By Guest
Writer: Filmmaker, Linda Garcia Merchant
Tony Diaz of Librotraficante and Nuestra Palabra, DAY ONE at Mercado Mayapan (photo by Kathryn Haviland) |
I finally met
Tony Diaz in person, in 2012, at a weekend conference that acknowledged the 40th anniversary of the Partido Raza Unida Convention at Mercado Mayapan in the Segundo Barrio area of El Paso, Texas. One
of the cornerstones of the modern Chicano Movement in El Paso, Mercado Mayapan,
was originally a factory, that in 1981, was repurposed by a group of Chicana
laborers, La Mujer Obrera, as a job training and social center.
I had "virtually" met Tony
three years earlier when I was interviewed on his “Nuestra Palabra" show to
promote several Texas screenings of my first film, Las Mujeres de la Caucus
Chicana (2007). Las Mujeres had been
invited to screen at the Museo Alameda in San Antonio and was to be the debut
of the Mexican American Community Center (MACC) in Austin as part of the 2008
Sor Juana Festival Tejas, sponsored by the National Museum of Mexican Art in
Chicago.
I continue to be
a fan of the work Tony does with Librotraficante and, more recently, taking on
the incredible challenge of creating a resource for Mexican American Studies
(M.A.S.) in Tejas.
"Reel Chicano Filmmakers" (L to R: Sean Arcy, Jesus Treviño, unknown, Dennix Bixler, Linda Garcia Merchant (photo by Kathryn Haviland) |
In June of 2014,
Tony wrote an article for The Huffington Post, Latino Voices entitled, “Top 10 Chicano Films for M.A.S.” which included 15 of the top Chicano films to have as
a resource for M.A.S. I looked at the
list and immediately tweeted a message to him that said, “Great! Where are the women? We make films too!"
Tony is a great
guy and a true activist in the sense that
the work is always about inclusion. His
immediate response was: “What would a
list of Chicana films look like?”
My first
reaction was to create a list of films for M.A.S. by and about Chicanas. But that wasn’t really solving the issue of
inclusion. If anything, it was keeping
us as far apart as we have been in movement politics. A list of films about Chicano culture should
include films by men and women about Chicano men, women, and children. As there are all types of films available
that fit this requirement, I felt it should be one list, not two. However, understanding that this list had
already been published by The Huffington Post, there was a good chance there wouldn’t be a
follow-up to correct or include what I felt was half a list.
It was then that
I realized the inclusion of the filmmakers as well as the films would be
important to this list. I realized it
was personal. I felt that the women left
off the list, including myself, had made great contributions to our culture,
and had done so with little fanfare or acknowledgement which continues to
render many of us invisible to the history and contributions frequently
recognized as “Chicano.”
So instead of
just giving Tony a list with run times and authors, I wrote a passionate
statement about why the inclusion of Chicana Filmmakers was important to the
M.A.S. resource. Here is that statement:
I love being a
Chicana Filmmaker because we are many things.
We are primarily activists moving cultural production forward. We are provocateurs, inciting free thinking
and daring conversation to come from the open-ended questions we shout in the
stories we tell. In Matilde Landeta’s Las Trotacalles, there is a death scene
where the group of women standing around the bed of their dying friend are not
dwelling on the sadness of the moment, but are having a heated conversation
about the existence of God. Landeta manages to bring the emotional arc back
from curious to poignant with the dying woman’s last words about faith that
silences both the women and the audience.
Martha Cotera, founding member of Mujeres de la Raza Unida, and Jesus Salvador Treviño, filmmaker, on the opening panel of the 40th Anniversary Commemoration of the Partido Raza Unida Convention held at University of Texas, El Paso (UTEP) (Photo by Kathryn Haviland) |
We are risk
takers, high wire aerialists tiptoeing over fields filled with the landmines of
funding and exposure, cultural and gender insensitivities, resistance, and
oppression, all while juggling actors, creative financing, production,
distribution, and places to work, that will support us and our families.
Chicana
filmmakers are family, bound by the bond of Chicana-ism and filmmaking, and the
many battles fought to get things done.
We teach one another craft and technique, understanding the importance
of the auteur in the creation of product.
