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'1923' Star Aminah Nieves On Show's Brutality Toward Indigenous People

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  kavika  •  9 months ago  •  7 comments

By:   Aminah Nieves (Deadline)

'1923' Star Aminah Nieves On Show's Brutality Toward Indigenous People
1923' Star Aminah Nieves On The Show's Brutality Toward Indigenous People: "I Felt Like Sometimes, I Wasn't Even In Control Of My Body

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Aminah Nieves as Teonna of the Paramount+ series 1923.Emerson Miller/Paramount+

SPOILER ALERT! This story contains plot points from episode seven of 1923 on Paramount+.

Anyone who tuned in to Taylor Sheridan's latest Yellowstone prequel expecting wall-to-wall storytelling about the Dutton family was in for a shock: half of the story has been devoted to the horrific treatment of young indigenous women in a boarding school run by Catholic nuns and a very sadistic priest.

One of those girls is played by Aminah Nieves, an indigenous actress who landed the very important role of Teonna Rainwater — a veritable prisoner of the Catholics (and ancestor of Gil Birmingham's Thomas Rainwater, who we eventually meet in Yellowstone) who can dish it out as much as she can take it. Teonna finally escapes the clutches of her captors but trouble continues to follow her.

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Here, Nieves talks affectionately about meeting Taylor "Tay Tay" Sheridan and how important it was for her to accept the role.

DEADLINE This has definitely been a lesson in history for some, learning how indigenous people were treated by the colonizing Catholic Church. This horrific chapter from our country's past is rarely depicted on television - the way missionaries beat and dehumanized Native peoplesin these so-called schools.

AMINAH NIEVES For me it wasn't the same. I am aware what happened to our indigenous peoples. My family made it clear to voice and educate us growing up. It wasn't the first time for me to read it. Those traumas are kind of embedded with you. They get passed through your parents, through the womb, and they connect to you. But I did even more research than I already knew. I talked to a bunch of different indigenous communities.

DEADLINE How did you first land this role?

NIEVES I love Tay Tay! I was not aware of the Taylor Sheridan universe before. It happens the way it always happens, you get it through your team. I read it and was emailing my manager like, 'I don't know man. I don't know if I should do this. It's just heavy and triggering.' My manager was so supportive and said, 'you know what? I support anything you do so whatever decision you make is a good one.' And then my mom is my reader for everything. We talked about it a lot. I did the audition the day it was due because I waited so long. I was scared. My mom was like, 'Aminah, you have to do this, not just for you, it's for us. It's for our communities and for all indigenous peoples across the world.'

DEADLINE What scared you the most about doing it?

NIEVES We did five scenes for the audition from the first three episodes. They were heavy, heavy scenes. It was really hard to move through, because you feel everything. I knew it wasn't just going to be me feeling it. I knew that there were gonna be ancestors flowing through me. That's exactly what happened when I got to set. I felt like sometimes, I wasn't even in control of my body, you know? It felt like, 'Aminah, someone else is here. Let them take over for a second.' I was scared a lot. I wanted to make sure I was honoring every single human, every single family member, my grandparents, my aunties, my mom, my dad and then all of the communities. I'm so happy that I'm here and doing it and being a voice.

DEADLINE Where did you shoot all of your scenes in the school and beyond?

NIEVES Six months in Montana and around Butte with a Walmart. It was great. We probably went to Walmart twice a day to feel something.

DEADLINE So what was it like doing those scenes with Jennifer Ehle [Sister Mary], who was the one constantly beating your character? Was a lot of choreography involved?

NIEVES We had an amazing stunt crew, and Jennifer is just an incredible talent. I bow to her. She was so tender and kind, moving through everything that we did. We talked a little bit before each scene, but typically they would just give us the stunt choreography in like 10 minutes. Then we'd be, alright, let's shoot it. You kind of have to separate yourself a little bit from what's happening because it's a lot of physical and spiritual energy. We always made sure to be with one another. Can I tell you a story? I believe it was in episode two or three, where all the nuns were on top of me in the lunchroom for somewhere up to three minutes, at one point. They yell cut and I hear Leenah Robinson, who plays my cousin Baapuxti, scream 'get off of her!' They were already off me. But when you are put in these situations, she was just scared. You're witnessing all the traumas at once. [Nieves begins to cry]. I think that was a life changing moment for me because I knew she was my sister for life. She's everything to me, and an incredible talent too.

DEADLINE When you got those initial scripts, did you ask Tay Tay if you there would be a payoff for your character? That you were going to be able to fight back?

