The documentary A Song for Cesar tells the story of Cesar Chavez and the Farmworker Movement's struggle for justice and fair working conditions through the eyes of musicians and artists. The film screening will close Hispanic Heritage Month as a celebration of UC lrvine's Latine community.
Wednesday, October 15, 2024
Irvine Barclay Theater
6:00–7:00 p.m.: Pop-Up UCI Libraries Special Collections & Archives Display
7:00–8:30 p.m.: Documentary Screening
8:30–9:30 p.m.: Panel Discussion with Filmmakers
Pop-Up Display
UCI Libraries Special Collections and Archives (SCA) is pleased to share materials related to the life and labor activism of Cesar Chavez in the lobby of the Barclay Theater prior to the A Song for Cesar screening. The selection will center publications, photographs, and ephemera from and about the United Farm Workers (UFW). Chavez, Dolores Huerta, Larry Itliong, and other organizers folded together groups fighting for farmworkers’ rights into the UFW in the early 1960s.
Research Guide
The A Song for Cesar library guide highlights some of the related resources available from UCI Libraries. Explore books, videos, and more on the story of Cesar Chavez and the Farmworker Movement's struggle for justice and fair working conditions through the eyes of musicians and artists.
A Song for Cesar begins with an inspiration that strikes as musicians Abel Sanchez and Jorge Santana record a song at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California. The inspiration is sparked by the spirit of the thousands of farmworkers who worked for generations under back breaking conditions and who struggled for justice alongside labor leaders like Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta.
This film by Andres Alegria and Abel Sanchez tells the story of the alliance that Chavez and farmworker activists formed with musicians and artists in the 1960s and 1970s to fight for the rights of farmworkers. Members of Cesar’s family, key figures of the movement like Dolores Huerta and artists and musicians like Joan Baez, Carlos Santana, and many more, tell the story of marching, singing, painting, acting and standing side by side with the farmworkers in their struggle for justice.
Five studio recording sessions are the backbone of the film. The songs themselves are an artistic response to the social conditions that were the farmworkers reality. They also are the transitions between the plot points of the film: Cesar's early life and work in the fields, the inception of the farmworkers union (UFW), the enthusiastic response of musicians and performers in fundraisers for the UFW, the emergence of Chicano Art from the fields of Delano, the role of theater in the struggle, and the commitment to nonviolent action, all helping to create a movement that joined social struggle and culture at the hip.
A Song for Cesar blends together music, art and the striving for social justice emblematic of the period with a contemporary and timely reminder of art's role in progressive change.
Image credit: A Song For Cesar. Mural artwork by George Yepes (https://georgeyepes.com)
Related LibGuide: Chicano / Latino Studies by Elizabeth V. Hernandez
CONTACT
For questions about this or other UCI Libraries events, please contact partners@uci.edu.
PARKING
Parking permits are required on the UCI campus at all times. For campus maps and parking rates, see the UCI Parking Permits webpage.