Maceo In Havana: A Movie - Part 1
The
Screenplay
Shortly after the panic and celebration that marked the new millennium
nearly two decades ago, I wrote a screenplay about Cuba’s iconic Antonio Maceo.
“Maceo In Havana: The Life and Wars of Antonio Maceo” took me nearly
three years to complete, including long-periods in which I could hardly think or
talk about anything else.
Seen from afar, Antonio Maceo’s
life was the most natural 3-act play.
Act one. Maceo is born (June 1845, Santiago de Cuba) and grows into
a strong and healthy young man. He marries María
Cabrales and shortly thereafter the Ten-Year
War begins (1868). This can be seen as the beginning of Cuba’s civil rights
period and Maceo grows into a loved and respected military leader. As he rises
through the ranks, he loses his father (Marcos), his two daughters and two
brothers to the war. Sadly, the war ends in stalemate (1878) and many Cuban
rebels are forced into exile.
Act two. Maceo in exile. In Santo Domingo, he’s ambushed and forced
to fight for his life… in Costa Rica he becomes a successful farmer… yet he
continues to actively plan the next war for Cuban independence; but the rebels
suffer set-backs and frustrations and he almost fights a duel with friend and
compatriot Flor Crombet. He visits
New York and is shocked at how black people are treated. He meets Martí. He visits Cuba with permission
from the Spanish Empire (1892) during which he shares a civil moment with Spanish
General Fidel Vidal de Santocildes.
Act three. In 1895 Maceo returns to Cuba for the Final War for Cuban Independence. Marti and Jose Maceo (Antonio’s
brother) die in battle early on. The battles are fierce, and war historians
claim the bloody Invasion of Cuba’s Western provinces to be one of the great
military feats of the 18th Century. Maceo dies in battle (1896), but
his name has already become the stuff of legends.
The Western Invasion, led by Gomez and Maceo, is said to be one of the
great military feats of the 19th century.
Route of The Western Invasion, 1896 |
The title, Maceo in Havana, reflects the hope and aspirations of the Cuban
rebels at the time. It meant that the rebels had reached Havana, which had not been
the case in previous wars (The Ten-Year
War and The Little War). Havana
is where the island’s power-base was situated. Fidel Castro’s celebrated arrival
in Havana (January 1959) owed much of its momentum to Maceo and the Generation of ’95.
What happened to Cuba after Spain left the island is not
what the rebels fought for. U.S. intervention
(1898) forced Cuba into a U.S.-style government.
Eventually I realized that my story
had too many characters… that my script was strictly following Maceo’s life as
documented in the Antonio Maceo Timeline,
at historyofcuba.com, (http://historyofcuba.com/history/mactime1.htm).
And since so many of those close to Maceo died in battle… it seemed that characters
were introduced in one scene and killed in the next… I had to do something
about this, but I didn’t want to short-change history for the sake of
expediency.
A movie is different than an
academic timeline. A movie is not a history book… but a movie should stick to
the truth of its subject.
Maceo and the Cuban Rebels cross the TROCHA into Havana in 1896 |
I noticed some abstract similarities with Mel Gibson’s Braveheart… specifically how in both stories the wealthier classes opposed the popular leader for fear of their support among the lower classes. William Wallace spoke truth to power in a way that power didn’t want to hear. “You think the people of this country exist to provide you with position,” said Wallace, “I think your position exists to provide those people with freedom.”
You can find the script for Braveheart here, though I suspect this isn’t the final version.
Braveheart banks on the word
“freedom,” to make a point not strictly based on an academic timeline… but we
tend to know much more about Maceo than we do Wallace, if only because we have
more recent evidence of Maceo’s life, which was yesterday by comparison.
The Ten-Year War might have ended differently if the Havana-Cubans… the
owner class… had not feared Maceo’s popularity. Some of this complexity is
hinted at in a first-act letter that Maceo writes to the Republic’s first Cuban government (in arms).
The letter is almost exactly as it appears at historyofcuba.com. But ours is mostly an action movie that just
“happens” to be a true story.
Still,
in the end it may turn out that Maceo’s fiercest enemy was not the Spanish
Empire, but the idea, held by some influential Cubans at the time, that Cuba
should become a U.S. state.
A
Southern state.
A
slave-holding, Southern state… though, by the time of the third and final war
against Spain (1895) the thought of “slave-holding” had evolved to “U.S.-style
racism.”
In his battles for Cuban independence,
Maceo survived 24 battle wounds, coming near death on several occasions. He
achieved unprecedented military victories against superior forces and survived
numerous assassination-attempts from a declining empire that claimed the right
to control Cuba and Cubans. Can you imagine a more outdate idea?
In his time, the Spaniards called
him The Lion. Today, Cubans still
call him Maceo.
NEXT: Who could direct a movie
about Maceo The Lion?
Labels: Antonio Maceo, Braveheart, history, movies