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Alba Enid Garcia

Alba Enid Garcia Rivas is an international award-winning Boricua filmmaker with Taíno Indigenous roots. Garcia Rivas brings a new, uplifting narrative by creating worlds inspired by her ancestors’ stories.

In 2018, the Puerto Rican filmmaker completed Dak’Toká Taíno (I am Taíno) with executive producer and daughter of Jim Henson, Heather B. Henson of Green Feather Foundation. García used puppets she designed and created for the film about the aftermath of Hurricane María. It qualified and ran for an Oscar in 2019, and was shown at the Smithsonian Museum, the Museum of the Moving Image, the Newark Museum, and on HBO Max. It is now being distributed by The Jim Henson Company under the Handmade Puppet Film collection.
She finished her fourth film, Dangerously Ever After, a stop-motion film that took over seven years to bring to life. The film is based on an award-winning picture book by Dashka Slater and illustrated by Valeria Docampo. The film was screened at the Museum of the Moving Image. She is also developing a Taino-Inspired TV series, a fantasy feature film and a children’s book.
Alba is a member of The Women in Animation Guild and the Association Internationale du Film d’Animation (ASIFA-East and Hollywood). Alba has a YouTube series titled “Alba’s Heart to Heart Conversation with Artists,” in which she explores and give strategies to all artists from all walk of life.