Felipe Luciano
Felipe Luciano (born c. 1947 in East Harlem, New York City, New York,) is an American poet, community activist, journalist, media personality, and politician. He is of Afro-Puerto Rican heritage.[1][2]
Luciano served time in prison for manslaughter[2] in the fatal stabbing of a Brooklyn teenager in the early 1960s. Following his release, he attended Queens College and became a member of the Original Last Poets (with Gylan Kain and David Nelson).
He along with five others co-founded the New York branch of the Young Lords (later called the Young Lords Party in New York), whose legal counsel was a young Jerry Rivers (now known as Geraldo Rivera) and served as its chair. The Young Lords as a movement which spread nationally was founded in Chicago by Jose Cha Cha Jimenez who transformed it from a gang. It developed because the Puerto Rican community in Chicago was being gentrified.The Young Lords Party in NYC was a branch that originated within the Young Lords Movement,and reportedly began as a primarily student political movement that later coalesce with several other New York branches of these Young Lords to form the New York Regional Chapter of the movement.
Luciano later became a radio, television, and print journalist, and won several awards . He is President and founder of Luciano Productions, Inc.
Films
- 1971 - Right On!: Poetry on Film (Original Last Poets; directed by Herbert Danska)
- 1973 - Badge 373 (directed by Howard Koch)
- 1979 - Salsa: Latin Music in the Cities (directed by Jeremy Marre)
- 1994 - It Could Happen to You (directed by Andrew Bergman)
- 1996 - Palante, Siempre Palante (documentary on the Young Lords; directed by Iris Morales)
- 2006 - Yo soy Boricua, pa'que tu lo sepas! (I'm Boricua, Just So You Know!)
- 2009 - Latin Music USA (Episode 2)
- 2015 - Rubble Kings (documentary directed by Shan Nicholson)
See also
References
- ↑ Kareem Fahim (August 21, 2001). "Barrio Match: Reed vs. Luciano". The Village Voice.
- 1 2 Ojito, Mirta (1997-08-24). "One Man's Journey To Police Adviser". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-04-03.