Violeta Went to Heaven
Violeta Went to Heaven is a 2011 Chilean biographical drama film about singer and folklorist Violeta Parra, directed by Andrés Wood. The film is based on a biography by Ángel Parra, Violeta's son with Luis Cereceda Arenas. He collaborated on the film.
The film was selected as the Chilean entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. It was awarded the World Cinema Jury Prize at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
Plot
The film portrays the life of Violeta del Carmen Parra Sandoval and her path to becoming one of Chile's most renowned folklorists and artists. It details her early guitar playing, the influence of her musician father, and her experiences in the rural areas of southern Chile's Ñuble Province.The film follows Parra's project to study Chilean folk music, with the aim of preserving and reinterpreting traditional composition styles to create the genre now known as Nueva Canción Chilena. It shows her seeking out old musicians and requesting them to sing or play the songs they knew.
The film covers her travels to Warsaw, Poland, and Paris, France, where she performed and visited parts of Europe and the Soviet Union. It also portrays the events in Chile leading up to the tragic death of her daughter Rosita during her absence.
The film explores Parra's tumultuous relationship with Swiss flautist Gilbert Favre, whom she met when he accompanied an anthropologist specializing in Chilean folklore to Chile. It follows her artistic diversification, including her oil painting and mixed-media tapestry called arpilleras or Hessian. The film also follows Parra and Favre's stay in Geneva and Paris, including her visit to the Musée du Louvre, where she became the first Latin American woman to have a solo exhibition.
Upon their return to South America, Favre and Parra separated, as he wanted to live in Bolivia, where he was part of a successful Bolivian music group, Los Jairas. Parra focused her energy on reviving a unique version of a Peña, a community center for the arts and political activism. She set up her tent on a 30x30 meter piece of land in the Parque La Quintrala in today's La Reina municipality of Santiago, in the area once known as la Cañada. The tent hosted musical events and political activism, and Parra and her children lived on the same land. The film chronicles her dealings with Fernando Castillo Velasco, the mayor of the area at the time, who helped her establish the site. Favre later returns with his group but declines to stay, and Parra humbly begs him to remain, but he had already established a life and married in Bolivia.
The film depicts the changing atmosphere of the tent, at times lively with artists during the day and music and political activism at night, and at other times desolate or too rainy and cold to be hospitable, leaving Parra suffering from poverty and loneliness.
The film concludes with Parra's suicide on February 5, 1967.
Cast
- Francisca Gavilán as Violeta Parra
- Gabriela Aguilera as Hilda Parra
- Daniel Antivilo as Sr. Mayer
- Stephania Barbagelata as Carmen Luisa
- Eduardo Burlé
- Pablo Costabal
- Juan Quezada as Don Guillermo
- Sergio Piña as Mario
- Cristián Quevedo as Nicanor Parra
- Francisco Acuña as the young Nicanor Parra
- Thomas Durand as Gilbert Favre
- Roberto Farías as Luis Arce
- Vanesa González as Blonde Model
- Luis Machín as Interviewer