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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nina_SerranoNina Serrano - Wikipedia

    Nina Serrano (born 1934) is an American poet, writer, storyteller, and independent media producer who lives in Vallejo, California. She is the author of Heart Songs: The Collected Poems of Nina Serrano (1980) and Pass it on!: How to start your own senior storytelling program in the schools (Stagebridge).

  2. About Nina Serrano 1941. New York City, Nina Serranos Early Performance. Nina Serrano, born in 1934 in New York City in the middle of the great depression, learned that hard times are struggle times when people have to come together and help each other.

  3. Literary Dialogs with Nina Serrano Celebrates the 50th Anniversary I am so excited about this interview on the 50th anniversary El Tecolote , a bilingual English/Spanish newspaper much beloved in the Latinx community of San Francisco, California, because I was around for the beginning!

  4. Nina Serrano, longtime activist and poet, describes how she got her start as a poet and writer and joined the Good Times collective, writing for it along with her husband and son... which led her to re-adopt her original last name! Video: Shaping San Francisco. Volume 90% 00:00. 10:25.

  5. The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo. Post-screening conversation with writer, director, producer Lourdes Portillo. After the Earthquake (Después del terremoto) Made with co-writer-director and now-established poet Nina Serrano, After the Earthquake is situated within a Latino community of San Francisco.

  6. Nina Serrano (born 1934) is an American poet, writer, storyteller, and independent media producer who lives in Vallejo, California. She is the author of Heart Songs: The Collected Poems of Nina Serrano (1980) and Pass it on!: How to start your own senior storytelling program in the schools (Stagebridge).

  7. United States. Languages. Spanish. English. ¡Qué hacer! is a 1972 Chilean-American drama film directed by Raúl Ruiz, [1] Nina Serrano, and Saul Landau. [2] According to co-director Nina Serrano, "The formal script in the first draft was written by Saul Landau, Raul Ruiz, and Jim Becket.

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