Read Gabriel García Márquez Online
Authors: Ilan Stavans
This movie fever was far from being an exclusively local affair. Mexican movies were distributed all over the Spanish-speaking worldâfrom Montevideo, Uruguay, to San José, Costa Ricaâand pleased these audiences more than Hollywood could. But Hollywood wasn't far away. There were constant collaborations: Dolores del RÃo, the star of
MarÃa Candelaria,
traveled to Los Angeles to do some projects, and Emilio
“El Indio” Fernández directed
La perla,
an adaptation of John Steinbeck's novella.
The idea of making a career in the movies was tempting to GarcÃa Márquez. He was ready to settle down and have more children. Until then he hadn't received a single royalty check for his books. The film industry allowed him to nurture dreams of stability.
Perhaps GarcÃa Márquez's love of film is rooted in his childhood passion for comics and drawing. In Colombia he had been involved, however peripherally, with the making of
El grupo de Barranquilla
's short,
La langosta azul.
During his European sojourn, he stayed briefly in Italy and enrolled in some film classes at Cinecità .
GarcÃa Márquez went to the movies “almost every day.” His newspaper columns were regularly devoted to film reviews. His favorite filmmakers were Orson Welles (he especially admired
The Immortal Story
) and Akira Kurosawa (whom he met in 1990 in Tokyo). He followed French New Wave and Italian Neorealism and was an enthusiast of François Truffaut's
Jules et Jim
and Roberto Rossellini's
Il generale della Rovere.
If one wished to collect everything GarcÃa Márquez ever wrote about
el séptimo arte,
as filmmaking is known in Spanish, it would easily fill a couple of three-hundred-page volumes.
*
GarcÃa Márquez's life-long passion for film is in sharp contrast to his ambivalence to sports. Colombia, Venezuela, and Cuba are known as fertile baseball cradles, yet none of his columnsâor his novelsâcontain a single reference to the sport, although
Living to Tell the Tale
does mention, in passing, some games of soccer he played when he was a child.
3
Soccer is the most popular sport in Europe, as well as Mexico and other parts of Latin America. Again, there is absolute silence about it in his work. The sole exception is a serial in
El Espectador
of Bogotá entitled “The Triple Champion Reveals His Secrets,” about Ramón Hoyos, a Colombian bicycle champion. The story was based on one-on-one interviews with the athlete, but was written by GarcÃa Márquez in the first person as though the installments were part of Hoyos's autobiography.
Ãlvaro Mutis had arrived in Mexico City in 1956. He had worked in public relations for Esso, Standard Oil, Panamerican, and Columbia Pictures, but Esso accused him of misappropriating the company's money. Apparently, Mutis had at his disposal a fund for charitable endeavors, but he spent the money rather capriciously on other projects, most of which were cultural endeavors. Esso judged the behavior to be unacceptable and sued Mutis. Before any action could be taken, he flew to
El De Efe
on an emergency trip arranged by one of his brothers and some acquaintances. He settled there, thriving in the city's intellectual atmosphere.
At the age of thirty-three, Mutis had moved from Bogotá. He had brought with him a couple of letters of recommendation, one of which was addressed to Luis Buñuel, the Spanish filmmaker who lived in exile in Mexico. Like most young intellectuals in Latin America, Mutis had been hypnotized by Buñuel's surrealist style.
Un chien andalou,
released in 1929, was an epoch-making experiment in which dreamlike images allowed audiences to see
el séptimo arte
as a conduit to the
unconscious. Buñuel's
Los olvidados
(
The Young and the Damned
), which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1950, dissected the Mexico City slums with astonishing power. Intellectuals such as Octavio Paz and Carlos Fuentes were effusive about the daring way in which Buñuel used the camera to create a documentary-like fictional account of neglected street children, the failure of schools and government institutions to help them, and the resulting violence from this social problem. Mutis applauded the connection between cinema and politics that Buñuel achieved in his movie.
Eventually, his problem with Esso caught up with him and in 1959, Mutis was arrested for having misappropriated company funds while he was an employee in Colombia. The process was rather quick. In spite of the support of his friends Juan Rulfo, Octavio Paz, poet and editor Ali Chumacero, scholar José Luis MartÃnez, Colombian painter Fernando Botero, and GarcÃa Márquez, Mutis's legal fortunes worsened. Faced with extradition, he was instead sent to the Mexican prison of Lecumberri, known as “
El Penal,
”
el palacio negro,
the black palace. He was in prison for fifteen months, a time he wrote about in an extraordinary document entitled
Diary of the Lecumberri.
