Rita Moreno is widely known for breaking down barriers for Latino performers in Hollywood, but the legendary actor revealed Monday that she did not always embrace her Hispanic identity.
“For many years, I didn’t like being a Hispanic person,” Moreno, who is Puerto Rican, told TODAY show host Hoda Kotb while promoting her new film, “The Prank.” “It took a very long time to get over the feeling that I was an unworthy person, that I wasn’t pretty, or that I was a Latina.”
Moreno has previously opened up about her struggles overcoming her own insecurities after years of being typecast by major film and television studios as well as facing discrimination. She particularly details these challenges in her 2021 documentary “Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go For It.”
When Kotb referenced some of these struggles during the interview, Moreno recalled being 5 years old and believing she had no value because some people made her feel othered.
Moreno said children are “tender” and susceptible to believing what others tell them. “When someone says that, you accept it.”
The 92-year-old added it took her a long time to work through such feelings. She also credited “years of psychotherapy” for helping her understand her value.
From “One Day at a Time” and “Jane the Virgin” to “West Side Story“ and countless other movies and TV shows, Moreno — one of the few Americans with what is called EGOT status as an Emmy-, Grammy-, Oscar- and Tony-winning actor — has accomplished a lot in a trailblazing career spanning seven decades.
Moreno made history as the first Latina to win an Academy Award, receiving the best supporting actress accolade for her role as Anita in the 1961 movie “West Side Story,” a modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet centered around the Upper West Side neighborhood in New York City.
She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2004, the National Medal of Arts in 2009, the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award in…
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