
There are no Latino characters in this film, which I expected as this film takes place in Greece. The film is in 3D and stars Micky Rourke (The Wrestler, Iron Man 2) as King Hyperion, Henry Cavill (The Tudors) as Theseus, John Hurt (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2) as Old Man, Luke Evans as (Clash of the Titans) Zues, Frida Pinto (Slumdog Millionaire) as Phaedra the Oracle, and Stephen Dorff (Public Enemies) as Stravros.
Written by Greek-American brothers Charley and Vlas Parlapanides and produced by Gianni Nunnari and Mark Canton, both who are behind the production of 300 (2006); I knew there would be some fantastical elements to the film. However, it was the director Tarsem Singh that won me over. Singh has created two of the most visually stunning films I’ve seen in a really long time: The Cell (with Jennifer Lopez and Vincent D’Onofrio) and The Fall (with Lee Pace). I also knew that having a director of Color working on this film means that the racism and ethnocentrism that we saw in 300 (all the people of Color were evil sends a very specific message) is not going to fly so easily. And it didn’t.
Although the cast is primarily racially white to help us believe this is taking place in Greece, there is not an exclusion of faces of Color as many are sprinkled throughout the film. Not only are many of the men of Color in the army, some of them even have speaking roles. We see the most diversity in the High Priestesses and Oracle. Frida Pinto as the virgin Oracle is protected by three other women who are High Priestesses and include a Black (Ayisha Issa), Asian (Mercedes Legget) and Native woman (Kaniehtiio Horn). The Hight Priestesses are to protect the virgin Oracle and confuse people into know which one is the actual Oracle. The women are powerful, have formed a spiritual and emotional bond with one another, and are also loyal. They were by far the highlight of the film for me as a viewer as they are some of the main women with speaking roles in the film (other women in the film that speak are Theseus’ mom and Athena both who are killed).
7:23 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|New York City|theatre · 2 Comments
11 Nov 2011
Because of the Veteran’s Day holiday, I am posting this calender a day early, for those of us (unlike me) who have Friday off.
Friday, November 11, 2011
The Immigration Circus
No, Cecilia Munoz is not coming to town with more of her storytelling.
People’s Theatre Project in collaboration with Theatre of the Oppressed NYC presents
An all new, interactive and bilingual theatrical event based on the performers’ true stories of immigration and deportation.
These three short plays address issues that affect all New Yorkers. You, the audience member, are a character and an actor in our plays, helping us brainstorm alternative solutions to these urgent problems!
Facilitated by: Mino Lora and Katy Rubin
Conceived, written and performed by our Uptown Action Troupe of community members: Fabian Eduardo Arias, Maria Aristy, Carmen Barbosa, Lisa Battle, Gonzalo Cruz, Michael Feld, Lyana Fernandez, Melanie Gold, Rubén González, Matt Higgins, Denny Jerez, Marcela Madrid, Sarah Merchlewitz, Corporina Nicolas, Carla Robles, Reza Salazar, Esdras Santana, Oscar Trujillo
Admission is Pay-What-You-Can
7:30 pm
Word Up Community Bookshop
4157 Broadway, NY, NY 10032
(between 175th and 176th Streets, A train to 175th)
Reserve your seats by clicking here or call 646-398-9062
BORIMIX 2011: Puerto Rico Fest
DC-7, The Roberto Clemente Story
The new musical from Puertorican writer/director, Luis Caballero, on the legendary baseball star, Roberto Clemente
Teatro SEA, City of New York
Saturday, November 12
3rd Annual Freedom Dance honoring Cisco Torres of the SF8
9 pm
Nova Bar and Grill at 884 Pacific St. btw Underhill Av. & Washington Av.;
TRANSIT: C train or weekend Fulton St. Local to Clinton-Washington (east exit to Fulton & Washington); Franklin Av. Shuttle “S” to Franklin Av. (at Fulton); #2, 3 to Bergen St. (& walk east against Bergen traffic); Q, 4, 5 to Atlantic Av./Atlantic-Pacific; D, N, R to Pacific St./Atlantic-Pacific; MAP: <http://ow.ly/77PwP >
$20 at < http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/207355>
Ongoing
November 10-13
PINTA – Modern & Contemporary Latin American Art
Friday, November 11th 2:00pm ˆ 8:00pm
Saturday, November 12th 12:00pm ˆ 8:00pm
Sunday, November 13th 12:00pm ˆ 7:00pm
7 West 34th Street, at 5th Avenue
New York, NY 10001
General Admission $25
Student $10.00
Groups (8+) reduced price $15.00
2011 U.S./México Playwright Exchange Program
Public Readings
November 12-13 at 3pm & 7pm
full schedule at www.larktheatre.org
@Lark BareBones Studio
311 West 43rd Street, 5th Floor (between Eighth and Ninth Avenues)
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE.
