There are people in this world, including some in the Rio Grande Valley, who are afraid to step out of the box. Yet, Sandra Avila, an Edinburg native, had no such problem doing that.
Avila is an accomplished TV and film producer and president and CEO of Avila Entertainment, which is based in Los Angeles, where she now resides.
Avila Entertainment, her startup production company, was in charge of âEndgame,â a movie based on true events and most of which was filmed in Brownsville.
âEndgameâ is an inspiring film on centered deprived public school students from Brownsville who go on to become chess champions. The story tackles deportation, broken family bonds, as well as teenage death.
Rico Rodriguez, a cast member of ABCâs âModern Family,â and Efren Ramirez, better known for his role as Pedro in âNapoleon Dynamite,â star in the film, as well as chess students from the Brownsville area.
â[The children] seemed to really love it,â Avila said. âWe paid them, so they got to make their own money. We bought them little iPads and they had a great relationship with Efren and Rico.â
Although Avilaâs journey to success seems far from reach, that couldnât be further from the truth. Many people can relate to her story.
She grew up in Edinburg and graduated from Edinburg High School. Avila helped her grandmother, Jovita Garza, in her familyâs bakery, Magnolia Bakery.
âThat was my first job,â she said.
After graduating from Edinburg High School, she attended St. Maryâs University and received her bachelorâs degree in public justice pre-law and psychology.
Yet, after receiving her law degree from Loyola University College of Law in New Orleans, Avila said she wanted to figure out what she wanted to do with her life. So, she moved back to Texas and took five years to decide just that.
âI loved television,â she said. âI loved media [and] film. I just didnât know how people worked in that business.â
Her concern was that she didnât know anyone who worked in the business. Yet, her mind was set on following her passion.
While working in Dallas, she decided to move to L.A., but needed to get a second job. She waited tables to save money and rented a room from a lady in Burbank, Calif.
âAround the year 2000,â she said with a laugh while grasping the fact that it has already been 16 years since she made the bold move.
Avila said that explaining the move to her parents was the hard part.
âMy parents were concerned, but I told them, âYou know, I have a law degree. Iâm 30. Like, Iâll figure it out,ââ she said. âIf it doesnât work out, Iâll just come back.â
Avilaâs father agreed and both made the drive. He helped her get set up and soon after, she signed with a temp agency.
She admitted to the agency that she really wanted to work with an entertainment company because she wanted to learn about the business and learn about the different jobs there are within the industry.
Two months later, she landed the job that would change her life.
âI land a job assisting a senior vice president of development in TV at Showtime Network,â she said. âAnd thatâs how everything kind of got started.â
In her seven years there, Avila learned a lot while assisting the vice president of development. She assisted in the production of various shows, such as âDexterâ and âResurrection Blvd.â
She then was promoted to coordinator. In that position, she oversaw the story department, which managed the scripts for all shows. She also ran the Latino Filmmakers Showcase for the network, which highlighted Latino filmmakers and would premier Hispanic Heritage Month on Showtime.
âI loved the culture there,â she said. âI loved the development and learned what that was. [It was] cultivating and creating shows.â
She said the network was so small, âit reminded me of school. It was like a family.â
Avila admits, though, that she should have left the network a long time ago.
âAfter you donât see yourself moving, you should leave, but I was cultivating my skill sets with other contacts in different networks and studios, so you can kind of get to your next job,â she said.
Because of this, Avila was approached by Maya Entertainment, a feature film and TV distribution company that focuses on creating and acquiring content for the Latino/U.S. market.
âI got to practically meet many, [if not] all, Latino actors, writers, directors, [and] producers in Hollywood,â she said.
With Maya, Avila was able to do a film, âOne Hot Summer,â for the Lifetime Network and an independent comedy, âTaco Shop,â with Tyler Posey from MTVâs âTeen Wolfâ that will premiere next year.
The company, however, folded and Avila was at a crossroads. In 2012, Avila gave birth to her production company, Avila Entertainment.
Quickly after, while at a Best Buy in the Valley, she ran into the brother of a friend from high school. It turned out that her friend, Hector Salinas, was working on a script based on a true-life story of kids from a Brownsville school.
âEndgameâ would become Avilaâs first major production and the film premiered at Edinburgâs Carmike Theatre on Oct. 9, 2015.
Today, Avila is a board member of Edinburgâs South Texas Independent Film Festival (STIFF), pitches ideas to all the major networks and will work on a couple of films, including âCanaima,â an action adventure that is set to start production in Puerto Rico in April.

