Tucson filmmaker David E. Valdezβs documentary on Tucsonβs seminal youth mariachi group Los Changuitos Feos will screen at Fox Tucson Theatre Saturday, March 16.
Showtimes for the film, βUgly Little Monkeys β A True American Story,β are at 2 and 7 p.m. at the Fox, 17 W. Congress St., where it premiered last weekend.
Valdez spent 5Β½ years working on βUgly Little Monkeys,β which retraces the ensembleβs start in 1964 in the basement of All Saints Catholic Church on South Sixth Avenue. Father Charles Rourke, an Irish priest from upstate New York who spent his non-clerical life as a jazz pianist, led the ensemble, which rose to become a local sensation, as well as a national and international touring act.
The film recounts how they performed before American and Mexican presidents and around the country, and how the group gave these young, mostly Hispanic boys hope and direction.
But beneath the facade of fame was a dark and ugly secret. Rourke, an alcoholic who embezzled from the group, wasnβt above abandoning the boys while on tour and sexually preying on them.
Valdezβs film, according to a 2021 Arizona Daily Star story, wanted to show the boysβ resiliency and perseverance against the horrific backdrop, how coalescing for the sake of the music and performances created the foundation of mariachi youth groups for generations to come.

Filmmaker David Valdezβs documentary about Los Changuitos Feos de Tucson, also known as the Ugly Little Monkeys, is screening at the Fox on Saturday.
Valdezβs documentary runs two hours. Tickets are $20 through foxtucson.com.
The film also will screen at various times March 22-24 at both Tucson area Harkins Theatres β Arizona Pavilions 12 at 5755 W. Arizona Pavilions Drive, off Interstate 10 and West Cortaro Road in Marana; and Tucson Spectrum 18 at 5455 S. Calle Santa Cruz, off Interstate 19 and West Irvington Road.
Learn more about the documentary at uglylittlemonkeys.com.

Father Charles Rourke and members of Los Changuitos Feos at University of Arizona stadium on July 4, 1966.
Linda Ronstadt continues her Tucson Festival of Books panel by talking about her mariachi history. Her book "Feels Like Home: A Song for the Sonoran Borderlands" highlights her life and legacy. Video by Pascal Albright/Arizona Daily Star