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Aurora Guerrero
American screenwriter and director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Aurora Guerrero is a writer-director from California.[1]
Early life
Guerrero was born in the Mission District of San Francisco, California, to Mexican immigrant parents, later growing up on the border of the cities of Richmond and El Cerrito while working at her parents' small Mexican restaurant in Berkeley. Guerrero studied both Psychology and Chicano studies at the University of California, Berkeley, completing a Bachelor of Arts. She later moved to Los Angeles to study directing at California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clarita, California earning a Master of Fine Arts.[2] Her narrative work often examines the intersection of the working class, queer people, and people of color.[3]
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Career
Summarize
Perspective
Early in her career, she co-founded Womyn Image Makers (WIM), a queer Xicana-identified film collective based out of Los Angeles [4], along with Dalila Mendez, Maritza Alvarez, and Claudia Mercado. As WIM, in 2005, she directed the short film Pura Lengua, which debuted at the Sundance Film Festival. Her second short film, Viernes Girl, won the 2005 HBO/New York International Latino Film Festival short film competition. [5] She was featured on Filmmaker Magazine's "25 Faces to Watch" list as a result of her work, and both films caught the attention of film institutions such as Sundance, Tribeca, and Film Independent.[3] Guerrero also went on to assist director Patricia Cardoso on her debut feature, Real Women Have Curves, which won the Sundance Film Festival Audience Award in 2002. In 2005 Guerrero was selected as a Sundance Institute Ford Foundation film fellow. While there, she participated in the Native Indigenous Lab with her script for Mosquita y Mari.[6] Through collaboration with members of WIM, Guerrero has created a body of work by or about queer women of color not previously featured or circulated in mainstream production houses. Guerrero asserts "third-space feminism" as the directive for her cinematic interventions, as she has been influenced by the rich intellectual genealogy of Chicana feminist theory. [7]
In 2012, Guerrero made her feature film debut at the Sundance Film Festival with Mosquita y Mari, becoming the first Chicana filmmaker to debut a feature-length film who was also previously a Sundance Institute and Ford Foundation Fellow.[8] Mosquita y Mari has since traveled to over 100 film festivals, including San Francisco International, Melbourne,[9] Guadalajara, São Paulo, and has garnered multiple awards, including Best First Feature at Outfest and Best U.S. Latino Film at New York's Cinema Tropical while picking up Spirit Award and GLAAD nominations for Best First Feature Under 500k and the Piaget's Producer's Award.[3] The film tells the coming-of-age story of two teen Chicanas in Huntington Park, California who form a relationship ignited by sexual attraction.[10]
In 2014, Guerrero announced her next project, Los Valientes, about a young undocumented Latino gay man living in the U.S.[11] Los Valientes, slated to be Guerrero's second feature, has been awarded two grants by SFF/KRF, a 2014 Sundance Feature Film Development Grant and a 2013 Tribeca Narrative Grant, and was selected to participate in IFP's No Borders Market in 2014.[3]
Most of Guerrero's film work has been centered around California, especially the San Francisco Bay Area where she grew up. Her first work not centered in California was the episode of Queen Sugar she directed, centered in Louisiana.[12]
In 2017, Guerrero directed the Ava DuVernay produced Queen Sugar episode "What Do I Care for Morning" which aired as episode three in season two. DuVernay chose Guerrero for the directorial position because of her work Mosquita y Mari. Based on this film, DuVernay felt confident enough that Guerrero could focus on the power of intimacy, especially for Queen Sugar, a show that focuses so much on family, betrayal and injustice. Prior to directing episode three of season two of Queen Sugar, Guerrero had no idea what episode or what she was going to be directing specifically. Exploring the flirtation, tension, and budding romance of this episode is one of her strengths, and it was a perfect directorial fit for her.[12]
DuVernay later recommended Guerrero to Lin-Manuel Miranda to direct the music video for Andra Day's cover of "Burn" from The Hamilton Mixtape.[13]
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Influences
In a blog post that she wrote on the Sundance Institute website on April 28, 2011[14] Guerrero writes, "My first inspirations were writers. Women of color feminist writers like Audre Lorde, Cherrie Moraga, Gloria Anzaldúa, Chrystos, June Jordan, and Angela Davis. When I discovered their brave works as a freshman in college, a fierce creative seed was planted in me. It was a calling I had the moment I was stripped naked by their words." Her work showcases the experiences of Chicanas that often echo her own experiences.
In an interview with El Tecolote on April 26, 2012, Guerrero stressed the importance of “opening doors to Latinos, especially women and youth, behind the camera in order to help build a community of Latina/o artists,” something she didn't have when she was a girl.[15] She also stresses the importance of activity in politics and cultural activism.[3]
Awards and nominations
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Filmography
| YEAR | FILM | CREDITED AS |
| 2025 | Murderbot (TV series) | Director |
| 2021 | Blindspotting (TV series) | Director |
| 2021 | Mr. Corman (TV series) | Director |
| 2020 | Cherish the Day (TV series)
Season: 1 Episode: 7 |
Director |
| 2020 | Gentefied (TV series)
Season: 1 Episode: 7 & 8 |
Director |
| 2020 | Little America (TV series)
Season: 1 Episode: 2 |
Director |
| 2019 | The Red Line (TV series)
Season: 1 Episode: 3 |
Director |
| 2019 | 13 Reasons Why (TV series)
Season: 3 Episodes: 7 & 10 |
Director |
| 2018 | Los Valientes | Director & Writer |
| 2018 | Greenleaf (TV series) | Director |
| 2018 | Andra Day: Burn (short) | Writer/Director |
| 2018 | Caracol Cruzando (short) | Story Editor |
| 2017 | Queen Sugar (TV series) | Director |
| 2013 | The 2013 Film Independent Spirit Awards | Herself |
| 2012 | Mosquita y Mari | Director & Writer |
| 2009 | La Mission | Assistant to Director |
| 2008 | Pandora’s (short) | Director, Writer & Co-Producer |
| 2008 | El Primo (short) | Special Thanks |
| 2005 | Viernes Girl (short) | Director & Writer |
| 2005 | Pura Lengua (short) | Director |
| 2002 | Real Women Have Curves | Assistant to Ms. Cardoso |
| 2002 | sIDney (short) | Special Thanks |
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See also
References
Further reading
External links
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