• “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
  • “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
  • “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
  • “War fare inevitably breeds corruption”

    Loreta Velazquez

The Austin Chronicle

“The rebellious spirit and mysterious complexities of secret soldier Loreta Velazquez continue to spark debate more than 100 years after her death.”
Jesse Cape

http://www.austinchronicle.com/blogs/screens/2013-05-24/loreta-velazquez-secret-confederate-soldier-and-union-spy-or-liar/

THE AUSTIN CHRONICLE
Loreta Velazquez: Secret Confederate
Soldier, Union Spy, or Liar?
BY JESSI CAPE, MAY 24, 2013, 4:55PM, PICTURE IN PICTURE
The rebellious spirit and mysterious complexities of secret solider Loreta Velazquez continue to spark debate more than 100 years after her death. Rebel, a documentary feature examining the historical evidence proving her existence and cultural significance, premieres tonight on Voces on PBS on KLRU at 9pm. One of an estimated 1,000 women soldiers who secretly served during the American Civil War, Velazquez – played by Romi Dias – was a Cuban immigrant raised in New Orleans. A teenage wife and mother whose life took many mournful turns, she disguised herself as a man and joined the Confederate Army as Harry T. Buford … supposedly. She bound her breasts, wore a wig and mustache, and recruited several hundred men for a battalion. Then, through a riveting turn of events, she became a Union spy. After several marriages a life in activism against slavery and in support of immigrant rights, her story continued to defy the norm. She published a 600-page memoir in 1876 and was consequently accused of lying and prostitution, effectively erasing her legacy from the history books. Rebel, directed by Maria Agui Carter, took 12 years to write, direct, and produce the project. Beginning with a chance encounter with a series of articles from a senior military archivist from the National Archives, Carter includes historians and reenactments in this old-fashioned mystery. Whether Velazquez’s Bull Run battle and Lincoln meeting were facts or folklore, a woman living in the Deep South who criticized the corruption of wartime society was certainly a prime target. Was Loreta Velazquez a real person? Did she really fight as a man in the Confederate Army? Why did she become a Union spy? And was her story wiped from the record simply because she was a woman with a courageous heart who did not fit the standard societal mold? Find out tonight on PBS.

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

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

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