We do not engage regularly, but we connect when it is important to do
so. When we do engage, it is with the
understanding that our bonds are as old as our history in this hemisphere, pre
tribal and pre colonial. I say this
because it is how I feel about one of the Foremothers of Chicana Filmmaking,
Sylvia Morales, producer of Chicana
(1979) and A Crushing Love
(2009).
When I first met
Sylvia Morales, I was just beginning production on my first film, Las Mujeres. Sylvia was beginning work on A Crushing Love. It was Chicano Filmmaker, Jesus Treviño, who
said we should meet as we were working on similar projects.
Sylvia is tall,
striking, as only Latinas can be beautiful, and the owner of the most piercing
set of eyes that can and do stand as judge and jury at any moment. “So you want to be a filmmaker,” she grumbled,
a tiny smirk on her lips and looking at me with that famous raised
eyebrow. “Well, be prepared to always be
broke and never completely satisfied with what you’ve done.” She then went on to tell wonderful stories of
her experiences at the Denver Youth Conference and what it took to make Chicana (1979). To this day, I relish every moment of that
first meeting and carry forward the important lessons I have learned from
Sylvia about why we do what we do. Sylvia continues to mentor my work with
honest feedback and constructive suggestions.
Jesus Salvador Treviño shooting The Women Legacy Panel (photo by Kathryn Haviland) |
The highlight of
my filmmaking career has been two opportunities
to work with Sylvia on projects.
First, in 2006, shooting Martha and María Cotera’s interview at my
cameraman’s house in Evanston for A Crushing Love. Then in 2011, shooting panels and interviews
for the Chicana Por Mi Raza Oral HistoryProject at the MALCS (Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social) Summer
Institute at CSU (California State University) Los Angeles, including a
presentation of Madres Por Justicia
by Teatro Chicana. Those four days in Los Angeles were the most
exhausting and exciting of my life.
I believe that
Chicana/Latina filmmakers have a special Y chromosome imprinted with the words
“not impossible.” It is how I can
rationalize our need to make films through the personal and economic challenge
that comes from making film in a world consistently hesitant or disinterested
in supporting us. It is a challenge that
presents itself as time away from children, spouses, and relationships in
general. Filmmaking insists on a
complete state of distraction during pre- and post-production, that begins with
the creative acts, with writing scripts, and continues through the editing of
footage, and concludes with the endlessly expensive lottery of festival
submission.
Jesus Salvador Treviño shooting The Women Legacy Panel with Martha Cotera (photo by Kathryn Haviland) |
However, this
list isn’t just about the challenges that come with stories we tell. It is about the simple fact that we are
telling them. Our “filmmaker”
foremothers: Matilde Landeta, Sylvia Morales, Nancy De Los Santos, and LourdesPortillo, learned the structure of our craft and then redesigned that form in
shapes that reflect a thousand years of tias, comadres y abuelas, teaching us
how to tell a tale.
Consider a young
Latina in El Paso, Tejas; another in Kenosha, Wisconsin; and yet another in Las
Vegas, Nevada watching A Crushing Love
(Sylvia Morales, UCLA BA, MFA), Señorita
Estraviada (Lourdes Portillo, San Francisco Art Institute MFA), or La negra Angustias (Matilde Landeta, Assistant
Director during the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema).
While she
watches these films, what seeds are planted in her mind, about the possibility
of making film and becoming a filmmaker?
Does she go on to become the young woman that makes Las Marthas or Mosquita Y
Mari? I know she does. I know we do.
1. Chicana. Director/Writer: Sylvia
Morales (1979) (Classroom clock: 23 mins). History of Chicana and Mexican women
from pre Columbian times to the present (Women Make Movies, distribution)
2. A Crushing Love
Chicanas, Motherhood and Activism. Director/Writer: Sylvia Morales (2009) (Classroom clock: 58
mins). Sequel to Chicana, Morales asks the question of Chicana activists and
their children, how do they successfully juggle the needs of both the community
and their families. Morales takes the question a step further by turning the
camera on herself and her daughter.
3. Senorita Extraviada, Missing Young Woman.
Director/Producer: Lourdes Portillo (2001) (Classroom clock: 74 mins.) Story of
the murdered women of Juarez Mexico is presented in a way that demonstrates the
genocidal nature of the tragedy and the lack of action by the government.
