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Film Screening

Madame Satã (Brazil, 2002)

A film by Karim Aïnouz, Brazil, 2002

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Presented by the UCLA Film and Television Archive and The Andrew J. Kuehn Jr. Foundation

Sunday, October 23, 2022
7:00 PM (Pacific Time)Billy Wilder Theater
10899 Wilshire Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA 9002

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Director Karim Aïnouz brings a visceral, sensuous take to the biopic well suited to his subject, João Francisco dos Santos. The Afro-Brazilian descendant of enslaved people, dos Santos became a living legend as an openly gay, street-fighting cabaret star whose drag persona Madame Satã (after DeMille’s Madame Satan) revolutionized Brazilian Carnival culture in the 1940s. The film begins years before when dos Santos (Lázaro Ramos) was still just an outlaw hustling in Lapa, Rio de Janeiro’s crumbling red light district. A master of capoeira with an affinity for Scheherazade and Josephine Baker, dos Santos battles cops and cons alike, drawing around him a tender family of outcasts, sex workers and petty thieves. Lázaro Ramos channels these seeming contradictions into a stunning performance cultimating in Madame Satã’s first appearance on stage. 20 years after its original release, Madame Satã still seethes with liberating energy from start to finish.

 

35mm, color, in Portuguese with English subtitles, 105 min. Director: Karim Aïnouz. Screenwriter: Karim Aïnouz, Marcelo Gomes, Sérgio Machado, Mauricio Zacharias. With: Lázaro Ramos, Marcélia Cartaxo, Flávio Bauraqui.


In-person: 

Q&A with director Karim Aïnouz, moderated by UCLA Assistant Professor Alex Ungprateeb Flynn

 

Register HERE

Cost: Free


Download File: Madame-Sata-FTVA-Flyer_for-office-printing-sj-xfw.pdf

Sponsor(s): Center for Brazilian Studies