Rita Moreno
About Rita Moreno
A petite dynamo whose career has encompassed stage and screen, Rita Moreno is one of only eight individuals to have earned each of the major entertainment awards--the Oscar, Grammy, Emmy and Tony--in competition. (Helen Hayes, John Gielgud, Audrey Hepburn, Marvin Hamlisch, Richard Rodgers, Mel Brooks and Mike Nichols are the others.) While this is an impressive feat for anyone, in Moreno's case it is all the more so as early in her career she had to overcome ethnic typecasting. Indeed, she has played a wide array of role of diverse backgrounds and has avoided being typecast as the "Latin spitfire", a type that hampered actresses like Lupe Velez.
Born in Puerto Rico as Rosa Delores Alverio, Moreno and her mother moved to the USA when she was a toddler. Almost immediately, the youngster began a performing career, appearing in shows at Macy's. By the time she was a teenager, Moreno was acting on Broadway (1945's "Skydrift"). Four years later, she was spotted by a Hollywood casting agent at a dance recital and whisked to Tinseltown with an MGM contract in hand. As the film industry rarely knew what to do with talented non-white performers, Moreno was relegated to a playing stereotypical Latina spitfires and Indian maidens in a spate of B-movies. A rare opportunity came when she was chosen to tango with Gene Kelly in the now classic "Singin' in the Rain" (1952) but her first major break came when she landed the role of Tuptim, the rebellious concubine of the Siamese monarch in "The King and I" (1956). Encouraged by co-star Yul Brynner, she studied with an acting coach and her hard work finally paid off with 1961's "West Side Story". As the fiery Anita, who sings and dances the show-stopping "America", Moreno blazed across the screen netting that year's Best Supporting Actress Academy Award.
Her post-Oscar films, though, proved unspectacular and hardly challenged this gifted player. Instead, Moreno turned to the stage, making her London debut in "She Loves Me" and appearing on Broadway in "The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window" (both 1964). After time out for motherhood, she returned to the big screen opposite her former lover Marlon Brando in the ludicrous "The Night After the Following Day" (1968) before beginning to hit her stride as Alan Arkin's girlfriend in "Popi" (1969). While co-star Ann-Margret garnered the lion's share of critical kudos for "Carnal Knowledge" (1971), Moreno was equally effective in her all too brief scenes as a prostitute hired by Jack Nicholson. Switching gears, she spent the next five years as a company member of the children's educational program "The Electric Company". In 1975, Moreno had great fun spoofing the Latina spitfires of her earlier career as Googie Gomez, a second-rate Puerto Rican entertainer in a gay bathhouse, in Terrence McNally's play "The Ritz". Richard Lester wisely chose to allow the actress to preserve her Tony-winning turn in the following year's film adaptation. She rounded out the 70s with a pair of Emmy Awards, one for a 1975 guest appearance on "The Muppet Show" (syndicated) and the second as a reformed hooker in a memorable 1978 episode of NBC's "The Rockford Files". (This was the second of four appearances on the series and she would later reprise the part for a 1999 CBS TV-movie sequel.)
While the 80s saw Moreno's film career dwindle--her last role for nearly a decade was in Alan Alda's warm study of middle-aged friendships "The Four Seasons" (1981), the stage and TV picked up the slack. She inherited Lily Tomlin's role of Violet Newstead for the ABC sitcom version of "9 to 5" (1982-83), headlined a busted 1986 pilot for her own sitcom and had a regular role as Burt Reynolds' ex-wife in "B.L. Stryker" (ABC, 1989-90). In between small screen gigs, she performed her own one-woman variety concert and toured with Sally Struthers in a distaff version of Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple" (1984-85) which also included a stop on Broadway.
Resuming her film career in 1991, Moreno played Jonathan Silverman's mother in the uneven "Age Isn't Everything/Life in the Food Chain". She contributed memorable work as Jon Seda's highly critical mother in Darnell Martin's "I Like It Like That" (1994) and was reunited with Alan Arkin as his snooty sister-in-law in "Slums of Beverly Hills" (1998). While continuing to play her one-person show, Moreno also made theater history in 1996 as the first Latina to play silent screen star Norma Desmond in the London production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musicalization of "Sunset Boulevard". The actress also found a new round of fans playing Sister Peter Marie, a nun and the psychological counselor to the inmates of a maximum security facility, in "Oz" (HBO, 1997- ). In 2001, she earned plaudits for her turn as the title character's mother who instills in him a love of words in the biopic "Pinero".
