Sarah Maldoror

Birthday: 1929-07-19
Deathday: 2020-04-13
Birthplace: Condom, France
Gender: Female

Sarah Maldoror (in Arabic: سارة مالدورور), whose real name was Marguerite Sarah Ducados, was a French filmmaker and director, born on July 19, 1929 in Condom (Gers) and died on April 13, 2020 in Fontenay-lès-Briis (Essonne). Her cinema is poetic but also political and committed. She is considered a leading figure in African cinema and the first female director on the continent.

Born to a Guadeloupean father from Marie-Galante and a mother from Gers, she chose the artist name "Maldoror" in homage to the poet Lautréamont. In 1958, she created the first black troupe in Paris, "Les Griots", alongside Toto Bissainthe, Timoti Bassori and Samb Abambacar. One of their goals is to share and make known the texts of black authors, and to offer major roles to actors of African origin. Sarah Maldoror left for two years in Moscow to study cinema at VGIK under the guidance of Mark Donskoï. There she met the Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembène.

Companion of Mário Pinto de Andrade, Angolan poet and politician, she participated with him in the African liberation struggles. They gave birth to two daughters, Annouchka de Andrade and Henda Ducados. She returned to France in Saint-Denis. Mario de Andrade is the founder and first president of the MPLA (Movement for the Liberation of Angola). While he was secretary to Alioune Diop, founder of Présence africaine, he organized the first congress of black writers and artists in Paris (Sorbonne, 1958) and became a close friend of the poets Aimé Césaire, Léopold Sédar Senghor, Frantz Fanon and Richard Wright.

It was in Algiers, where she moved in 1966, that she made her debut on the cinematographic front of the anti-colonial struggles: assistant on Gillo Pontecorvo's Battle of Algiers (1966) and William Klein's Pan-African Festival of Algiers 1969, a documentary, she soon made her first film, followed by a lost film shot in Guinea-Bissau and a first "fiction" feature film, Sambizanga (1972). Filmed in the Republic of Congo, based on an Angolan novel by José Luandino Vieira, adapted by his partner Pinto de Andrade with the French writer Maurice Pons, Sambizanga takes place in 1961 and describes the repression of the Angolan Liberation Movement from the point of view of Maria, the wife of a revolutionary activist imprisoned and tortured by the Portuguese army, who sets out to look for him across the country.

Sarah Maldoror will direct more than forty short or feature-length films, fiction films or documentaries. Her gaze has focused in particular on the poets Aimé Césaire (five films), René Depestre or Louis Aragon, as well as the painters Ana Mercedes Hoyos, Joan Miró or Vlady.

She died in April 2020 from Covid-19. In November 2021, "Sarah Maldoror, Cinéma Tricontinental" proposed by the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, is a retrospective of her work, her life and her political commitment. The exhibition continues at the Musée de l'Homme, the Musée de l'Histoire de l'immigration and the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire Paul Éluard in Saint-Denis.

Credits

Year Title
2009-11-19 Papa Césaire
2009-01-01 Ana Mercedes Hoyos
2005-01-14 Scala Milan AC
2005-01-01 Les oiseaux mains
2003-01-01 Memory's Gaze
1998-01-01 Tribu du bois de l'E
1996-01-01 L'Enfant cinéma
1995-05-02 Léon G. Damas
1989-01-01 Vlady
1987-10-17 Robert Doisneau, photographe
1987-08-05 Le Passager du Tassili
1987-03-29 Rencontre avec Assia Djebar
1987-01-01 Aimé Césaire: The Mask of Words
1986-11-16 First International Conference for Black Women
1986-10-05 A Senegalese Man in Normandy
1986-06-01 Tunisian Literature at the French National Library
1986-05-04 Point Virgule
1986-01-01 Emanuel Ungaro
1986-01-01 Alberto Carlisky
1986-01-01 Point Virgule, Youth Journal
1985-12-15 Portrait of Christiane Diop
1985-01-01 Portrait of an African Woman
1985-01-01 Public Writer
1984-11-26 Claudel in Reims
1984-05-15 Toto Bissainthe
1984-01-01 Robert Lapoujade, peintre
1983-05-28 The Hospital of Leningrad
1982-01-01 René Depestre, poète haïtien
1981-03-12 Dessert for Constance
1980-10-08 Wielopole, Wielopole as Staged by Kantor
1980-01-01 Carnival in Bissau
1980-01-01 Wifredo Lam
1980-01-01 Opening of the Theater Noir in Paris
1979-07-10 Miró, The Painter
1979-01-01 Carnival in the Sahel
1979-01-01 Fogo, Fire Island
1979-01-01 Foreign-Inspired Architecture in Paris
1978-01-01 Louis Aragon, a mask in Paris
1978-01-01 Père Lachaise Cemetery
1977-01-01 Aimé Césaire at the End of Daybreak
1977-01-01 The Basilica of Saint-Denis
1976-05-02 Aimé Césaire, Un homme une terre
1976-04-27 And the Dogs Were Silent
1973-04-26 Sambizanga
1972-06-01 Saint-Denis-sur-Avenir
1970-01-01 Guns for Banta
1968-01-01 Monangambeee