Reservations are required
call 212-246-2676 x224.
2:00 pm By BiancaLaureano · Culture|Immigration|youth · Comments Off
9 Nov 2011The ACLU has produced this video that shares the story of Cineo Gonzalez and his daughter who was given a paper in front of her entire class that explains HB56 in Spanish. When Gonzalez spoke with the principal asking why his daughter was receiving this information, the principal replied “they give this paper to all the students who appear to not be from here (US).” There are subtitles in English in the video. The ACLU has created a website specifically devoted to working to challenge HB56 and you may visit it at Crisis In AL.
1:53 pm By Maegan La Mala · Alabama|Immigration|Politics|Secure Communities · Comments Off
9 Nov 2011Yesterday, almost civil and human rights organizations from across the United States, and a few international organizations, sent a letter to the Secretary of Honeland Security, urging her to stop deportation programs like 287(g) and Secure Communities in Alabama. Many of the signatories, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), had already been calling for a stop to the policies that currently are deporting about 400,000 people a year in the United States, but the recent implementation of what is being called the harshest anti-migrant law in the country is compelling many to focus on Alabama.
Secretary Napolitano is targeted because the successful implementation of HB 56 is contingent upon cooperation and participation of DHS as the state law relies on the department to take custody of non-citizens identified through HB 56 for detention and deportation. The groups also urged DHS to promote and enforce its own guidance which limits state action in immigration matters, as well as exercise favorable discretion in any case that arises from enforcement of Alabama’s HB 56.
HB 56 combined with ICE pattern and practices specifically threaten Latinos in the state. Since immigration is racialized as a latino issue, people who are perceived as Latino will be targeted. Racial profiling threatens the 185,602 Latinos in Alabama, a population that while making up only 3.9% of the total population according to the 2010 Census, increased 145% in the last decade.
The Department of Justice is currently challenging the constitutionality of HB 56, which went into effect in September. I signed onto to the letter to Secretary Napolitano, but with a healthy dose of cynicism in terms of expectations. The Department of Homeland Security through Napolitano continues to defend it’s deportation record and Secure Communities. The White House continues to defend Secure Communities. It will be interesting to see how the Federal Government, who has helped to create the anti-immigrant atmosphere surrounding states like Alabama, further reacts to the crisis in the state. Will the answer be a policy change or a public relations campaign.
Sources : New America Media
3:38 pm By BiancaLaureano · Culture|Latin America|New York City|Politics|Raices|Uncategorized · Comments Off
5 Nov 2011The Afro-Latin@s Now! Conference is taking place as I write. It began on Thursday at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture with the Plenary and continued through Friday with “traditional” presentations throughout the day and wraps up this Saturday with events targeting youth at El Museo del Barrio.
I was asked to participate in one of the sessions on sexuality but my workload didn’t allow me to attend any of the events except for the Plenary. I’ve included some notes I took on the plenary and some other reflections from other folks who did attend Friday.
