Amy Serrano

Amy Serrano (born November 8, 1966 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban-American filmmaker, author and human rights activist. She is most well known for her critically acclaimed documentary, The Sugar Babies: The Plight of the Children of Agricultural Workers on the Sugar Industry of the Dominican Republic. She has also produced and directed several documentaries for PBS. She is a women and children's rights activist.

Amy Serrano
Amy Serrano, New Orleans, 2012
Born (1966-11-08) November 8, 1966
CitizenshipUnited States
EducationBachelor of Arts, Sociology and Anthropology
OccupationAuthor, filmmaker, human rights activist.
Known forDocumentaries

Early life and education

Born in a post-revolutionary Cuba, and into a life of poverty and oppression, after being forced to separate from her family and home,[1] Serrano was relocated to Miami as a political refugee.

Serrano attended Florida International University and graduated with a degree in Sociology and Anthropology and a minor in International Relations with a focus on International Organizations and Human Rights. She also has certificates in Leadership Studies from Harvard University - the John F. Kennedy School of Government, the Universidad Menendez Pelayo in Spain, Gallup University in D.C, the Center for Creative Leadership in North Carolina, and the National Hispana Leadership Institute in Washington D.C.

In 2007, Serrano relocated from her hometown of Miami, Florida to New Orleans, Louisiana to focus more on her writing. She continues to reside and write in the Greater New Orleans Area.

Filmmaking

Adios Patria? The Cuban Exodus

Serrano's first work was as a producer for the PBS documentary Adios Patria? The Cuban Exodus. The film recalls the dramatic stories of Cubans fleeing their homeland, unfolding onto the shores of South Florida. It features a wide range of interviews, from liberals to the conservative, and includes the horror stories of the journey of several Cubans.[2] The film is narrated by Academy Award nominee Andy Garcia.[3]

Cafe Con Leche: Voices of Exiles Children

Serrano executive produced the PBS broadcast and Emmy-Award-nominated Cafe con Leche: Voices of Exiles' Children. The film is an introspective look at the first wave of Cuban exiles who came to the United States, who are now young adults. The film focuses on a group of young Cubans called "Generation ners", who discuss their bi-cultural lives as Cuban-Americans.[4][3]

A Woman's Place: Voices of Contemporary Hispanic-American Women

She directed and produced the PBS broadcast A Woman's Place: Voices of Contemporary Hispanic-American Women featuring Isabel Allende, Dr. Antonia Novello, Bianca Jagger, Dr. Patricia Allen Carbonell, Maria Hinojosa, Esmeralda Santiago, Marjorie Agosin and other barrier-breaking Hispanic-American Women. The film features music by Lissette, and two songs about female empowerment by Tori Amos.

Move!

Serrano wrote, produced and directed the U.S. co-production for the feature-length film MOVE! Produced in Rome, Italy and distributed through film festivals and television in Europe, MOVE! is a fictional film composed of short films by 11 filmmakers on six continents exploring the dispassionate state of humanity through varied emotions.[5]

The Sugar Babies

Serrano went up against Big Sugar to investigate and expose child labor and human trafficking when she shot, produced, wrote and directed the feature-length documentary The Sugar Babies: The Plight of the Children of Agricultural Workers on the Sugar Industry of the Dominican Republic. "Narrated by award-winning Haitian-American author Edwidge Danticat and composed of field recordings coupled with outside testimony, the film explores the lives of the descendants of the first Africans delivered to the island of Hispaniola for the bittersweet commodity that once ruled the world."[3]

The film was scored by Bill Cruz and features music by Bola de Nieve, Solomon Burke and the Blind Boys of Alabama, Kenny Rankin, Alberto Beltran and original musical field recordings sung by the children in film.

Other film work

Serrano's body of work includes directing and producing the short film Of Hope, Courage and Justice: A Global Mosaic of Women in Human Rights, and associate producing the Emmy-Award nominated Havana: Portrait of Yesteryear, narrated by Gloria Estefan, for PBS.[3]

Since 2013, Serrano has been working on a film titled Airman: The Extraordinary Life of Calvin G. Moret,[6] based on the life and legacy of Louisiana’s last known Tuskegee Airman. This is a historical and continuing work in progress.

