Vancouver Sun

Without a trace

‘Chicano hero’ who vanished focus of new doc

- RUSSELL CONTRERAS

The Rise and Fall of the Brown Buffalo Debuts Friday, PBS

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. Oscar Zeta Acosta, a volatile Mexican-American writer who was the real-life inspiratio­n for Hunter S. Thompson’s Dr. Gonzo in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, is the focus of a new VOCES/PBS documentar­y.

The Rise and Fall of the Brown Buffalo traces the life of the lawyer-turned-writer who became a central figure in the Chicano Movement before disappeari­ng without a trace in Mexico in 1974.

Using actors to recreate Acosta’s own words and interviews from friends, the PBS documentar­y follows his evolution from the U.S. air force to becoming a “Robin Hood” lawyer who defended poor black tenants in Oakland, Calif., and radical Mexican-American activists in Los Angeles.

Along the way, the El Paso, Texas-born Acosta ventured to Aspen, Colo., where he befriended Thompson and other white countercul­tural figures of the late 1960s. The hellraisin­g pair eventually travelled to Las Vegas on a drug-fuelled trip that Thompson re-created in his 1972 novel, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.

The journalist portrayed Acosta as a 300-pound Samoan who couldn’t get enough food, drugs and danger — a portrayal that angered Acosta because it ignored his Mexican-American identity.

Following a legal fight, Acosta gave the OK to publish Thompson’s book in exchange for publishing two of his own memoirs, Autobiogra­phy of a Brown Buffalo and The Revolt of the Cockroach People. Both became classics in Chicano literature.

Then, he disappeare­d. Director Phillip Rodriguez said Acosta’s colourful life made him a great subject.

Unlike better-known Chicano activists such as Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, Rodriguez said everyone knew that Acosta was not a saint because of his public battles with addiction and mental illness.

“He was struggling with himself,” Rodriguez said. “But he was a man of action and challenged the whole notion (of ) what it means to be a Chicano hero.”

Rodriguez said he opted to use actors to re-enact interviews and Acosta’s writing since little archive footage exists.

In the documentar­y, actors portraying former activists spoke of Acosta using Bob Dylan lyrics in closing arguments, detailed how he brought drugs in the courtroom and talked about Acosta keeping the remains of his stillborn daughter in a jar to cope with her death.

“He was really crazy,” Raul Ruiz, 70, said the former editor of La Raza paper in Los Angeles.

After his second marriage fell apart and sales of his books fell flat, Acosta went to Mazatlán, Mexico, and disappeare­d. Santiago Vaquera-Vasquez, a writer and Spanish and Portuguese professor at the University of New Mexico, said Acosta’s books grew important after his disappeara­nce as scholars and students sought more literature about the Mexican-American experience.

“His outrage and crazy lifestyle in the cities served as a counter to other works which were romantic and more rural,” said Vaquera Vasquez, who uses Acosta’s work in his courses.

 ??  ?? Oscar Zeta Acosta
Oscar Zeta Acosta

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