The plenary had four extremely well-known people doing work within the Afr@Latin@ community in various capacities. The panelists included Educardo Bonilla-Silva, sociologist at Duke University and author of several texts on white supremacy, Maria Rosario Jackson a researcher and professor who works in urban planning and development and , Evelyne Laurent-Perrault a biologist and historian and founder of the annual Arturo Schomburg Symposium at Taller Puertorriqueno in Philidelphia, and Silvio Torres-Saillant a professor of English and founder of the Dominican Studies Institute at City College and the author of several texts about Dominican identity. The facilitator for the evening was James Counts Early the Director of the Cultural Heritage Policy Center at the Smithsonian instituion. You may read more about each panelist and a fuller bio at the Afro-Latin@ Now! Conference site.
The first question that was posed to the panelist were “why is there this interest in Black Latin@s at this time?” Responses included an increased interest in Blackness, the diaspora. Torres-Saillant shared that when he was growing up Blackness was something one had to apologize for in the Dominican Republic. Rosario Jackson shared that with the browning of the US being more local yet there is still a crisis which she believes may lead to more creative opportunity. Laurent-Perrault mentioned the term “coyuntura” and how there is an increase in energy within particular communities that is leading to this attention. Bonilla-Silva shared that we are living in a “new racial order” which is how the US is moving towards a more Latin Americanist perspective on race, which he believes is NOT a good thing. He states we, in the US, are living in a “multi-racial white supremacist regime” and that there is a three point racial consciousness for Black Latin@s which includes: being racially Black, being ethnically Latino and being US citizens as well.
The next question was about being proactive. Torres-Saillant began by indicating how mestizaje is connected to the “multi-racial white supremacist regime” where the US hides racism under mestizaje in the US in the same way that Latin American’s are currently finding themselves in crisis regarding their mestizaje. Rosario Jackson shared that we must begin to claim racially Black people as a strategy to be proactive. At this point the facilitator Early shared how many Black Latin@s Anglicized their names to pass just as Blacks in the US. He gave the example of actor and producer Terry Carter and several Black Latin@ baseball players who changed their names to simply be in the Negro Leagues and be Black only. Laurent-Perrault indicates this is why she loves history because it already gives us some of the answers we need. It’s at this time that the panelists indicate that Black US folks can learn from LatiNegr@s as we have 100 years longer of Blackness in our countries compared to the US (based on documentation of when the first African slaves were brought to the areas in the 1500s). Bonilla-Silva mentions the connections to the ideas of mixing among Black Latin@s in an effort to “better” (i.e. whiten) the family and community. He also mentions this being connected to a myth of nation building where we validate whiteness by using the same categories and structures that were created by whites to identify and label/mark Latin@s worldwide.
8:03 am By Maegan La Mala · children|Family|Immigration|Justice|Women · 4 Comments
3 Nov 2011
Shattered Familiess, A report released yesterday by the Applied Research Center, states that current immigration enforcement policies put at risk 15,000 additional children for placement into the foster care system. The report is the first of its kind to research the impact of the intersection of immigration enforcement and the child welfare system.
As many families know, the foster care system already has parents of color, poor parents and immigrant parents in it’s crosshairs. Child welfare, working with local law enforcement who engage in racial profiling, put the long term care of children at risk. Poverty, instead of being looked at as a structural problem, is viewed as criminal neglect. Instead of attempting to attack the root causes of poverty, parents are criminalized and asked “why did you have children if you can’t afford them”. According to the report, children of immigrants are significantly more likely than children of non-immigrant parents to live in low-income families (below 200% poverty line)—35% to 49%. Some of this can be attributed to the fact that immigrant families ay not
I am reminded of the case of Cirila Baltazar Cruz, who lost custody of her daughter when a Mississippi social worker, who didn’t speak the same Indigenous language as Baltazar Cruz and who never sought translation services, found the Oaxacan mother unfit to care for her infant Ruby citing her lack of language skills, as well as fabrications that accused Baltazar Cruz of engaging in criminal activity. Eventually, Cruz was reunited with her daughter, but not before almost losing her permanently, as Ruby was placed in the care of a prominent local family that sought to fast track the child for adoption.
