A new feature film documenting the life of Grammy-winning pianist and bandleader Eddie Palmieri is currently in production. Directed by Emmy-nominated filmmaker Omar Acosta, the movie explores Palmieri's role in revolutionizing salsa and Latin jazz. Set in Spanish Harlem and the Bronx from the 1950s to the 1980s, it highlights his contributions to amplifying Puerto Rican voices.
The documentary, titled Eddie Palmieri: Sweet Sweet Sugar, focuses on the career of Eddie Palmieri, who shaped salsa and Latin jazz through his music. It examines how Palmieri used his compositions to represent Puerto Ricans in New York, influencing Latin music's global reach today.
Director Omar Acosta stated in a press release: “Puerto Ricans came to New York with rhythm, passion, and very little else. We didn’t melt into the pot. We reshaped it. Eddie Palmieri is the proof.” He added: “Born in the crucible of Spanish Harlem, his music captures the moment Puerto Rico collided with New York and invented something new, something permanent. Eddie speaks for the Puerto Rican diaspora, a people whose fight for dignity and opportunity transformed not only themselves, but American culture and the world beyond it.”
The film is produced by David Kennedy and Nick Quested of Goldcrest Films, in co-production with Uprising Music NYC and in cooperation with the Eddie Palmieri estate. It includes full access to Palmieri’s music catalog and previously unseen archival footage.
Palmieri, a Grammy winner known for his work as a pianist, composer, and bandleader, is celebrated for his innovations in the genres during the mid-20th century in New York City's Puerto Rican communities.