East Bay Times

WAS HER NATIVE IDENTITY AN ACT?

Sisters say Sacheen Littlefeat­her, who declined Brando's best actor Oscar, faked her background

- By Martha Ross mross@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Sacheen Littlefeat­her was giddy as she hung up the phone in her San Francisco apartment in March 1973. The caller was Marlon Brando, she told her younger sister, Trudy Orlandi, and he had asked Littlefeat­her to appear on his behalf at the Academy Awards the following night, in case he won the best actor award for “The Godfather.”

At the time, Brando was a top Hollywood supporter of the American Indian Movement and acquainted with Littlefeat­her through her neighbor, Francis Ford Coppola. And

Brando had decided to cast the 26-year-old aspiring actress as his Oscars proxy to reject the award, denounce the negative stereotypi­ng of American Indians in entertainm­ent and bring attention to the Wounded Knee occupation protest in South Dakota.

Orlandi didn't understand Brando's choice. To her, Littlefeat­her was Marie Louise Cruz from Salinas, and they had a Mexican American father and White mother. But the next night, Orlandi watched on live TV as Littlefeat­her stoically ascended the Oscars stage in a buckskin dress and told a global audience of 85 million that she was Apache.

“It was a moving presentati­on, but it was a pretend Sacheen,” said Orlandi, who now lives in Marin County. “And White Mountain Apache? Where did that come from?”

To Orlandi, it was the beginning of Littlefeat­her's nearly half-century hoax.

Since Littlefeat­her's death in Novato on Oct. 2 at age 75, Orlandi, 72, and another sister, Rosalind Cruz, 65, have ignited an uproar in Native American circles by alleging their estranged activist sister spent 50 years faking an identity as White Mountain Apache and Yaqui. They say their sister's speech was the first time anyone in their Salinas family had ever talked about being Native American.

“It was mortifying,” said Cruz, of Lake County, Montana, of the Oscars appearance. “I thought, `Oh great, this is the lengths you will go to to get into acting.' ”

The allegation­s emerged into public view in October when Native American journalist Jacqueline Keeler published an investigat­ion into the Mexican ancestry of Littlefeat­her's California-born father, Manuel Cruz. Keeler is known for her aggressive efforts to

out alleged “Pretendian­s,” people who falsely claim to be Native American. Her research, which included records

going back to 1850, uncovered no ties between the Cruz family of Mexico

and the White Mountain Apache and Yaqui tribes.

None of Littlefeat­her's relatives identified as Native American, Keeler said. The Pascua Yaqui tribe in Arizona told this news organizati­on that Littlefeat­her wasn't enrolled, while the White Mountain Apache hasn't responded to media inquiries about her membership.

As the 50th anniversar­y of Littlefeat­her's Oscars moment approaches, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences continues to showcase Littlefeat­her as an icon of diversity in its glittery new museum in Los Angeles, where she is featured in an exhibit about iconic moments in the award ceremony's history.

Academy representa­tives have said the organizati­on recognizes “self-identifica­tion.” But it has inserted a disclaimer at the start of a three-hour interview with Littlefeat­her, posted on its YouTube channel, that says oral histories “should not be understood as statements of fact.” In that interview, Littlefeat­her claims she was raised in poverty by an abusive

alcoholic father and that she was “abandoned” by her parents who were too mentally ill to care for her. Littlefeat­her's sisters say those claims are false.

Littlefeat­her's longtime Bay Area friend, Bridget Neconie, said she and others never doubted Littlefeat­her was Apache or Yaqui. “She couldn't have been more Native,” said Neconie, an enrolled member

of the Pueblo of Acoma of New Mexico and former UC Berkeley assistant director of undergradu­ate admissions. “Maybe she didn't have the piece of paper to prove it, but there's no doubt about who she was.”

Other scholars and activists say Littlefeat­her's alleged fraud was “an open secret” for years, and that she obscured, embellishe­d or fabricated biographic­al

details. LaNada War Jack, one of the student organizers of the 19-month-long Native American occupation of Alcatraz that started in 1969, told this news organizati­on: “We applauded her when she spoke at the Oscars” but “we knew she wasn't Native.”

“It's one of the biggest hoaxes — certainly the biggest hoax since Iron Eyes Cody,” said Dina GilioWhita­ker,

a Cal State San Marcos lecturer of American Indian studies who was commission­ed at one point to ghostwrite Littlefeat­her's memoir. Cody, a secondgene­ration Italian American actor, has become infamous for falsely claiming to be Native American after playing the role in movies, TV and the “Keep America Beautiful” public service ads in the early 1970s.

After Littlefeat­her's sisters learned about her death, they went public with their fraud allegation­s because, they said, their sister's “lies” maligned their parents, Manuel and Geroldine Cruz. The truth, they say, is that their parents, self-employed makers of horse saddles, raised their three daughters in a loving middle-class home. Geroldine Cruz was not a battered wife or mentally ill, and their hearing-impaired father never touched alcohol or abused his children. He died of cancer when Sacheen was 19, Orlandi said.

It was around the same time Littlefeat­her reportedly suffered a breakdown. She spent a year in Agnews Insane Asylum in Santa Clara and was diagnosed with schizoaffe­ctive disorder, which can include mood swings, hallucinat­ions

and delusions.

Helene Hagan, a historian, anthropolo­gist and former longtime friend, believes that Littlefeat­her's Native American claims and “delusions” of being “a suffering, victimized woman” began around this time.

Some of Littlefeat­her's claims about aiding Native American organizati­ons can be verified. The San Francisco Ballet confirmed she worked as an adviser for the Emmy-winning 1984 telecast of Michael Smuin's “Song for Dead Warriors,” and she served as a board member of the American Indian AIDS Institute.

Other claims appear to have been exaggerate­d or are simply false, including that she worked with Mother Teresa on AIDS patients, that she participat­ed in the Native American protest-occupation at Alcatraz and that John Wayne tried to attack her at her Oscars appearance.

Orlandi and Cruz just want the truth to be known about their family.

“My mom was a very sweet, kind person,” Orlandi said. “I never saw my sister being beaten by my dad. … She made this man out to be a monster. This guy cannot protect himself or his name or his reputation.”

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Trudy Orlandi, with a second grade photo of her sister Marie Louise Cruz at home in Marin County, talks about the woman who would later become famous as the Native American activist Sacheen Littlefeat­her.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Trudy Orlandi, with a second grade photo of her sister Marie Louise Cruz at home in Marin County, talks about the woman who would later become famous as the Native American activist Sacheen Littlefeat­her.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Sacheen Littlefeat­her, a Native American activist, tells the audience at the Academy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles, March 27, 1973, that Marlon Brando was declining to accept his Oscar as best actor for his role in “The Godfather.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Sacheen Littlefeat­her, a Native American activist, tells the audience at the Academy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles, March 27, 1973, that Marlon Brando was declining to accept his Oscar as best actor for his role in “The Godfather.”
 ?? ?? Brando
Brando
 ?? FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES ?? Sacheen Littlefeat­her appears onstage at an event at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles on Sept. 17, 2022. Littlefeat­her, who was born Marie Louise Cruz in Salinas, died in Novato on Oct. 2 at age 75.
FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES Sacheen Littlefeat­her appears onstage at an event at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles on Sept. 17, 2022. Littlefeat­her, who was born Marie Louise Cruz in Salinas, died in Novato on Oct. 2 at age 75.

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