This drama film is one of the first pictures to
advance the feminist social and political point of view. Its plot
centers on a long and difficult strike, based on the 1951 strike against
the Empire Zinc Company in Grant County, New Mexico. In the film, the
company is identified as "Delaware Zinc," and the setting is "Zinctown,
New Mexico." The film shows how the miners, the company, and the
police react during the strike. In neorealist style, the producers and
director used actual miners and their families as actors in the film.
The film was called subversive and blacklisted
because the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers
sponsored it and many blacklisted Hollywood professionals helped produce
it. The union had been expelled from the CIO in 1950 for its alleged
communist-dominated leadership.
Director Herbert Biberman was one of the Hollywood screenwriters and directors who refused to answer the House Committee on Un-American Activities on questions of CPUSA affiliation in 1947. The Hollywood Ten
were cited and convicted for contempt of Congress and jailed. Biberman
was imprisoned in the Federal Correctional Institution at Texarkana for six months. After his release he directed this film.Other participants who made the film and were blacklisted by the
Hollywood studios include: Paul Jarrico, Will Geer, Rosaura Revueltas,
and Michael Wilson.
The producers cast only five professional actors. The
rest were locals from Grant County, New Mexico, or members of the
International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, Local 890, many
of whom were part of the strike that inspired the plot. Juan Chacón,
for example, was a real-life Union Local president. In the film he
plays the protagonist, who has trouble dealing with women as equals. The
director was reluctant to cast him at first, thinking he was too
"gentle," but both Revueltas and his sister-in-law, Sonja Dahl Biberman,
wife of Biberman's brother Edward, urged him to cast Chacón as Ramon.
The film was denounced by the United States House of Representatives for its communist sympathies, and the FBI
investigated the film's financing. The American Legion called for a
nation-wide boycott of the film. Film-processing labs were told not to
work on Salt of the Earth and unionized projectionists were instructed
not to show it. After its opening night in New York City, the film
languished for 10 years because all but 12 theaters in the country
refused to screen it.
By one journalist's account: "During the course of
production in New Mexico in 1953, the trade press denounced it as a
subversive plot, anti-Communist
vigilantes fired rifle shots at the set, the film's leading lady
Rosaura Revueltas was deported to Mexico, and from time to time a small
airplane buzzed noisily overhead ... The film, edited in secret, was
stored for safekeeping in an anonymous wooden shack in Los Angeles."
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