Glasgow-based artist Phil Collins’s film Soy Mi Madre examines the immigrant populations of Colorado’s Roaring Fork Valley, a sizable percentage of which hail from northwestern Mexico. The region relies heavily on service and maintenance work provided largely through this population, who often commute to work in Aspen. Loosely inspired by Jean Genet’s The Maids—a seminal example of Theatre of the Absurd that renders surreal the intricate power dynamics that exist between people of divergent socioeconomic groups and exploits the volatility of social identity—Soy Mi Madre portrays the social realities of this region through the melodramatic lens of the telenovela. Reproduced in this volume through a generous selection of stills, the film uses popular Mexican television actors and crew, including Patricia Reyes Spindola, Zaide Silvia Guitérrez, Veronica Langer, and Salvador Parra, as well as members of the transsexual prostitute community of Mexico City.
Phil Collins
Director
Graham Clayton-Chance
Writer

Verónica Langer
Clara

Sonia Couoh
Solana
Gina Morett
Clara

Patricia Reyes Spíndola
Clara

Zaide Silvia Gutiérrez
Sable Sainte

Tenoch Huerta Mejía
Ramón
Miriam Calderón
Sable Sainte

Dobrina Liubomirova
Sable Sainte
Almadella
Clara
God's Pocket58%
Holy Lands61%
Brotherly Love70%
La joven69%
What Maisie Knew71%
El Chicano66%
Mexicali77%
Hungry Hearts65%
Farming62%
El Greco59%
Skin64%
In the Family67%
The Safety of Objects65%
Hellion58%
Frontera65%
Bastard Out of Carolina71%
The Truth About Emanuel59%
TalhotBlond63%
Normal66%
A Dry White Season67%