4
By the time the GarcÃa Márquezes arrived in
El De Efe,
Mutis had been out of prison for months. He had kept his friend aware of his dramatic incarceration and the efforts to free him. Once released, he continued to keep him abreast of the latest on various intellectuals and artists. The Lecumberri episode had not diminished Mutis's gratitude toward his host country. The love for Mexico he expressed to GarcÃa Márquez no doubt served to lure the writer and his family.
At this point, Mutis was working for Producciones Barbachano Ponce, a film company at the heart of the Mexican movie boom. He first housed the GarcÃa Márquezes in one of the Apartamentos Bonampak on Calle Mérida, then at Renán #21, in the Anzures neighborhood. Eventually, the family moved
to the well-to-do neighborhood of San Ãngel Inn, in the southern part of the city, not too far from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, the oldest and largest institution of higher learning in Latin America. Their first child, Rodrigo, was still a baby. They had a mattress, a crib, a table and two chairs. Still, Mutis did everything possible to make them feel comfortable.
For GarcÃa Márquez, Mutis served as a key to the Mexican intelligentsia. He was acquainted with important figures of the time, including the crème de la crème of the Mexican cultural scene: novelist Carlos Fuentes; poet, essayist, and diplomat Octavio Paz; fiction writer Juan Rulfo; editor and anthropologist Fernando BenÃtez; short-story writer and public intellectual Juan José Arreola, and journalist and novelist Elena Poniatowska, as well as expatriate filmmaker Jomà GarcÃa Ascot and his wife, MarÃa Luisa Elio.
GarcÃa Márquez's friendship with Carlos Fuentes dates to this period. One year GarcÃa Márquez's junior, Fuentes was born in Panama City in 1928. His father was a Mexican diplomat, and the family lived in Montevideo, Rio de Janeiro, Washington D.C., Santiago, and Buenos Aires. This diasporic existence contributed not only to Fuentes's universalist view of Hispanic civilization, which he perceived as a sponge that absorbed elements from every other important culture, but to his pitch-perfect command of both English and Spanish. In 1959, Fuentes published his magnum opus, the Balzakian saga
La region más transparente
(Where the Air Is Clear) and
Las buenas conciencias
(The Good Conscience).
Aura
, a Henry James-inspired novella about the young biographer of a caudillo, a military figure active during the Mexican Revolution of 1910, is arguably his most popular, perhaps his most successful, work. Published by the Spanish refugee-sponsored Ediciones Era in 1962, the narrative uses the second-person singular (“You wake up . . .”) as an experimental device. Fuentes's fascination
with the revolution is at the heart of his masterpiece,
The Death of Artemio Cruz,
also released in 1962. These works are set in Mexico City, where Fuentes returned as an adolescent and lived until 1965. Although he spent many years abroad, he always considered the metropolis his center of gravity.
Mutis gave Carlos Fuentes some of GarcÃa Márquez's work which had been published in Bogotá's periodical
Mito.
Fuentes was then co-editor, along with Emanuel Carballo, of the prestigious
Revista Mexicana de Literatura.
He reprinted some of the stories in his magazine, including “
Monólogo de Isabel viendo llover en Macondo
” (Monologue of Isabel Watching It Rain in Macondo). When the second edition of
No One Writes to the Colonel
was published, Fuentes wrote a review in
La Cultura en México,
the supplement of the magazine
Siempre!
Referred to by the Mexican press as
el duo dinámico,
Fuentes and GarcÃa Márquez remained friends into their eighties, long after other members of
El Boom
had died and the few remaining ones had become distant, largely as a result of ideological differences. In 2007, the Royal Spanish Academy published a commemorative edition of
One Hundred Years of Solitude
to celebrate GarcÃa Márquez's eightieth birthday and the book's fortieth anniversary, for which Carlos Fuentes wrote an affectionate piece praising their friendship and ratifying the novel's standing among the classics. And he was next to GarcÃa Márquez when, in April of that year, the volume was presented to the public during the IV Congreso Internacional de la Lengua Española, in Cartagena. Likewise, in 2009, when the Royal Spanish Academy published a commemorative edition of
Where the Air Is Clear
to coincide with its fiftieth anniversary, GarcÃa Márquez joined Fuentes in Mexico City to present it to the public.
