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The Directors:
Marta Moreno Vega, Puerto Rico/USA
Marta
Moreno Vega is a scholar who has spent most of her life researching
and developing programs that focus on the African Diaspora. She is the
founder of the Caribbean Cultural Center in New York, Amigos del Museo del
Barrio. She is also the author of a book called “The Altar of My Soul:
The Living Traditions of Santeria". Marta Moreno Vega was
recently able to speak with MundoAfrolatino.com about her work and the
documentary on Cuba that she co-produced.
Robert Shepard
Bobby
Shepard has extensive credits as cinematographer on numerous historical
documentaries, most notably Eyes on the Prize, I & II. He also
served as cinematographer on: Black
Is...Black Ain't, the DuPont Award winning Facing
The Truth With Bill Moyers, Soldiers
Without Swords: the Black Press (Stanley Nelson, Producer), Licensed
To Kill (Arthur Dong, Producer) and I'll
Make Me a World (Blackside, Producer), Ralph
Ellison: An American Journey (Avon Kirkland, Producer), and Brother
Outsider: Bayard Rustin (Llew Smith, Executive Producer).
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When
the Spirits Dance Mambo
Marta
Moreno Vega & Robert Shepard, Cuba/USA, 2002, Documentary, English &
Spanish with English subtitles, 90 mins.
A
triumphant voyage of faith and power, "Cuando los Espíritus Bailan
Mambo"/"When the Spirits Dance Mambo" is a real life
testament of strength and triumph of the human spirit. Tracing the role of
sacred African thought and practices in the formation of Cuban society,
culture and music, the 90-minute documentary is a tribute to the spiritual
energy that traveled from West Africa to Cuba and New York.
Co-produced
and directed by Robert "Bobby" Shepard and Marta Moreno Vega,
"When the Spirits Dance Mambo" was shot in Cuba and New York
over a three month period.
A
celebration of the traditions of ancestor worship, "When the Spirits
Dance Mambo", documents the roots of the sacred African religion, La
Regla de Ocha (known as Santeria) as practiced in Matanzas, Santiago de
Cuba and Havana. With the Caribbean Cultural Center as Executive Producer,
the film traces its roots from 15th century Africa to the New World.
Developing practices in the formation of Cuban civil society, Yoruba
belief systems survived and traveled from Africa to Cuba and New York
through sacred rituals, songs, music and dance. Armed with the energy of
their ancestral rituals and customs, enslaved Africans carried La Regla de
Ocha as protective shields believing in the power of a spiritual force for
endurance, identity and empowerment.

On the
Web:
http://www.whenthespiritsdancemambo.org/about.htm
Films
and Filmmakers:
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BaadAsssss
Cinema, Isaac Julien
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Bajan
Film Showcase, featuring new film from Barbados
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Bonjour
la Rézoné, Elsie Haas & Nixon Amilcar
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Buying
Wine ... or How Not To, Thomas
W Campbell & Arnold C Baker
(2004)
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Clando,
Jean Marie Teno
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Guantanamera,
Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Juan
Carlos Tabío
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Heritage, Ladi
Ladebo
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Le
Silence de la Forêt, Didier Florent Ouenangaré
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Madame
Brouette, Moussa Sene Absa
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Of
Men and Gods, Anne Lescot and Laurence Magloire
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Paradise
Omeros, Isaac Julien
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Prize
Award and Screening of Guantanemera, Tomás
Gutiérrez Alea & Juan Carlos Tabío
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When
the Spirits Dance Mambo, Marta Moreno Vega
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