Sara Gómez

Sara Gómez
Born November 8, 1942
Havana, Cuba
Died June 2, 1974 (aged 3031)
Havana, Cuba
Organization ICAIC

Sara Gómez (November 8, 1942 June 2, 1974) was a Cuban filmmaker. Brought up in a middle-class black family in Havana, she studied literature, piano and Afro-Cuban ethnography. She worked as a journalist before joining the newly-formed ICAIC in 1961, where she subsequently served as assistant director to Jorge Fraga and Tomas Gutierrez Alea, as well as to the visiting French director Agnes Varda. One of only two black filmmakers at ICAIC at the time, and for several years its only woman director, Gomez made a series of documentary shorts on assigned topics before directing her first feature.

Contribution to Cuban Cinema

Gómez's last film, the 1974 hybrid narrative/documentary has been hailed as the "first movie to truly explore conflicting threads of racial and gender identity within a revolutionary context," [1] with noted Cuban film scholar Michael Chanan observing that the film is "an aesthetically radical film...mix[ing]...fiction and documentary, in the most original way...by using real people to play themselves alongside professional actors."[2]

Filmography

References

  1. Template:Cite name="Andrea Easley Morris, Afro-Cuban Identity in Postrevolutionary Novel and Film: Inclusion, Loss, and Cultural Resistance (Lanham, Bucknell University Press, 2012), 12.
  2. Template:Cite name="Michael Chanan, The Cuban Image (London: BFI Publishing, 1985), 284-85.

See also


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