NIEVES We did have a talk. I wanted to honor her deeply and didn't want the public to see her as someone who they can take advantage of. He reassured me that she will get hers and she will be victorious.

DEADLINE It's very violent, but I took glee in watching you beat the sisters to death.

NIEVES Oh girl, yeah. That was the hardest scene for Jennifer and I to do together. For Teonna, it wasn't joyous for her. It was the hardest thing she's ever had to do because she sees Sister Mary as an abuser. But it's just like what she told her: 'I am the land, no one who is the land is killing you.' In that moment she's sitting there with her thinking, I wish she could have understood that we are way similar than Sister Mary thought. We share the same soil. We walk the same.

DEADLINE So are we going to see your character get happy anytime soon?

NIEVES Let's pray. I don't want to spoil anything!

DEADLINE Can you say if you will, if at all, join the world of the Duttons?

NIEVES I have no clue. I want to know, too. Maybe we should write Tay Tay together.

DEADLINE When you found out there would be a second season, did you immediately call to find out whether your character would live to see it?

NIEVES We were all like that. Every single person in the cast was like, what is happening? What's going on? But I have faith that Teonna will make it to season two. We don't know anything happening in season two at all. He hasn't written anything yet.

DEADLINE What can we expect for Teonna going in to next Sunday's finale?

NIEVES Have your box of tissues at hand. Episode eight really destroyed me.


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Kavika
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Kavika     9 months ago

If anyone has seen the series and especially the episode that was part of the interview in this article, give us your thoughts.

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
1.1  TᵢG  replied to  Kavika @1    9 months ago

The treatment of the indigenous women and girls by the Irish Catholic 'school/church' was horrific.   While watching the series I was struck at the hypocrisy of the 'teachers' as they violated the teachings of Christ and treated the 'wards' like subhumans during the forced assimilation and intentional attempt to destroy their culture.

The show is of course fiction but the practice of forced assimilation and mistreatment via Indian Boarding Schools is historical fact.   

Practices such as these are thematically repeated throughout history in many cultures and in many nations.   Human beings can be amazingly cruel ... especially when imbued with the hubris of certain religions.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  Kavika   replied to  TᵢG @1.1    9 months ago

I haven't seen this segment, TiG but I doubt if they could show everything that went on in the ''schools''.

Besides physical abuse, sexual abuse was also the order of the day by priests, nuns, and volunteers. Renting out the boys to local farms as labor and the girls as house maids there was NO learning other than Christian teachings. Disease was rampant and medical care was non-existent. Death was a frequent visitor to the children. Experiments on native kids were done as well, especially on hunger and it effects on children.

.

The death toll in Canada was around 6,000 kids but many records were lost or withheld especially by RCC and Anglican Church. They died from untreated disease, physical abuse, and sexual abuse, some froze to death trying to escape in the winter.

The US has kept its ''Indian Boarding Schools'' pretty well hidden until Biden named Deb Haaland (NA) as Secretary of the Interior she has opened several investigations and what they are finding is the thousands of kids that the schools said did not die there really did die here when went through the school's records, who knows what the final number will be if we ever know. 

At one point the schools were sending Indian kids back home to die. Yes, that is correct, they would be sick with TB, or other diseases of which we have no immunity and they would carry it back to the tribe and hundreds would die, it was cheaper to do that they to give them medical attention, experts have estimated over 40,000 NAs in the US died from this ''action''.

I just hit the highlights so to speak, T,G.

 
 
 
Perrie Halpern R.A.
Professor Expert
1.1.2  Perrie Halpern R.A.  replied to  Kavika @1.1.1    9 months ago

I have seen the series from start to finish, and it was horrific to say the least. It was not only cruel to the students, but the government worked with the Church to help them hunt down their own families (who were lied to about their children's whereabouts), and kill them, too. To intellectualize these things is one thing, to see the horrors is a whole different animal.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
1.1.3  seeder  Kavika   replied to  Perrie Halpern R.A. @1.1.2    9 months ago
To intellectualize these things is one thing, to see the horrors is a whole different animal.

Many Americans will not or do not believe what went on in the ''Indian Boarding Schools''... Americans could never do that, sadly they are not familiar with US history, yes we have done it more than one time to more than one minority.

 
 
 
TᵢG
Professor Principal
1.1.4  TᵢG  replied to  Kavika @1.1.3    9 months ago

Not only Americans, but Christians.   And not just Christians but nuns and priests.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
1.1.5  seeder  Kavika   replied to  TᵢG @1.1.4    9 months ago
And not just Christians but nuns and priests.

All the while the US government looked the other way and the RCC protected them. 

 
 

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