The
legendary
performer
Zoe
Caldwell
gave
her
assistant
Jade
Esteban
Estrada,
who
was
just
starting
out,
a
piece
of
advice:
"Jade,
to
be a
great
actor,
you
must
do
everything."
Now
he's
a
Comedy
Central
veteran,
an
accomplished
musician,
performer
and
author
who
basically
has
done
everything.
"I
really
started
to
realize
that
nothing
I
did
in
my
life
was
wasted,"
he
said
in a
phone
interview
from
his
home
in
San
Antonio.
"I
tap
dance
in
my
shows,
I
speak
Spanish
in
my
shows,
I
sing
in
my
shows
in
many
different
ways
and
I
have
to
make
people
laugh."
Estrada
has
made
a
career
from
playing
off
two
of
his
more
dominant
characteristics.
He
showcases
two
of
his
shows
tonight
and
Saturday
on
the
Palouse.
First,
he's
Latino.
Tonight
he
performs
"Tortilla
Heaven"
–
written
by
his
sister,
Celeste
Angela
Estrada,
and
directed
by
his
brother,
David
Miguel
Estrada
– at
Washington
State
University's
CUB
Ballroom.
The
performance
is
sponsored
by
WSU's
Chicano/Latino
Center.
"Everyone
has
to
deal
with
the
fact
that
Spanish
is a
growing
necessity
in
our
country,"
he
said.
"(They
are)
wherever
you
are
in
the
country
–
they're
in
Idaho,
North
Carolina
–
and
they
don't
speak
English,
and
that's
what
this
show
is
about."
Second,
he's
gay.
He
performs
the
self-penned
"ICONS:
The
Lesbian
and
Gay
History
of
the
World,
Vol.
1"
on
Saturday
at 8
p.m.
at
the
University
of
Idaho.
The
performance
is
sponsored
by
UI's
Gay/Straight
Alliance.
The
one-man
show
finds
Estrada
acting
as
gay
celebrities,
such
as
Michelangelo,
Oscar
Wilde
and
Ellen
DeGeneres.
"I'm
not
just
a
comedian
anymore;
I'm
a
social
commentator,"
he
said.
"I
realized
that
people
were
coming
to
see
me
because
I
was
a
comedian
from
Comedy
Central,
but
they
were
staying
to
hear
me
speak
because
of
what
I
had
to
say."
The
shows
were
created
to
cater
to
Latinos
and
the
Lesbian,
Gay,
Bisexual,
Transgender
community,
Estrada
said.
But
once
he
got
them
on
the
road,
he
discovered
his
message
was
resonating
with
straight
and
non-Latino
audiences.
He
realized,
too,
that
he
had
unexpectedly
become
political.
"The
fact
that
I'm
brown
is a
political
statement
to
some
people,"
he
said.
"The
fact
that
I'm
gay
is
this
huge
controversial
thing
to
some
people.
My
mission
is
to
get
on
stage
and
make
people
laugh
and
entertain
them.
I
think
that's
what
I'm
about.
Let's
talk
about
it,
let's
laugh
about
it,
let's
move
on."
©2006
Spokesman-Review