Teatro Paraguas is pleased to present a screening of Salt of the Earth, which focuses on the incredible story of the 1951 strike by the Mexican-American miners and their wives against the Empire Zinc mine in Bayard, New Mexico. The 15-month strike by Local 890 of the International Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union was the first successful mine strike in U.S. history. When the mining company invoked the Taft-Hartley Act to make it illegal for the miners to strike, their wives and mothers took over the picket line.
The movie Salt of the Earth was produced in 1954, written by Michael Wilson, directed by Herbert J. Biberman, and produced by Paul Jarrico. 1954 was the height of the McCarthy Era, and Wilson, Biberman, and Jarrico were all three blacklisted by the Hollywood establishment due to their alleged involvement in communist politics. Salt of the Earth was produced under incredibly difficult conditions. Rosaura Revueltas, a famous Mexican actor who starred as Esperanza -- the pregnant wife of one of the chief miners -- was deported during the filming. The company was harassed while shooting scenes, and the set was vandalized. No film lab would process the film. No union crew would work for the film, nor Hollywood actors. The men and women of the mining community played the characters in the film. Salt of the Earth was one of the first fully independent films made outside the Hollywood studio system.
Beginning March 6, 2026, Teatro Paraguas will present the premiere production of Esperanza, a play by Carlos Morton based on the movie. Esperanza is directed by Paola Vengoechea and Elsa López, and stars Dalia Melendez as Esperanza and Joaquin Rodriguez as her husband and union leader Ramon. Original music and songs in the play were written by Luis Moreno and Tony Ybarra. Jonathan Harrell is the music director for the production. The production runs for nine performances March 6-22, 2026.
Donations from the screening of Salt of the Earth will be used to defray costs of Esperanza's production.
Please join us Sunday, February 15th at 2:00 PM
Free Screening, donations welcome!
Contact: Argos MacCallum argos@teatroparaguas.org 505-365-9459