An ancient Maya myth finds new life in a Mexican circus companyâs performance
- - An ancient Maya myth finds new life in a Mexican circus companyâs performance
MARĂA TERESA HERNĂNDEZNovember 23, 2025 at 7:03 AM
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1 / 5Mexico Circus Underworld TwinsAcrobats from a Mexican theater company perform the show titled "Mortal Leap into Xibalba," which reinterprets a myth from a sacred Mayan book about creation and the journey to the underworld, in Mexico City, Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)
MEXICO CITY (AP) â Mexican artistic director Jorge DĂaz used to have a unique selection of bedtime stories for his son.
Setting aside well-known books like âPinocchio,â they read tales closer to home. Among their favorites was the Popol Vuh, a compendium of sacred Maya myths.
âRecalling those stories is important,â said DĂaz, whose grandmother told him legends from her Indigenous lineage as a child. âWe have plenty of beautiful, pre-Hispanic tales. But we sometimes forget.â
The one he enjoyed with his son recounts the story of hero twins IxbalanquĂ© and HunahpĂș.
In the Popol Vuh, the brothers embark on a perilous journey to the Maya underworld. There, they outwit death, confront its lords and ultimately rise transformed.
The myth inspired DĂazâs adaptation, âMortal Leap into Xibâalbâa.â Blending circus arts with theater, the piece employs acrobatics and ritual to reimagine the ancestral story on stage.
âWe sought to give the piece its own identity through circus, but I didnât want the work to rely only on tricks or spectacle,â DĂaz said. âThe idea was for the techniques to blend with the story and the characters, creating atmospheres rather than just showcasing skills.â
The show has returned to the stage periodically since its debut in 2023. New performances were held in Mexico City in late November.
Circus as storytelling
The troupe behind âMortal Leap into Xibâalbâaâ was founded 20 years ago by DĂaz and fellow artist Jessica GonzĂĄlez. Initially a theater company, âTrĂĄnsito Cincoâ evolved into a group devoted to circus arts.
âFresh out of university, we searched for tools that would allow us to grow as actors,â said GonzĂĄlez, who also performs as a narrator in the Maya myth piece. âWe wanted to find something that could connect theater with dance and the circus became a meeting place.â
Their current repertoire includes 16 productions. Thereâs not a shared theme among them. Yet DĂaz and GonzĂĄlez aim to create pieces with a clear narrative thread.
âOur shows are built around a theme or storyline,â she said. âWe believe that circus arts can also be a way to say something, whether itâs about social issues or any other subject.â
How they work hand in hand with artists is reflected in âSomnia,â a documentary about TrĂĄnsito Cincoâs history and vision.
âThis is one of the most influential art forms Iâve ever witnessed,â said director Arely Cantellano during a recent showing of her film. âIt opens those doors to many different arts and invites us all to take part.â
Circus as ritual
Aside from adapting the Maya myth and directing fellow artists, one of DĂazâs jobs in âMortal Leap into Xibâalbâaâ is rigging work. That is, as Yareli Reyes performs while being suspended from a rig by her hair, DĂaz oversees her safety
Her performance is close to DĂazâs heart. She plays one of the Maya twins, a role the director once envisioned for himself.
His brother â also an actor â plays the main character in the Maya-inspired piece and DĂaz dreamed of performing alongside him. âI love that fragment of the Popol Vuh,â he said. âIt felt important to me to create it onstage together.â
He let go of the role so he could avoid overloading himself. But watching his beloved sacred story from a distance provides him with a fresh understanding of his art.
âCircus has the power to astonish and play with risk,â he said. âWhen Iâm holding the performer who does hair suspension, there are moments when I see the light, the atmosphere, and it feels like a ritual.â
Several scenes feel full of energy to him. The way the music, the light and the artistsâ bodies fuse into stagecraft creates an immersive environment for audiences, he said.
âItâs fantastic,â said marketing strategist Alba Vida about TrĂĄnsito Circoâs work after the recent showcase of their documentary. âI love circus arts because, within them, the frontier with entertainment shifts.â
A tale of rebirth
DĂazâs son is now 14. However, the work inspired by their nights delving into the Maya underworld is still aimed at children and families.
For an hour, âMortal Leap into Xibâalbâaâ depicts the twinsâ journey between the living realm and the underworld. The performance kicks off, portraying how the brothers are born after their mother becomes pregnant when the skull of their father spits into her hand, a symbolic transfer of life.
The twins are raised among humans. Yet as they learn to play a pre-Hispanic ritual sport that infuriated the Xibâalbâa lords, several fights take place and the pair eventually perishes â only to return transformed in the mythâs final cycle.
âUnder the Mayan worldview, death is not an ending, but a chance to be reborn,â DĂaz said. âSo even as they throw themselves into the fire as a sacrifice, they become the Sun and Moon.â
Conveying how the ancient Maya perceive death as a possibility to reinvent oneself is as important to DĂaz as taking care of every detail in his colleaguesâ risky, brilliant acts.
âThere are many elements from pre-Hispanic Indigenous traditions that can be brought into circus performance,â he said. âWays to use them, reinterpret them and give them new meaning onstage.â
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