His best-known work, "The Devil's Music: The Life and Blues of Bessie Smith," the critically acclaimed play with music on the life of Bessie Smith, was named "one of the top-10 Off-Broadway experiences of 2001" by the New York Daily News, "Best Solo Show" by Florida's Broward/Palm Beach New Times, and won a second NYFA Playwriting Fellowship (2000). The award-winning show was originally directed by Joe Brancato and originally staged by Penguin Repertory Company, Stony Point, New York.
Parra has production credits: in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C.; at Florida Stage (Palm Beach), The Hartford Stage (Hartford, CT), Theatre Memphis, and at the Cape Playhouse (Cape Cod); and, at the Edinburgh International Festival
Among Parra's other prize-winning plays is the hospital drama, "Journey of the Heart" (formerly titled "A Heart of Flesh"), winner of the Jewel Box Theatre, Mixed Blood Theatre, and David James Ellis national play awards in 1998. Also in 1998, "Song of the Coquí", his Hispanic family drama with humor and dance, won the Chicano/Latino Literary Award (University of California, Irvine) and an "American Dream" prize by Repertorio Español in New York City.
Parra is a member of the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theater Workshop and The Dramatists Guild. He was a Tennessee Williams Scholar at the 2000 Sewanee Writers Conference, and has taught playwriting at SUNY Rockland Community College In addition to his BA in Communication Arts at Fordham, he earned an MA in Political Science at the New School in New York, and MFA in Playwriting at Brooklyn College. He is currently president of the "Penguin Repertory Company" Board of Trustees.
Along with the children's musicals "Percy T. Penguin Comes to America" and "Anansi the Spider Learns his Lesson", Parra's other plays include: