When Juana Dolores is given a bus, she does not miss the opportunity to express all her complaints and concerns. On this occasion, it was in the framework of the Grec Festival press conference, in which his show *Hit me if I’m pretty* or the modern princess was presented, which will be for a month at the Antic Teatre, in the July 6 to August 6.
The other four shows that have been presented are not minor, and are among some of the most renowned in this edition of the festival. Agrupación Señor Serrano, La Veronal, Mal Pelo and Sònia Gómez and Los Sara Fontán have spoken about their attractive proposals, but Hurricane Juana Dolores has passed through the press room like a meteorite.
The director of the Grec, Cesc Casadesús, has found himself trapped as happened to the journalist Xavier Graset a few days ago, but he has dealt with that Miura with his characteristic know-how.
Juana Dolores has not left a puppet with a head and has especially attacked the Antic Teatre, the room where she will present 21 performances 21 of her show, within the Grec Festival, in conditions that she considers “abusive” and “precarious”.
“With the grant of 30,000 euros that the ICIC gave me, the Antic Teatre has bought three giant screens and three projectors, which they will keep,” the artist stated.
Beyond the denunciation of the precariousness of the profession in general, Juana Dolores has spoken about the trilogy she is working on, A new Constitution –hypothesis and images in feminine–, of which Hit me if I’m pretty* or the modern princess is the second piece. This work is based on the texts of Machiavelli’s The Prince and Gramsci’s The Modern Prince. “And sexually explicit images appear,” she warns.
The fact that she has to do 21 performances is something that worries her: “I don’t know if I’ll hold up physically well all these days. If I get sick, I’ll take the leave and that’s it.” But she has also declared that she would not taste bad “for the public, because the tickets are selling very well.”
Juana Dolores has also criticized Ada Colau for not having made the Antic Teatre a public center, which would facilitate the work of the artists, and regarding the new Barcelona City Council, she has concluded: “I will not be calm until I see the socialist victory. The Socialist Party is not socialist, it is a party of the Spanish right”.