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Sundance in New Mexico to work on filmmaking
By DEBORAH BAKER, Associated Press Writer
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP): Actor and director Robert Redford will
collaborate with the state of New Mexico to expand training
opportunities for Native American and Latino filmmakers.
``Sundance in New Mexico'' was announced Thursday by Gov. Bill
Richardson and Redford, who said the project grew out of his
long-standing love for the state, where he made ``The Milagro
Beanfield War'' in 1988.
Redford's Sundance Institute in Utah will work with the
Department of Cultural Affairs and the New Mexico Film Office to
develop programs in film, arts and the environment.
The project will be based at Los Luceros, the historic,
state-owned hacienda and complex of buildings along the Rio
Grande north of Española.
The lab program at Sundance that provides hands-on training for
aspiring Native American filmmakers will be moved to New Mexico
``because I think this is a more appropriate place to have it,''
Redford said.
Eventually, those could be followed by programs aimed at Latino
and Native American producers and writers, and by environmental
programs as well, he said.
``The negative part of me is, I'm impatient ... I've had to
learn the hard way over time that you have to do just one step
at a time,'' the actor said at a news conference in the
governor's office.
Redford said he was disappointed in the failure of two of his
earlier ventures, a project 30 years ago to get movie cameras
into the hands of Indian children and a more recent dream to
make a series of New Mexico-based films from the books of
mystery writer Tony Hillerman.
``Sundance in New Mexico'' is a new opportunity to work in that
vein, he said.
``It has a lot to do with the changes in the world around us,
the fact that there's change that's in the air right now ... and
the positive has to do with arts and culture,'' he said.
Redford was executive producer of the Spanish-language film,
``The Motorcycle Diaries,'' which recounted the journey through
South America of a youthful Ernesto ``Che'' Guevara, who became
a famed Latin revolutionary.
He said his interest in Latino culture dates to growing up in
one of the few Anglo households in a Latino, working-class
neighborhood of Los Angeles.
The new collaboration will kick off with a series of events, the
first of them a panel discussion this Saturday in Santa Fe on
the links between oral tradition and filmmaking.
It will feature director John Sayles, filmmaker Sterlin Harjo,
who is Creek and Seminole, and documentary filmmaker Merata Mita,
who is Maori.
Kathleen Broyles, program coordinator for feature films at
Sundance Institute and Redford's liaison in New Mexico,
described the New Mexico project as a ``sister program'' and
said it was the first such arrangement for Sundance.
``This is brand new,'' she said.
Lisa Strout, director of the state film office, said the
collaboration will expand training opportunities for Indian and
Latino filmmakers who already are participating in
state-sponsored programs.
The collaboration—which Richardson described as ``evolving''—is
estimated to cost the state at least $80,000 a year initially.
Richardson said he would likely have to secure funding beyond
that as the program grew—for example, if it were decided to
build ``eco-lodges'' on the Los Luceros grounds for program
participants.
Redford said art can drive the economy, citing as an example his
Sundance Film Festival, which he said started on a shoestring
and pumps millions of dollars into the state's coffers annually.
``It's been very frustrating to me to see art constantly
categorized at the end of the train, as the caboose, as
something that's elitist or extremely leftist ... always pushed
into the nonprofit zone,'' he said.
``That to me is an old saw that needs to be changed.'' |