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Andy Garcia



Last Updated: 5/14/2008

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 53
Sign: Aries

State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/4/2006

Who Gives Kudos:


Thursday, March 20, 2008 


The following are excerpts of the full interview that appears only in print.

H: Besides a student revolt, there is a conspicuous absence of workers and their plight in the movie. Why is that?

AG: The Cuban Revolution was led and financed by the middle class mainly. That’s the microcosms in which we focused the movie. It’d take a 10-hour series to go into all of the ramifications and historical depth of every aspect of the revolution. Ultimately you are trying to follow the point of view of the protagonist and how it affects this person.

We tried to hang this journey of this family on this individual and tried to reach into the fabric of the revolution through the brothers. Also, by showing the abuses of the Fulgencio Batista regime and the frustration of the characters who are involved in the revolution, we show why they laid down their lives and took extreme measures to change the government. A lot of people think the Cuban Revolution was like the Bolshevik Revolution, of peasants. That was not the case. It was an intellectual revolution to restore the constitution and democracy that Batista had abolished. It wasn’t a Marxist, Leninist, or communist revolution. That only happened as a change of direction and as a betrayal of the original ideas once Fidel Castro took power.

H: While the events depicted in the movie occurred almost 50 years ago, you portray Batista, Che Guevara, and Fidel in a similarly negative light, a vision that may not be shared by a younger generation who has come to see, particularly Che, as a great visionary. Do you think this movie will change that?

AG: I don’t know. Most people I ask, ’Do you know who you have on your T-Shirt?’ They will answer, ’Yeah, it’s Che Guevara, he was a revolutionary guy.’ That’s as much as they know about him. When you confront them and say ’Do you know he executed over 2,000 people in Cuba?’ They’d tell you they didn’t. This is historical fact, but people have limited knowledge about him. He talked about the necessity to execute, and about revolutionary justice being ultimate justice so you don’t need a trial to convict someone. This figure has been romanticized over the years and unfortunately people don’t take the time to read and learn about it.

H: Do you believe there is also a skewed, romantic vision of Cuba that is predominant outside the island?

AG: Yes, people think of Cuba as a social paradise. They argue that it has free education. Well, yes, only if you call indoctrination free education. If you believe that education is reading only the books they provide you. You can’t read Cabrera Infante or Faulkner because its illegal and you can go to jail. People believe the propaganda that the [Cuban] government has spread. People say: ’They have free medicine.’ Well, they have free diagnosis but no medicine for the people. There’s a lot of [misconceptions] that people in the Americas and around the world believe based on the propaganda that comes out of Cuba. As an exile you know the lack of civil liberties that Cubans have, but people in America don’t know that. The majority of people here know very little about American history, let alone Cuban history.

H: Your character in the movie goes into exile as an older man, but your own experience was leaving as a child.

AG: Yes, my character leaves around the same age as my father left.

H: How is your memory of that event, leaving as a child?

AG: I remember very specifically when I was told we were leaving, and I also remember very specifically leaving. You know the incident at the airport that happened to Fico happened to my family. Like all exiles, we had to go through what we called ’the fishbowl,’ where you were stripped of any belongings you had that they found of value. …Similarly, Fico goes through this and is stripped of all of his possessions; including the watch his father just gave him, which was the most important of all possessions. So things like that are very personal. Nestor Carbonell –who plays my brother Luis- his uncle was executed by Che Guevara. So being that most people that worked on the movie are exiles or the sons of exiles, it created a very strong and deep emotional basis for the performances and a strong commitment to the movie because it’s ultimately a very personal film.

H: It seems like foreign policy towards Cuba has become a waiting game for Castro’s death. Do you think there is more the world should be doing right now to remedy the conditions in which the Cuban people live?

AG: The entire world trades with Castro. I think America is the only country that enforces an embargo against Cuba. And it seems to me –this is just personal opinion- like every time there is talk of lifting the embargo something happens over there that makes the U.S. reconsider lifting it. I don’t believe he wants the embargo lifted, because once he has no embargo, then he has no enemy. That’s just my personal political theory. Also, the problem with an embargo-free Cuba is that it doesn’t solve the problem of Fidel’s embargo over the Cuban people that prevents them from participating in a market economy. The lifting of the embargo wouldn’t directly help the Cuban people. If they can only do business with the government, then how do the Cuban people benefit from that? Why don’t they benefit from the business that Cuba does with European nations? Those countries do business with the Cuban government, but Cuban citizens don’t have access to those business opportunities…And the benefits go to the government who can decide how much they trickle down to the people, which as you know, is nothing. The only way lifting the embargo could help stimulate the economy is if people are allowed to freely participate in a free market society so they can deal directly with investors coming in from the outside, or get hired by those investors. So there are two embargos that need to be lifted, the first is the embargo Fidel has over his own people, and obviously the American embargo. Until then nothing will happen. I don’t think Fidel wants the embargo lifted because it’d put pressure on him to open up the process. He blames the American embargo, but he also keeps it in place. Without an enemy, who’s going to like me?

