The Boston Globe

Lourdes Portillo, 80, acclaimed filmmaker

- By Orlando Mayorquín

Lourdes Portillo, an Oscarnomin­ated Mexican-born documentar­y filmmaker whose work explored Latin American social issues, died Saturday at her home in San Francisco. She was 80.

One of Ms. Portillo’s bestknown works is her 1994 documentar­y “The Devil Never Sleeps,” a murder-mystery in which she investigat­es the strange death of her multimilli­onaire uncle, whose widow claimed he had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. In 2020, the Library of Congress selected the film for the National Film Registry.

“Using vintage snapshots, old home movies and interviews, the film builds a biographic­al portrait of Oscar Ruiz Almeida, a Mexican rancher who amassed a fortune exporting vegetables to the United States and went on to become a powerful politician and businessma­n,” Stephen Holden, a New York Times movie critic, wrote in a 1995 review of the film.

The documentar­y had the tenor of a telenovela and presented open questions about Ruiz Almeida’s mysterious life and death and the people who could have had a motive for the murder.

“The more Oscar is discussed, the more enigmatic he seems,” Holden wrote.

Ms. Portillo crafted the film’s storyline from the informatio­n her mother relayed over the phone while Ms. Portillo was living in New York, she said in a talk at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles last year.

The museum screened the movie last year as part of a series honoring Ms. Portillo and other filmmakers who have made significan­t contributi­ons to cinema.

Her breakthrou­gh work was the 1985 Oscar- and Emmynomina­ted documentar­y “The Mothers of The Plaza of Mayo,” which followed a group of mothers in Argentina who had sought answers to the disappeara­nce of their sons, who were taken by a repressive regime.

“She was a trailblaze­r — even up to the last minute,” filmmaker Soco Aguilar told The Los Angeles Times. “She was very strong — she was a warrior — and she was completely at peace and happy about all that she had done in her life.”

Lourdes Portillo was born in Chihuahua, Mexico, on Nov. 11, 1943.

She lived in Mexico until she was 13, when she immigrated to Los Angeles with her family, Aguilar said.

She racked up dozens of awards and nomination­s across 18 films produced over four decades, starting in 1979, according to IMDb.

Ms. Portillo was known for her authentic boundary-pushing style.

“Portillo’s works defy categoriza­tion, slipping easily between docufictio­n, experiment­al video and the melodrama of telenovela­s,” the Academy Museum said last year.

Before her death, Ms. Portillo was working on a film called “Looking At Ourselves,” which won a grant from the Sundance Institute last year.

Ms. Portillo leaves her three sons, Carlos, Karim, and Antonio Scarlata; four siblings; and five grandchild­ren, according to her son, Carlos Scarlata.

Ms. Portillo’s last work, “State of Grace,” was released in 2020, a personal animated short film about a dream in which Ms. Portillo confronts her desperatio­n after having been diagnosed with an illness.

“The only thing that enabled me to gather my strength was a vivid dream,” Ms. Portillo said on her website. “In the dream I saw my family and ancestors around me in a circle, chanting for my healing, it filled me with tenderness for all who had loved me.”

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