโs hoping that attention might be parlayed into casino gigs where the band could reach broader and more diverse audiences.
โOne thing about our bandโI always call them the perfect combination, which is Salvadoran and Mexican combined,โ she said. โAnd itโs so good. Thatโs why, always, when I start any gig, I describe the perfect combinationโFuerza Latina.โ
Lola Winckelmann, a tattoo artist at A Toda Madre Tattoos, also describes what she and other artists at the shop do as a type of combination. On their website, they bill it as โChicano style.โ
โChicano style tattooing, I would say that itโs a way to represent the Latino community and the lifestyle of thatโwhat that means to live in this country being from that background and how to bring that sense of nostalgia but, also โฆ we have now a mixture of this culture with that culture.โ
According to Winckelmann, one way the artists at A Toda Madre work to blend more modern and traditional Chicano-style tattoos is by specializing in modern interpretations of a style called โblack and gray realism,โ which made its way from prisons to East Los Angelesโ Chicano communities, where it became popular.
โIt started getting out into the streets and people started knowing about that and seeing how beautiful that is,โ she said. โPeople just started taking that and running with it and evolving it. Now we have some beautifully complex black and gray pieces out there. Theyโre hyperrealistic, and it all came from that. We really try and, you know, give our own flair to it and offer that to our community at this shop. โฆ I think that we do primarily specify in black and gray, and we are accommodating to that audience specifically, but we do have somebody for everything. We try to be a well-rounded shop.โ
A Toda Madre will have a vendorโs booth during Fiesta on Wells. According to Winckelmann, the shopโs artists are excited to participate with raffles that will hopefully draw in new people. But, like Cavallone, DelaRosa and Zamora, sheโs quick to clarify that Fiesta on Wells is only one chance to engage with a community that exists year round.
โFor instance, in the holiday time, we do a lot of toy drives and things like that,โ she said. โDefinitely, I think that thereโs more than one way of being involved in the community. โฆ We have all of these little events here and there. So we give back to the community, and I think thatโs really helped for us to be successful in the five years weโve been here as well.โ
