• “War fare inevitably breeds corruption”

    Loreta Velazquez
  • “My career has differed from that of most women.  Some things I have done have shocked persons for whom I have every respect.”

    Loreta Velazquez
  • “I was, despite my Spanish ancestry, an American, heart and soul.”

    Loreta Velazquez
  • “The way to keep a secret, is not to tell it to anybody.”

    Loreta Velazquez
  • “A woman labors to fight her own way in the world, and yet, she can often do things that a man cannot.”

    Loreta Velazquez
  • “What a fearful thing this human slaughtering was.”

    Loreta Velazquez

Latin Heat

“Maria Agui Carter’s film is beautifully directed and the major battle scenes are worthy of blockbuster feature period films.  “A powerful film about the life of Loreta Janeta Velasquez, a Cuban immigrant from New Orleans who became one of an estimated 1000 women who secretly served as soldiers during this war period.”

Latin Heat Q and A

By Elia Esparza

 

María Agui Carter: A Scholarly Filmmaker “Rebel” and Storyteller

Posted By Eesparza On May 23Rd, 2013 05:00 Am | Spotlight, Tv

Rebel explores the secret life of Cuban Immigrant who fought in the American Civil War, shattering the gender and ethnic boundaries of her time.

Director Maria Agui Carter prepares to shoot a scene with actress Romi
Días, dressed in costume as Loreta Velazquez, photo by Julio Palleiro.

By Elia Esparza
On Friday, May 24th at 10PM (EST/PST), PBS/VOCES will premiere Rebel, the riveting
new film written and directed by María Agui Carter.
Who knew that a Cubanita teenager was fighting in battle 150 years ago in the
American Civil War?
Filmmaker Agui Carter found this historical nugget just too intriguing to pass up and set
out to make a documentary. What she ended up with is a powerful film about the life of
Loreta Janeta Velasquez, a Cuban immigrant from New Orleans who became one of
an estimated 1000 women who secretly served as soldiers during this war period. Who
Director Maria Agui Carter prepares to shoot a scene with actress Romi
Días, dressed in costume as Loreta Velazquez, photo by Julio Palleiro.
was she? Why did she fight? Watch the film! It is an absolutely fascinating story and
beautiful film.
Latinos only represent 2% of the directors working on TV and film,
less than 1% of the writers, and 4-6% of actors in media today.
We caught up with the extraordinary woman who wrote, directed, and coproduced Rebel
to ask her about the film, and about being a Latina working toe-to-toe in
a mostly white, male-dominated profession called filmmaking.
Latin Heat: How did you discover Loreta Janeta Velazquez? How excited were
you?
María Agui Carter: A Cuban woman fighting and spying in the American Civil War?
That is the stuff of legend. I was excited to find that she had written a memoir, so we
could hear an American Latina’s viewpoint across the centuries. Noone had heard of
her outside of Civil War circles and I immediately knew that this rebel teenager who
shattered the gender and ethnic boundaries of her time would appeal to our modern
sensibilities.
LH: Before Loreta, were you interested in the American Civil War?
MAC: War is about people sacrificing their sons and fathers for a cause. War is about
nation building. It’s been seen as the province of men – but of course women suffer its
consequences as deeply. I was not a Civil War buff per se, but I was deeply aware that
American democracy was built on the blood sacrifice of millions lost in the American
Civil War. It is arguably our most pivotal event of American history. And the Civil War
was not just the province of men – women were part of this war effort in every way, not
just knitting socks, but as spies gathering intelligence for both armies, as nurses, even
as soldiers in combat – over a thousand women are estimated to have fought for both
sides disguised as men! The Civil War has been seen as a black/white event, but there
were 10,000 Mexicans who fought in that war, entire groups of Spanish speaking
recruits, and Spanish surnamed soldiers from Louisiana to Vermont signed up to fight
on both sides.

General Jubal A. Early (Will Lyman) attacks Loreta Velazquez (Romi Dias) as a Northerner and declares there were no women in the Civil War armies. Photo by Ashley Pletz.

