Alondra de la Parra is a star of classical music. She has conducted more than 100 orchestras in 20 countries, breaking the glass ceiling in a male-dominated profession. [Online until: 18.05.2019]
Even early on, Alondra de la Parra dreamt big: "When I was 13 or 14, I wanted to be a conductor. But I thought, ‘how could that happen, I don't look like a conductor at all. Most conductors come from Germany and are very old with white hair. But I am from Mexico and a girl." Alondra de la Parra was born in New York in 1980, but her home country is Mexico. She studied music in England and the USA, and at the age of 24 founded the Philharmonic Orchestra of the Americas, which she both manages and conducts. The mother of two children, she embodies a new type of conductor: young, feminine and widely underestimated. As an artist between cultures, continents and musical genres, she has always faced resistance: "At the beginning of my career, the fact that I was a woman certainly didn't please a lot of people." In 2017, she was appointed Music Director of the Queensland Symphony Orchestra in Brisbane, Australia.
Alondra de la Parra allowed us access to her private archive for "La Maestra", and the film presents previously unpublished footage from the conductor's life, including videos shot at a workshop with the German conductor Kurt Masur.
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