The empathy they shared went beyond an emotional bond. The left-wing ideological persuasion that defined Fuentes and
GarcÃa Márquez when they were young remained strong as they matured while other Latin American writers shifted in different political directions. They remained supportive of Fidel Castro's regime, sympathized with the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, and sharply criticized neoliberalism as a veiled marketing strategy in the eighties. It is important to remember that upon meeting Fuentes in
El De Efe,
GarcÃa Márquez was the less accomplished of the two. Fuentes was a polyglot (his English and French were impeccable) and an extraordinarily dynamic intellectual. Known for his looks, he was also intimately connected to the film world. His first wife was actress Rita Macedo, whom he married in 1957. He claimed to have had an affair with actress Jean Seberg, iconic for, among other reasons, her role in Jean-Luc Goddard's 1959 film
à bout de souffle,
known to American audiences as
Breathless.
The relationship appears to have been imagined by Fuentes. In part to refute accusations that it never took place, he wrote the 1994 novella,
Diana, The Goddess Who Hunts Alone,
in which the lead female character is modeled after Seberg.
GarcÃa Márquez's sojourn in Mexico was a period of fresh encounters. In addition to Fuentesâwith whom he spent part of his Sundays having teaâhe and Mercedes became close with Jomà GarcÃa Ascot and MarÃa Luisa ElÃo, to whom the Spanish edition of
One Hundred Years of Solitude
is dedicated. (The French edition has a different dedication: “Pour Carmen et Ãlvaro Mutis.”) GarcÃa Márquez also befriended the Catalan filmmaker GarcÃa Ascot, who was born in Tunis, Morocco, in 1927. The son of a diplomat who spent his childhood in Portugal, France, Belgium, and Morocco, GarcÃa Ascot arrived in Mexico City in 1939 as a refugee from the Spanish Civil War. He studied at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and was a founder of the institution's film club. He directed the movies
Un dÃa de trabajo
(A Day of Work, 1960) and
El viaje
(The Journey, 1976), and a short documentary on surrealist painter Remedios Varo.
MarÃa Luisa ElÃo and her husband were the GarcÃa Márquezes' neighbors in the San Ãngel Inn section of Mexico City. The Colombians lived in Loma #19 and the Spaniards in Cárpatos #14. The connection was fruitful. Not only would the couples go to the movies together but ElÃo later recalled how GarcÃa Márquez would regale them with extraordinary stories he would tell, even an entire plot, which he improvised in front of them.
One Hundred Years of Solitude
was taking shape.
5
In the essay “
La odisea literaria de un manuscrito
” (The Literary Odyssey of a Manuscript), published in the Spanish newspaper
El PaÃs
in 2001, GarcÃa Márquez wrote: “MarÃa Luisa ElÃo, with her clairvoyant drive, and Jomà GarcÃa Ascot, her husband, paralyzed with poetic stupor, listened to my improvised stories as if they were ciphered signals from the Divine Providence. Thus, I didn't doubt for a second, from their early visits onward, that I would dedicate the book to them.”
6
On April 16, 1962, GarcÃa Márquez's second son, Gonzalo, was born.
7
The family moved to a larger apartment at Calle de IxtaccÃhuatl #88, in Colonia Florida. At the time, GarcÃa Márquez's principal source of income was screenplays. Mutis had introduced him to Miguel Barbachano Ponce, and, through him, GarcÃa Márquez met other screenwriters, directors, and actors. His reputation as an exemplary fabulist began to earn him commissions. Writing for the screen was exciting but frustrating. He would spend weeks drafting a script only to find out, after a long process, that it would be shelved, sometimes forever. GarcÃa Márquez worked on various scripts simultaneously, if only to make ends meet for his growing family.
A few of them did see the light of day, albeit not immediately. He made the adaptation, along with Barbachano Ponce, for
Lola de mi vida
(Lola of My Life, 1965), but the screenplay
was credited to Juan de la Cabada and Carlos A. Figueroa.
En este pueblo no hay ladrones
(No Thieves in This Town, 1965) was based on one of his stories and adapted by Emilio GarcÃa Riera, who would become one of Mexico's most distinguished film critics, together with Alberto Isaac. Isaac's brother, Jorge, directed the film. There were others, too, such as the two-part
Juegos peligrosos
(Dangerous Games, 1966), based on another of his storiesâdirected by Arturo Ripstein, Buñuel's one-time assistant (who would adapt other GarcÃa Márquez material for the screen, including the 1999 coproduction among Mexico, Spain, and France,
No One Writes to the Colonel
), and Luis Alcorizaâand
Patsy mi amor
(Patsy My Love, 1969), directed by Manuel Michel.