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Leonard I Gordon | husband | born c. 1920; met in December 1964; married on June 18, 1965 |
| Fernanda Luisa Gordon | daughter | born c. 1967; co-starred with mother in "The Glass Menagerie" (1991 at Cherry County Playhouse, Michigan); married David T Fischer |
| Justin Fischer | grandson | born on July 26, 1998 |
| Cameron Fischer | grandson | born c. 2000 |
| Rosa Alverio | mother | born c. 1917; divorced from Moreno's father; died in October 1999 |
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Elvis Presley | companion | dated |
| Marlon Brando | companion | had highly publicized multi-year on-again, off-again relationship from the 1950s to 1961 |
| Assumed role of Violet Newstead (played by Lily Tomlin in the film) for the ABC sitcom "9 to 5"; earned Emmy nomination | |
| Cast as Esmeralda in original production of Tennessee Williams' "Camino Real"; fired at the playwright's insistance | |
| Had regular role as a ditsy landlady on "The Cosby Mysteries" (NBC) | |
| Joined MGM's starlet stable at age 17 | |
| Played regular role in a series of TV-movies for ABC starring Burt Reynolds as "B.L. Stryker" | |
| 1935 | With her mother, moved from Puerto Rico to NYC at age four; father and brother remained in Puerto Rico |
| 1936 | Made nightclub debut at age five (date approximate) |
| 1945 | Broadway debut at age 13 in "Skydrift" |
| 1950 | Feature acting debut, "So Young, So Bad" |
| 1952 | Had bit part dancing a tango in the classic movie musical "Singin' in the Rain" |
| 1952 | TV acting debut, "Saint and Senorita" on "Fireside Theater" |
| 1956 | Played Tuptim, one of the monarch's wives, in the fi lm adaptation of "The King and I" |
| 1961 | Attempted suicide when her multi-year affair with Marlon Brando ended |
| 1961 | Won acclaim and a Best Supporting Actress Oscar playing the fiery Anita in the film version of "West Side Story" |
| 1964 | London stage debut as Illona in "She Loves Me", directed by Harold Prince |
| 1969 | Appeared opposite Alan Arkin in "Popi" |
| 1969 | Played supporting role in "Marlowe", featuring James Garner |
| 1970 | Returned to the Broadway stage as Sharon Falconer in the short-lived musical "Gantry", based on the novel "Elmer Gantry" |
| 1971 | Co-starred in "Carnal Knowledge" |
| 1971 - 1976 | Was a regular on the children's series "The Electric Company" |
| 1972 | Received Grammy Award for contribution to the recording "The Electric Company" |
| 1974 | Earned first Emmy nomination for the variety special "Out to Lunch" (ABC) |
| 1975 | Offered an hilarious, Tony-winning turn as entertainer Googie Gomez in Terrence McNally's "The Ritz" |
| 1976 | Reprised Googie Gomez in the film version of "The Ritz" |
| 1977 | Introduced the character of Rita Capkovic in an episode of NBC's "The Rockford Files"; first of four appearances over the next two years; received second Emmy Award for a 1978 guest appearance |
| 1977 | Made Emmy-winning guest appearance on "The Muppet Show" (syndicated) |
| 1978 | Starred in pilot for a proposed CBS sitcom, "The Rita Moreno Show"; show not picked up by the network |
| 1981 | Appeared in the unsuccessful play "Wally's Cafe" |
| 1981 | Last film for a decade, "The Four Seasons" |
| 1982 | Received Emmy nod for her turn in the CBS movie "Portrait of a Showgirl" |
| 1983 - 0 | Began appearing in a one-woman show, mixing singing, dancing and storytelling |
| 1985 | Starred on Broadway in a female version of "The Odd Couple" (reworked by Neil Simon) opposite Sally Struthers |
| 1986 | Filmed unsold pilot for own CBS sitcom, "Rita" |
| 1991 | Returned to feature films playing Jonathan Silverman's mother in "Age Isn't Everything/Life in the Food Chain" |
| 1994 | Portrayed Jon Seda's highly critical mother in "I Like It Like That", helmed by Darnell Martin |
| 1994 | Voiced the title character in the animated children's series "Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?" |
| 1995 | Appeared Off-Broadway in Anne Meara's comedy "After-Play" |
| 1995 | Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame |
| 1996 | Played Norma Desmond in the London production of "Sunset Boulevard" |
| 1996 | Starred with Louis Zorich and Frank Whaley in the Off-Broadway show "The Size of the World" |
| 1997 - 0 | Returned to series work as Sister Peter Marie Reimondo, the prison's psychological counselor, in the HBO drama "Oz" |
| 1998 | Had small role as Alan Arkin's wealthy sister-in-law in "Slums of Beverly Hills" |
| 1999 | Made NYC cabaret debut at the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel |
| 1999 | Reprised her Emmy-winning role in the TV-movie "The Rockford Files: If It Bleeds ... It Leads" (CBS) |
| 2001 | Had co-starring role as the title character's mother in the biopic "Pinero" |
Notes
"I am Latin and know what it is to feel alone because you are different. When you are ignored, you lose your sense of identity. So I can be the Latin on television in 'The Electric Company', and my presence can tell a lot of children and some adults, 'We do exist, we have value.'" --Moreno quoted in InTheater, November 8, 1999.
About acting on stage: "I always get nervous ... What I love is the immediacy of a live performance. In concerts, of course, I can be much looser, because it can go almost any way I want. But there is something absolutely fabulous about interacting with wonderful actors on stage, and it all comes back so fast, it's amazing: 'Oh, that's what I have to do. I have to find my light.' You can't drop the ends of sentences in an ensemble piece." --Rita Moreno quoted in TheaterWeek December 25-31, 1995.
About the perils of her career, Moreno told Jan Breslauer in Los Angeles Times (November 21, 1996): "Now, not only being Hispanic but older really compounds the problems. Yes, I've had to spend a good deal of my life putting up with the whole business of the stereotype."
Although the name Rosita Moreno appears in the credits for the films "The Scoundrel" (1935) and "A Medal For Benny" (1945) and some sources attribute these films to her, it is not Rita Moreno but another actress, Rosita Moreno, who appeared in Hollywood films from the 1930s on. Rita Moreno made her film debut in 1950 in "So Young, So Bad" (1950) as Rosita Moreno. She changed her name to Rita Moreno for her second film, "Toast of New Orleans" (1950).
Moreno remains tightlipped about her relationship with Marlon Brando, the breakup of which led to a 1961 suicide attempt. As she told People (September 12, 1998): "I don't talk about him. We went together for [almost] 10 years. That's as much as I say."
Moreno was one of 32 private citizens named by President Bill Clinton to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities
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West Side Story
West Side Story starring George Chakiris, Rita Moreno, Richard Beymer, Natalie Wood, Russ Tamblyn
Quick Facts
Also known as
AKA : Rosita Moreno
Birth Name : Rosita Dolores Alverio
Born
December, 11 1931 in Humacao, Puerto Rico
Professions
actor, dancer, singer