LH: Has the process of discovering Loreta and filming this project changed you
as a woman? As a filmmaker?
MAC: I began this film a documentarian. I had never imagined I would take on a period
historical film with actors, 19th century sets, massive battle scenes. But Loreta’s memoir
is one of only two books published by a Latina in the 19th century and her voice was so
radical for the times. I thought I would find archival imagery of the large Cuban and
Spanish community she was part of in 19th Century New Orleans and I found plenty of
letters, newspapers and documents, but few photos. In fact, I ended up with only one
photo of Loreta, and that one was not even authenticated, so I had to find another way
to bring her story to life. I had spent a year reading and speaking to historians as a
fellow at Harvard University’s History Department, then had the opportunity to live in
New Orleans for a year as a Rockefeller fellow, combing through the city archives,
walking the streets, listening to the music and mingling with the people of the city. At the
end of the year I could imagine the smells and sounds and soul of that city in the 19th
century so the dramatic scenes of her life came to me so vividly from my research.
LH: I read that you had an opportunity to screen Rebel back in 2011 to an event
hosted by the White House and the U.S. Dept. of Interior. Do you think screening
to U.S. president and other diplomats helped strengthen the focus of Latinos?
MAC: President Obama is greeted like a rock star, and I was so excited to be invited to
share Rebel with him and the many illustrious civic and cultural leaders that day. I have
to credit Ken Salazar the recent Secretary of the Interior for creating the American
Latino Heritage Initative that brought us all together. I got a call from the National Park
Service, which is one of the Departments of the Interior, and they wanted to talk to me
about being an outreach partner with Rebel, which was in production and still seeking
final funding at the time. It was so exciting to be the “artist/filmmaker” chosen to present
at this White House event. But there are so many more stories for us to tell and so
many incredible fellow Latino filmmakers today that it will be our collective work that will
help transform America’s understanding of who we are.
LH: Did you always want to be a filmmaker? Where are you from? Your most
admired film director?
MAC: I never even had a television until I came to this country from my native Ecuador
when I was seven years old. I saw my first theatrical film when I was 11 years old. But I
have always been an artist – as a child I drew incessantly, and I taught myself English
by devouring entire sections at the Jefferson Market Library in the NY Greenwich Village
neighborhood my mother brought us to. I learned the language of cinema by watching
the “Late,” then the “Late Late,” then the “Late, Late, Late” movie on TV during
schooldays way before I did cinema studies at college. And this magical world still
transports me every time. It is a priviledge to be able to tell stories cinematically. I love
so many kinds of films – from Guillermo Del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth, to Jane Campion’s
An Angel At My Table to Chris Marker’s Sans Soleil to Clint Eastwood’s Million Dollar
Baby – the list is endless.

Producer Calvin Lindsay, Jr., and actor Beresford Bennet as Bob the slave,
discuss a scene in “Rebel”. Photo by Max Prum

LH: To up-and-coming Latina filmmakers, what advise can you give them to keep
them inspired, focused and stay strong above the fray of raising funds, attracting
investors, grants, etc.?
MAC: Film is like fine wine – it takes some time to get it right, so don’t despair and don’t
rush it. Choose carefully. Your time is precious – so work on stories that are authentic
and meaningful. A good film is made by teams – find the best collaborators and let them
make your work better. Nurture your fellow filmmakers – pitch in for their projects, find
your people and always be generous along the way. There will be dark times when
everyone around you says it can’t be done – it is the community around you that will get
you through the dark times.
LH: What is next for you?
MAC: I’ve been writing a quirky coming-of-age feature about attending one of the most
elite boarding high schools in the nation on a scholarship while secretly being
undocumented, loosely based on my personal experience, for years and I hope to finish
the script this coming year. And I’ve been mulling over an essay film about citizenship
and immigration – using history, art, literature and science to understand how we can be
a nation of immigrants that is so fearful of each new wave, rather than understanding
that is the key to our strength.
Congratulations, Maria Agui Carter! Your film is beautifully directed and the major battle
scenes are worthy of blockbuster feature period films.
Rebel is a film that continues where Ken Burns‘s Civil War series left off. In a labor of
love that took her twelve years to complete, Agui Carter has created a must-see
detective film about a woman, a myth, and the politics of national memory. Set your
DVRs for Friday, May 24th 10PM/EST /PST.

More on Rebel:

Premieres, May 24, 2013 on National PBS/VOCES at 10PM/7PM (EST/PST)
Theatrical Screening at Frameline Festival at the Castro Theater in San Francisco on
June 29th, 6:15PM
Screening at the Museum of Moving Image in New York City on Friday, July 19th, 7PM
Writer and Director: Maria Agui Carter
Producer: Maria Agui Carter with Calvin Lindsay
Original Music: Joseph Julian Gonzalez

Website coming in June where bonus videos and learning tools for teachers will be
available: rebeldocumentary.com and don’t forget to visit Facebook.com/rebeldocumentary,
“LIKE”

X

Buy DVD

One hour version of REBEL as broadcast on National PBS for personal use.
Buy

Educational

One hour teacher’s version of REBEL with audio/visual screening license.
Buy

Theatrical

75 min. feature Director’s Cut is available for theatrical and community screenings. Contact info@iguanafilms.com.