Cuban
ballet star Carlos Acosta stars in own biopic
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[December 13, 2018]
By Sarah Marsh
HAVANA (Reuters) - For
Carlos Acosta, the son of a black truck driver in
Communist-run Cuba, overcoming poverty, prejudice and
politics to become a global ballet legend, write a
best-selling memoir and create his own dance company was
not enough.
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The 45-year-old, who won fame as a teen for his athleticism and
virtuosity, this week presented a movie about his rags-to-riches
life at Havana's annual film fest that moved audiences to laugh,
weep and thunderously applaud.
"This is a Cuban story, so it's not my story only," Acosta said
in an interview with Reuters.
"Yuli" uniquely blends a fictionalized account of Acosta's life
based on his memoir "No Way Home" with archive footage of the
news and him dancing, and original choreographies representing
chapters of his past.
The 45-year old, who retired from the Royal Ballet in 2015,
features in a meta-role as himself directing his company Acosta
Danza to dance those choreographies in a Havana theater.
The movie, scripted by Briton Paul Laverty and directed by
Spaniard Iciar Bollain, received five nominations for the
Spanish "Goya" awards on Wednesday.
Political at times, "Yuli" reflects the universal suffering of
Cuban families divided by exile and struggling to get by when
the country went through a deep economic crisis following the
fall of former ally the Soviet Union.
The movie, which had its international premiere at the San
Sebastian film festival in September, evokes how hard it could
be for artists like Acosta to get Cuban government permission to
work abroad, often key to them being able to forge a career.
But "Yuli" also celebrates the Cuban education system that
provided free ballet training to the descendent of slaves from a
rundown neighborhood and features a choreography blasting U.S.
imperialism.
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The film's emotional core is Acosta's complex relationship with
his late father who - unusually given his macho, humble milieu -
sent him to ballet school to keep him out of trouble.
Acosta's father, who nicknamed his wayward son "Yuli" for a
warrior god, then intuited he could be a great dancer and pushed
him to "follow his star. But as a child, Acosta wanted to be a
footballer and not, as he remonstrates in the film, a "faggot"
in tights.
The film also evokes racism in Cuba and abroad. Acosta's
fair-skinned mother's family rejects him because of his skin
color, which also heightens his self-doubt when he seeks to
break into the white world of international ballet.
Acosta said he hoped his story of success would inspire hope in
an oftentimes dark world.
His autobiography "No Way Home" was published in 2007 in Europe
but is still not available yet in Cuba; critics say that is
because it includes passages deemed unflattering to the
matriarch of Cuban ballet, Alicia Alonso.
Acosta said he hoped the movie would prompt authorities to
distribute copies of the book now in storage.
He joined in a chorus of criticism of a decree that took effect
last Friday in Cuba, which many artists fear will result in
censorship. [nL1N1YD016]
"Artists should be consulted to come up with things like that,"
he said. "We should be careful because we all know without art
is no country."
(Reporting by Sarah Marsh; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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