H: Is a return to the 1940 constitution [which promoted a democratic state] a reality for post-Castro Cuba?

AG: I certainly hope so. It’s a simple move. All you have to say is: we want to go back to the promise of what the revolution was. The revolution has not fulfilled its original promise, which was to restore the constitution. It went in a different direction completely. So, yes, it is possible, but you’ll need a complete change in leadership. You can bet the house on the fact that the Cuban people would want that. But the question is: Will there be a government that wants to go in that direction, and have an election and restore democracy? It doesn’t mean you have to abandon social democracy. That was part of the Cuban constitution and of the revolutionary process. There were social programs established before the revolution, but the one thing that is not negotiable is freedom, democracy.

H: Do you see yourself returning to Cuba one day?

AG: Every day.
~Amelia~

 
I wasn't aware of what the Cuban people really went through until I knew about Andy Garcia the Man and the Actor. His Movie "The Lost City" and also The Movie, "For Love or Country" opened my eyes to a Terrible History and time that the Cuban people had to go through..I applaud this Man (Andy) for his efforts to open some eyes as to the atrocities these people have been through. I did not know one single thing about any of this until I started studying about the Revolution after watching Andy's movies...Thank You for waking me up..

Amelia
 
Posted by ~Amelia~ on Thursday, March 20, 2008 - 3:51 PM
[Reply to this
Loretta
Loretta Valeri

 
Dear Andy, to be honest I love your behaviour, of course you are a real impressive man, but what i admire more is that you rember your origin and give through your art a contribute to your birthland. Freedom and demopcrazy...the most important values.
Thank you very much and a big kiss
 
Posted by Loretta on Thursday, March 20, 2008 - 9:29 PM
[Reply to this
Adoro _ Zapatos *** THE Original ShowStopper***...

 
El hombre magnífico con la sabiduría y experimenta, eloquently shared.

Besos
 
Posted by Adoro _ Zapatos *** THE Original ShowStopper***... on Friday, March 21, 2008 - 12:25 AM
[Reply to this
Blaze

 
I almost cried reading that interview. It's an amazing interview and it is sure to open peoples eyes.
 
Posted by Blaze on Friday, March 21, 2008 - 6:09 AM
[Reply to this
~Amelia~

 
I WISH I KNEW WHERE TO PURCHASE THIS MAGAZINE..i WOULD LIKE TO READ ALL OF THE ARTICLE..
 
Posted by ~Amelia~ on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 - 5:22 AM
[Reply to this
hoBO

 
Amelia, here's the entire article;

http://www.hispaniconline.com/magazine/2006/april/features/search_of_lost_city.html

Hispanic Magazine April 2006
COVER STORY
In Search of The Lost City
By: Daniel Eilemberg
 
Posted by hoBO on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 - 11:43 PM
[Reply to this
hoBO

 
Muy bien dicho my hermano! Saludos de Los Angeles
 
Posted by hoBO on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 - 11:36 PM
[Reply to this
Stella

 
Most of the worst things in the world been done with the best intentions…
When the young rich guy became a Revolutionary leader of Cuba,
he gave a hope to the people…They believed in him and in his young and ambitious team…
Too much ambitious… and too much young… The Youth is wonderful,but
unfortunately is not wise...They came to the power.To the Real and Absolutely power…
And all the “best intentions” of Cuba revolution been buried in the name of the “Great Future”…
Pity, especially for the people who’s been forced to leave their motherland…
Just like your family…And many others…including my own ancestors,
which half been killed, the rest been forced to run away from their homeland during the Armenian genocide in Turkey at 1915…
I was always your big fan, Mr. Garcia, bcs you are a great actor and a gorgeous man, and I am not surprised that you are a wonderful human being as well… “The Lost City” is one of my favorite movies, thank you for this wonderful humanistic and actor work!
God bless you and your family! I wish you to be able to go back home soon...

Respect & regards, Stella.
 
Posted by Stella on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 - 5:15 PM
[Reply to this