The ARC report presents many like cases, showing that what happened to Baltazar Cruz wasn’t a one off incident, but rather a symptom of how the criminalization of immigrants also seeks to make immigrant parenthood illegal. ARC identified at least 22 states across the country where children in foster care are separated from their parents because of immigration enforcement. Because of the long amount of time it often takes for immigration matters to be resolved, children lose
the opportunity to ever see their parents again when a juvenile dependency
court terminates parental rights. In fiscal year 2011, the United States deported a record-breaking 397,000 people and detained nearly that many. According to never before released federal data acquired by ARC through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, a growing number of deportees are parents. In the first six months of 2011, the federal government removed more than 46,000 mothers and fathers of U.S.-citizen children. ARC conservatively estimates that there are at least 5,100
children currently living in foster care whose parents have
been either detained or deported.
The increase in enforcement programs, like Secure Communities and 287(g, have made the situation worse. In counties where local police have signed 287(g) agreements with
ICE, children in foster care were, on average, about 29 percent more likely to have a detained or deported parent than in other counties.
7:25 am By Maegan La Mala · boston|Lo Que Hay|Music|New York City · Comments Off
28 Oct 2011Boston
Considerado como uno de los mejores bajistas de Jazz del mundo, el puertorriqueño Eddie Gómez nos brinda una noche con lo mejor de su repertorio. Gracias a una colaboración entre Villa Victoria Center for the Arts y Berklee College of Music, esta especial presentación en Boston nos brinda la oportunidad de presenciar el talento de este gigante del Jazz.
Regarded as one of the best Jazz bass players in the world, Eddie Gómez will offer us an evening with the very best of his repertoire. Thanks to a collaboration between Villa Victoria Center for the Arts and Berklee College of Music, this one-night-only presentation is a unique opportunity to witness the talent of a true Jazz giant.
8 pm
Villa Victoria Center for the Arts
85 W Newton Street
Boston, Massachusetts
$10 hasta el 24 de octubre / $15 en la puerta
New York City
Hip Hop Theater Festival
8pm: Workshop Performance of Re: Definition and Single Reflex
LaMama Experimental Theatre
74 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003
Free to RSVP with $10 suggested donation at the door
Visit HHTF.ORG for more info/tickets
Saturday, October 29th 2011
Hip Hop Theater Festival
4:30pm-6pm: Book Launch for Say Word! and The Prophet Returns
LaMama Experimental Theatre
74 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003
Free to RSVP with $10 suggested donation at the door
Visit HHTF.ORG for more info/tickets
Sunday, October 30
Bronx, NYC
Panel Discusssion: Who is Albizu?
3 – 6 pm
El Maestro, Inc., 1300 Southern Boulevard
Presenter: Camilo Matos
Panelists:
-Ponce Laspina: Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico, Junta de Nueva York
-Olga I. Sanabria: Puerto Rico Committee in the U.N.
-Iris Zavala-Martinez: Lecturer, Hunter College
-Carlitos Rovira: Former Young Lord
Music:
DJ Mellow G
Tato Torres
Fernandito Ferrer
Luis Cruz
Angelito Villot
Pichichi
Poets
Mariposa
Prisionera Jamas
Armando Pacheco Matos
Ongoing
Bronx, NYC
After Dark at Woodlawn – Annual Halloween History Tour
OCTOBER 29, 30 and 31, 2011
Creep Through One of the Nation’s Oldest Cemeteries and the Final Resting Place of Notorious New Yorkers
This year, the spookiest annual Halloween event is getting a dramatic makeover. On October 29, 30 and 31, an early evening walk through Woodlawn comes ALIVE with real-life interpretations of NYC legends and lore, surreal tales of unsolved mysteries and murders, and more. Folklorist Elena Martinez leads the tours, accompanied by bagpipers and other mysterious characters. Flashlights required.
Two tours—6PM and 7PM nightly
COST: $20 admission fee.
Reservations are required for the Halloween tours.
Call 718-920-1469
Meet at the Jerome Avenue Entrance
The Jerome Avenue Entrance is located near the intersection of Jerome Avenue and Bainbridge Avenue.
