Alcántara performs with and is the artistic director of Ida y Vuelta Flamenco Dance Company, which, besides having local singers, dancers, drummers and guitarists, imports contemporary artists from Spain, other countries and across the United States for classes and concerts. The next concert features gypsy singer Cristo Cortes from Spain and guitarist Ricardo Diaz and dancer Monica Bermudez from San Francisco. It also serves as the first fund-raiser for Alcántara's next project, La Cantera Arts Conservatory, a center that will provide long-term opportunities for international flamenco artists, after-school programs for community kids and dance therapy for victims of domestic abuse. "I want to make a place where people who really need flamenco can get it," she says.
Along with a dance concert by Ida y Vuelta Flamenco Dance Company and guests, the La Cantera benefit will also feature models displaying flamenco costumes from vintage to modern, meaning a range from ruffles and long skirts to daring slits and fancy beadwork. All of which, Alcántara says, shows what a sensual and vibrant art form flamenco is. "It's a hot show," she says. "People are screaming; people are clapping and yelling. It's not a sit down and watch kind of show. Bring a date because you're going to be hot and bothered by the time you leave."