4. Corpus: A Home Movie for Selena. Director/Producer: Lourdes Portillo (1999) (Classroom clock:
47 mins.) It has been said that this documentary presents Tejana singing star
Selena Quintanilla 'from a Latina Feminist perspective'. Portillo chooses to
include Latina scholars commenting on the lasting fame and iconic nature of her
memory.
5. La Negra
Angustias.
Director: Matilde Landeta Writers: Matilde Landeta and Francisco Rojas Gonzalez
(1949) (Classroom clock: 85 mins.) At last a film about the Mexican Revolution
with a woman leading the revolutionaries. Starring María Elena Marques, who is better known for her role in Emilio Fernandez's film, La Perla.
6. La Trotacalles. Director: Matilde
Landeta (1951) (Classroom clock: 101 mins.) The second of three features
Landeta was able to make within the male dominated structure of the Mexican film industry. The film is about
a group of streetwalkers, but without the moral judgements often applied to
women in this profession.
7. The
Bronze Screen: 100 Years of the Latino Image in American Cinema. Producers/Directors:
Nancy De Los Santos, Susan Racho, Alberto Dominguez (2002). (Classroom clock:
90 mins) A wonderful documentary that presents the rich and little known
contributions on both sides of the camera by Latinos in Hollywood.
8. Pilsen: Port of Entry. Director: Kenneth Solarz Producer:
Nancy De Los Santos (1981) (Classroom clock: 28mins.) Documentary on the life of the Fraga family
in the Pilsen neighborhood in Chicago.
Interesting in that it touches on the challenges of maintaining cultural pride
with the ever present threat of gentrification.
9. Antonia:
A Chicana Story. Directors: Luz Maria Gordillo and Juan Javier Pescador (2013).
(Classroom clock: 55 mins.) One of the foremothers of Chicana studies, Antonia
Castaneda's life is presented through her writing along with interviews and
conversations with colleagues and friends.
10. My Filmmaking, My Life
Matilde Landeta. Director: Patricia Diaz Producer: Jane Ryder (1990).
(Classroom clock: 30 mins.). A documentary that presents the life and work of
Mexican director Matilde Landeta.
11. Mosquita Y Mari. Director/Writer: Aurora
Guerrero (2012). (Classroom clock: 85 mins.) A coming of age story of young
love that runs right into the fast paced life that is immigrant community.
Written and Directed by Aurora Guerrero, this film is beautifully shot by
Uruguayan cinematographer Magela Crosignani.
12. Las Marthas. Director: Cristina Ibarra
(2014). (Classroom clock: 66 mins.) A wonderful documentary on a little known
annual debutante ball that honors the legacy of George and Martha Washington in
the border town of Laredo Texas. Ibarra speaks to class and culture, inclusion,
body image, and the public image of young women chosen to participate in this
gala event.
13. Adelante Mujeres. Director/Producer:
National Women’s History Project (1992). (Classroom clock: 30 mins.) A quick
and comprehensive study of the contributions of Latinas through history.
14. Palabras Dulces, Palabras Amargas. Director: Linda Garcia
Merchant (2009). (Classroom clock: 45 mins).
Featuring six original works of the multicultural, multigenerational
spoken word ensemble La Dulce Palabra Spoken Word Ensemble.
15. Las Mujeres de la Caucus Chicana. Director: Linda Garcia
Merchant (2007) (Classroom clock: 93 mins) Recounts the turning points of six
Chicanas who answered the call to action and came together at the 1977 National
Women’s Conference in Houston.
Linda Garcia
Merchant, an award-winning
filmmaker and Independent scholar, is technical director of the Chicana Por MiRaza Project, a community partner for the Somos Latinas Oral History Project
and the Chicana Chicago/MABPW Collection Project, a member of the LGBT Giving
Council of the Chicago Foundation for Women and a board member of the Chicago
Area Women's History Council. Watch the trailer for Linda's latest production 'Yo Soy Eva'
, being released this fall.
6 comments:
Fabulous list!
Thank you for this important insightful piece!
Tell it, Linda!
Thanks for all of this information. I really like the Movie "Selena".
Good for you Linda, proud of you, don't stop now!
Great resource! Thanks!
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