New Orleans French Quarter.
A grant from Latino Public Broadcasting allowed us to shoot our period dramatic scenes in New Orleans. Local reenactors came out in force to fill the streets of the French Quarter dressed in period finery.
For more photos, check out our Web Gallery on our site! www.iguanafilms.com/upcoming/rebelgallery
Stay tuned!
-The REBEL Staff
REBEL
Monday, October 9, 2006
Dramatic Reenactments shot in New Orleans
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Tuesday, August 22, 2006
REBEL IN THE NEWS!
Writer Johnny Diaz recently wrote a wonderful article on the cover of the Living/Arts section of the BOSTON GLOBE. See: http://www.boston.com/yourlife/articles/2006/08/22/stealth_fighter/?page=full:
From the article:
"This is not just a great adventure story. It's also a story about the politics of how you remember history," Carter says during an interview at Lincoln Street Coffee in Newton Highlands. "It's a way to examine why you have this absence of this woman and so many other Latinas in history. It's a detective story. Who was she?"
Clothes make the man
Velazquez was born in 1842 near Havana, the daughter of a Spanish government official working in Cuba. In her early teens, she was sent to school in New Orleans, where she was educated in English, Spanish, and French. She eventually eloped with an officer in the US Army in 1856. They married and had three children, all of whom died young.
She talked her husband into renouncing his commission and joining the Confederate army, something she wanted to do herself instead of staying home. She paid a tailor to make her a soldier's uniform, donned a man's wig and a fake mustache and beard, and transformed herself into Buford.
Stay tuned for more press releases!
-The REBEL Staff
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5:23 PM
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Wednesday, November 9, 2005
New Orleans' GAMBIT covers REBEL shooting
For those of you who missed the meticulously researched cover article in the New Orleans GAMBIT, written by Bill Sasser: http://www.bestofneworleans.com/dispatch/2004-09-14/cover_story.html
From GAMBIT:
Dressed in corsets and crinolines, she sits before a mirror, shaking her hair loose as she takes scissors in her hand. Lock by lock, her long brown tresses fall around her skirt. Raised as a Southern belle, she soon will be on a battlefield wearing cavalry boots and the uniform of a Confederate officer, kicking her horse forward as muskets spit fire.These scenes are being shot for Rebel, an upcoming documentary by filmmaker Maria Agui Carter, who came to New Orleans this summer to dramatize segments of her biography of Loreta Janeta Velazquez. According to Velazquez's memoir, first published in 1876, at age 19 she disguised herself as a man to fight in the Civil War, seeing combat as a Confederate cavalry officer at Bull Run and Shiloh. She also became a spy and a double agent, working under a number of aliases. Born in Havana in 1842, she was raised in antebellum New Orleans before setting out on her remarkable odyssey through the Civil War, a story that until recently was all but lost to history.
Velazquez herself wrote about it all in The Woman in Battle: A Narrative of the Exploits, Adventures, and Travels of Madame Loreta Janeta Velazquez, Otherwise Known as Lieutenant Harry T. Buford Confederate States Army. Her life story runs counter to the history of the Civil War as we know it -- which is why she remained in the margins until being rediscovered recently by a new generation of historians.
"Five years ago nobody had heard of Loreta Velazquez, now suddenly she's hot," says Carter, a native of Ecuador who spent the past academic year working on Rebel as a Rockefeller Fellow at Tulane University's Institute for Cuban and Caribbean Studies. "Her story itself is fascinating, but I'm interested in the bigger parts of the picture. The actual history of the Civil War was much more complicated than white men fighting over issues of black and white."
More news to come!
-The REBEL Staff
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Tags: local press coverage, new orleans
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