Other work

In 2009, Serrano was commissioned by the Louisiana Division of the Arts to produce a photographic essay on a new population. After spending considerable time with the Garifuna people, Serrano wrote and produced From Punta to Chumba: Garifuna Music and Dance in New Orleans,[7] which explores the role of females in the Garifuna community as cultural tradition bearers. From Punta to Chumba was first published by Louisiana's Living Traditions. Currently, artifacts, photographs, and the essay are on tour in Louisiana's State Museums. As of 2013, the exhibit was intended to circulate around the State of Louisiana for the next 5–10 years.

In late 2013, Serrano released her first book of poems, Of Fiery Places and Sacred Spaces,[8] which deals with the poetics of place and space. Her poems have been published in Latino Stuff Review, Ella Magazine, MiPo Gallery, Into the Woods, The Peauxdunque Writers' Alliance Annual Anthology, and Poets and Artists Magazine.[9]

In 2016 she was invited to write the foreword to photographer Diego Quiros' fine art photography book, Alchimie Photographique.[10]

In 2017, she edited the Into the Woods Anthology and wrote the foreword. [11]

In 2018, she began writing a manuscript for a book, Mr. Moret and I: The Story and Legacy of My Unexpected Friendship with New Orleans' Last Known Tuskegee Airman. It is one part memoir (Serrano's) and one-part biography (Moret's). It reveals Moret's first-hand, contemplative recounting of history and race in America, while also functioning as Serrano's retrospective reflection of the meaningful friendship that emerged as a consequence of the great blocks of time spent at home, on the road, and up in the air to document his life for the film, Airman: The Extraordinary Life of Calvin G. Moret.

Presently, Serrano is at work on a transmedia work and book, Saudades: An Anthological Contemplation on Persons, Places, Identity, and Time." [12] which seeks to mine the experience and nuancical complexity of saudade in collaboration with visual, literary, and musical artists. The book will be released in the Spring/ Summer of 2020.

Serrano is a Senior Fellow of the Human Rights Foundation in New York; a Fellow of the National Hispana Leadership Institute in Washington D.C.; a board member of Voz de Mujer, a women’s empowerment and leadership organization based in Texas; an Advisory Council member of the Faulkner Society’ in New Orleans; a member of the Spanish Embassy's Young Hispanic Leader’s Association in Washington D.C.; and a founding Board member of Ambassador Armando Valladares' non-governmental organization, Human Rights for All.[13]

Awards and recognition

Serrano's leadership has been honored by the City of Miami with a proclamation making October 27 "Amy Serrano Day".[3] She has twice been named a "Woman of Today" in Glamour Magazine, which also named Serrano a "Woman of the Year." During Women's History Month, she was presented with a Mentor Award by the Public School System and was named a Distinguished Female Role Model by the Public Library System.

Serrano was one of eight women selected and profiled in "Evolution of Woman", a women's empowerment installation commissioned by Clinique Cosmetics. This national exhibit involved women selected by Clinique Cosmetics and photographed by Sandi Fellman, and was first unveiled at New York City's Metropolitan Pavilion before traveling the country with Clinique.[3]

Serrano is a recipient of the Tesoro Award in Art and Culture. She was awarded a Fellowship with the National Hispana Leadership Institute.[3] She was named a "Latina of Excellence" in Hispanic Magazine's Top Latinas Roster. She was one of fifteen Hispanic Leaders in the United States selected by the Spanish Embassy in Washington DC and Spain's Foreign Ministry to participate in a Diplomatic Exchange in Spain with their top leaders in the social, political, economic and cultural arenas which also involved meeting the King and Queen of Spain.

Serrano was selected and profiled in a book on Hispanic-American leaders in the United States published by the Spain-U.S. Council.[3]

Serrano has been profiled in the Florida Hispanic Yearbook, and MEGA TV named her "one of the most influential and recognized Hispanics in the United States." She was photographed and written about as a "Mujer Vanidades" in Vanidades Magazine.[3]

References

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