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Charise Castro Smith brings Latin experience to Disney Animation鈥檚 鈥楨ncanto鈥

Charise Castro Smith, the first Latino woman to co-direct a Walt Disney Animation Studios movie, admits that she has felt terrified at times. But when the chance to work on 鈥淓ncanto鈥 came around, she had no doubts.

鈥淚 said, 鈥業 have to do this. I have to鈥,鈥 Castro Smith said. She joined the project as a writer and had never been in a directing role.

Castro Smith, who has a young daughter, said 鈥渋t means the world to me for little brown kids everywhere to get to see themselves and to see themselves represented in a positive way and feel seen.鈥

鈥淓ncanto,鈥 which she co-directed with Jared Bush and Byron Howard, is set in Colombia 鈥 the land of magical realism 鈥 and follows Mirabel Madrigal, a teenage girl dealing with the frustration of being the only member of her family without magical powers. It opens in theaters on November 24.

Castro Smith and Bush share writing credits with Lin-Manuel Miranda, who created original songs for the film. The cast, led by Argentine American actor Stephanie Beatriz (鈥淏rooklyn Nine-Nine,鈥 鈥淚n The Heights鈥), includes Diane Guerrero, John Leguizamo, Wilmer Valderrama and Colombian Angie Cepeda.

鈥淓ncanto鈥欌 is undoubtedly a big step for Castro Smith, who started as a playwright and has credits as a writer for 鈥淒evious Maids.鈥欌 She was also a producer and writer for 鈥漈he Haunting of Hill House鈥欌 and 鈥淭he Exorcist.鈥

Her perspective as a woman raised in a Cuban-American family proved useful.

鈥淐harise was a godsend from the moment she joined 鈥楨ncanto鈥 and created a foundation of heart, vulnerability and authenticity that the entire film is built upon,鈥 Bush said. 鈥淔rom day one, she wanted to create a unique, flawed and utterly human character in Mirabel that spoke to the experiences of so many Latinas, while at the same time being relatable to audiences around the world.鈥

After seven or eight months collaborating on the script with Bush, Castro Smith was asked to be a co-director, she said. 鈥淪o it sort of happened organically and it鈥檚 been amazing.鈥

She especially credits her bond with her Cuban grandmother as a source of inspiration for Abuela Alma, who is voiced in the film by Colombian actor Mar铆a Cecilia Botero.

鈥淚 just remember watching that (talk) show 鈥楥ristina鈥 with her a lot,鈥 Castro Smith recalled of her grandmother. 鈥淪he encouraged me a lot. She was an amazing woman. Actually, the play I wrote most recently (鈥楨l Hurac谩n,鈥 or 鈥楾he Hurricane鈥) is about her.鈥

Although Alma 鈥渋s temperamentally really different than my grandmother was... that bond and that closeness I think was something that really informed me as I was writing,鈥 she said.

Howard could see this, too.

鈥淔rom the very beginning, Charise knew who Encanto鈥檚 Abuela Alma needed to be, inside and out,鈥 he said. 鈥淐harise鈥檚 writing showing Alma鈥檚 bravery and struggle became the emotional heart of the film, and I know that much of this intimate connection with the character comes directly from the strong women in her own family.鈥

鈥淭his unique talent of blending real-life emotion with heightened, supernatural storytelling comes naturally for Charise,鈥 Howard added. 鈥淪he always writes with a sense of emotional truth.鈥

Castro Smith was raised in Miami and attended Brown University as an undergraduate student and later the Yale School of Drama, where she earned an MFA in acting.

Growing up, storytelling was a big part of her life.

鈥淢y mom used to tell stories about how, when I was a little kid, I was putting on plays that I wrote in the living room and my grandmother really encouraged it,鈥 she recalled.

鈥淭hen I went to see my first musical when I was in third or fourth grade... and from that moment I was like, 鈥業 have to do this, I have to be involved in it鈥.鈥

In addition to the opportunity of bringing to the screen characters that children of color can relate to, Castro Smith said she was also drawn to 鈥淓ncanto鈥欌 by the idea of a protagonist that at the beginning may not be able to accept herself but learns to see and embrace her own value.

鈥淚 think it is a powerful message that I wanted to offer to everyone,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut particularly the fact that this is a Latinx character, it was just so personally important to me to put that on the screen. It鈥檚 meant the world to me to work on this because of that.鈥

In terms of representation, she feels hopeful that 鈥淓ncanto鈥 and other upcoming projects will pave the way for more productions led by and focused on minorities.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so important just because what we see, we kind of validate; what we see, we can empathize with; what we see, we can sort of put ourselves into the shoes of,鈥 Castro Smith said.

鈥淚 think what I do as a storyteller and what we all do as storytellers is kind of fundamental to the fabric of society.鈥

And Castro Smith has found her own value

鈥淚t turns out I really love directing,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanna keep doing that after this.鈥


 

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