#4 train to Woodlawn Station
7:01 am By Maegan La Mala · history|Puerto Rico · Comments Off
26 Oct 2011Filmmaker Melissa Montero is working on a film about Puerto Rican Nationalist Isabel Rosado and is requesting the help of the community. I woke up this morning thinking about “Occupy Oakland” , police violence and tear gas. This got me thinking about the years of resistance in U.S. occupied Puerto Rico and the work of women in that struggle.
Please watch the preview and if you can, contribute to the finishing of this film.
Isabel Rosado, a centenarian, who at 30 years of age joined the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and dedicated her life to the Puerto Rican independence movement. Through her story– as a Party member Isabel collected funds, sewed flags, delivered messages, cared for the stricken leader Don Pedro Albizu Campos, and took up arms in the fight for independence. We learn about the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States and Puerto Rico’s struggle for independence. Isabel, spending approximately 12 years in prison, has become a revered symbol of colonial resistance in Puerto Rico. Her life is a testament to the island’s unresolved conflict with political status, economic development, and a century-long struggle for independence. Isabel Rosado: Nationalist, chronicles the life of a woman of humble means who risked it all, endured persecution, and had her civil rights violated. Not only does her story highlight the central problem of colonialism but it also represents a marginalized community who for many years struggled for their nation’s right to self determination and sovereignty.
10:12 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Secure Communities · 1 Comment
25 Oct 2011Last night, Judge Shira Scheindlin ordered the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency to publicly disclose by November 1 a previously withheld internal memorandum that advocates believe will shed light on the agency’s legal justification for turning Secure Communities into a mandatory immigration enforcement program.
You can read the order here (PDF)
The decision follows motions for summary judgment filed by all parties in NDLON v. ICE about the memorandum. The government claimed the memorandum was exempt from disclosure under the attorney-client and deliberative process privileges. Plaintiffs the National Day Laborers Organizing Network, Center for Constitutional Rights, and Cardozo School of Law Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigration Justice Clinic argued the memo was improperly kept secret from the public in the midst of important policy decisions related to Secure Communities. Indeed, this summer, opposition to Secure Communities reached new levels with the Governors of Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York formally rejecting the program. In response, ICE announced that all of its Memorandum of Agreements with States were dissolved and that the program would be imposed unilaterally. Despite serious questions from States, local jurisdictions, and advocates about ICE’s legal authority to make the program mandatory, the agency continued to withhold information about its legal reasoning and sought to keep the legal authority memorandum secret.
I’m hoping some of the legal heads from VivirLatino would offer up what the impact could be were it revealed that ICE explicitly meant this policy to be mandatory from inception but chose to deceive states and counties into signing on by implying that participation was optional.
In the end, I am not sure if it even matters. The fact remains that as it stands now, Secure Communities is one part of an overall national immigration policy that is focused on keeping deportation numbers up, while keeping immigrant communities, especially people of color immigrant communities down.
3:26 pm By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Lo Que Hay|New York City · Comments Off
21 Oct 2011This page will be updated throughout the weekend so keep visiting!
Domingo, October 23nd
In a rare US appearance, La Colmenita, an internationally acclaimed Cuban children’s theater group and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, will perform in New York City.
The US tour will introduce some of Cuba’s most talented children to an American audience that has, in spite of the decades-long U.S. embargo, enthusiastically embraced Cuban culture. It is their hope that their productions will build greater understanding between two countries whose people have been divided by politics for too long.
PS 154 – The Harriet Tubman Learning Center
Play: “Abracadabra”
Time: 3pm, Harlem, New York Admission Free
Ongoing
October 14 – 28th
BAAD! – Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance
2011 Blaktina Performance Series
The Bronx Academy of Art & Dance kicked off its annual BlakTina Performance Series, a festival celebrating works by Black, Latina/o and Blatina/o artists, last week and continues with film, music and dance! This year we are using BlakTina in the festival’s title to flip the Spanish language norm that uses the masculine to describe the universal.
For the complete schedule of events and to buy tickets visit the official website.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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