East Bay Times

Indigenous report has agitated Hollywood

New Sacheen Littlefeat­her story reignites `Pretendian' flap ahead of possible historic Oscar moment

- By Martha Ross

As Lily Gladstone is set to appear at tonight's Academy Awards, the first Native American woman nominated for a best actress Oscar, her historic moment could wind up competing for attention with a controvers­ial new developmen­t in a case that has made waves in Hollywood and in Native American circles for 50 years.

A report in a leading Hollywood trade publicatio­n seeks to shed new light on the case of Sacheen Littlefeat­her, the late Bay Area activist who made global headlines at the 1973 Oscars when, dressed in a buckskin dress and presenting herself as Apache, she refused Marlon Brando's best actor trophy to protest the misreprese­ntation of American Indians in the film and TV industry.

After Littlefeat­her's death in 2022, her surviving sisters came forward in an explosive investigat­ive report to accuse Littlefeat­her of lying about her credential­s and being a “Pretendian,” someone who falsely claims to be Native American for fame or profession­al opportunit­ies.

Now The Hollywood Reporter, citing newly uncovered 200-year-old documents about Littlefeat­her's Mexican-born great-great-great grandfathe­r, claims she might have “Indigenous ancestry after all” — while acknowledg­ing that the records “do not appear to contradict” earlier reports on Littlefeat­her's family tree.

The report has sparked an uproar in Native American circles, and Littlefeat­her's sisters, Trudy Orlandi and Rosalind Cruz, say it has forced them to relive the “trauma” of their difficult relationsh­ip with a woman they describe as a serial fabulist.

“We spoke the truth about our sister, and this feels like a desperate attempt to rehabilita­te her (image) at our family's expense,” Cruz said in a statement.

Before Littlefeat­her died in 2022, the museum run by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles, which presents the annual awards, apologized to her for the boos and threats she faced at the 1973 awards ceremony. And it has generally supported her claims of Native ancestry, saying the Academy recognizes “selfidenti­fication.”

But the timing of the inquiry raises questions — including why such a powerful industry voice would rehash the Littlefeat­her controvers­y when Gladstone, an actor of Blackfeet and Nez Perce descent, is a frontrunne­r to win an Oscar for her performanc­e in “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

A Daily Beast report by Chickasaw journalist Anthony Perry quoted Cedar Sherbert, a filmmaker and citizen of the Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel, as saying the effort to salvage Littlefeat­her's reputation is another example of the film industry's “dismal track record” of misreprese­nting Native people.

The story by Rebecca Sun, the Hollywood Reporter's diversity and inclusion editor, was prompted by documents shared by Gayle Anne Kelley, a filmmaker who made “Sacheen: Breaking the Silence,” a short 2018 documentar­y about Littlefeat­her's life and brush with Oscars history. Sun told this news organizati­on the decision to publish the story is separate from the industry's recognitio­n of Gladstone's Oscar nomination.

Sun's story explained that a former New York City police detective and a genealogis­t helped Kelley uncover baptismal records of a Cruz family ancestor who was born in the Mexican state of Sonora in 1819.

The crux of the argument for Littlefeat­her's possible Indigenous heritage hangs on wording on a baptismal document that describes her ancestor, Juan Antonio Gonzales Seam, as “Yaquis criollos de la tierra.” According to Sun, this phrase translates to “Yaquis raised from the land.” But Native American journalist Jacquline Keeler, who has become known for her reporting on alleged Pretendian­s, has seen the records and told THR that the wording does not denote Indigenous ethnicity. The family, she says, could have been Spanish migrants to the land.

Orlandi and Cruz maintain that Littlefeat­her was born Marie Louise Cruz to a Mexican American father and White mother in Salinas. After the 75-year-old Littlefeat­her died of cancer in Marin County in October 2022, Orlandi and Cruz were sources of informatio­n for Keeler's published reports in the San Francisco Chronicle and on Substack that cited research into Littlefeat­her's family records, going back to 1850. That research found no Cruz family connection­s to the White Mountain Apache tribe, to which Littlefeat­her began to claim affiliatio­n in the early 1970s, or to the Yaqui tribe, to which she made “vague claims” starting in the 1990s.

Last year, the Pascua Yaqui Tribe in Arizona told this news organizati­on that Littlefeat­her wasn't enrolled, while the White Mountain Apache did not respond to media inquiries about her membership.

Littlefeat­her's sisters mainly went public to dispute Littlefeat­her's claim in Kelley's film she survived a violent, impoverish­ed childhood. Orlandi and Cruz maintain they were raised in a comfortabl­e middle-class home by loving, hard-working parents.

 ?? ROBYN BECK — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Lily Gladstone poses with the award for best performanc­e by a female actor in a motion picture — drama for “Killers of the Flower Moon” in the media room during the 81st annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills on Jan. 7.
ROBYN BECK — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Lily Gladstone poses with the award for best performanc­e by a female actor in a motion picture — drama for “Killers of the Flower Moon” in the media room during the 81st annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills on Jan. 7.
 ?? FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES ?? Sacheen Littlefeat­her on stage at AMPAS Presents An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeat­her at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles on Sept. 17, 2022.
FRAZER HARRISON — GETTY IMAGES Sacheen Littlefeat­her on stage at AMPAS Presents An Evening with Sacheen Littlefeat­her at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles on Sept. 17, 2022.

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