Friday, October 16, 2015

Review: Rita Moreno: A Memoir

Rita Moreno: A Memoir Rita Moreno: A Memoir by Rita Moreno
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I would say that the entire story of Rita Moreno -- though it is hardly complete yet; she just put out a new record a few months ago, "Una Vez Mas" produced by Emilio Estefan! -- is one of overcoming. So many barriers; a language barrier, a cultural barrier, a climate barrier -- and that was just by the age of six! -- in moving with her mother to the cold, hard concrete sidewalks of New York City from the warm, lush tropical greenery and fruitful gardens of Puerto Rico. Becoming a professional entertainer began not much later, when she was a child of 11, dancing, singing, acting. Moreno grew up in show business, spending her late childhood and all of her teen years experiencing successes and setbacks while training and working in films and on stage. She survived to carry on in this profession into and throughout her entire adult life. If you're looking for an overnight sensation, you've got the wrong performer -- assuming there even is such a thing. Moreno is heralded as one of the few EGOT holders, having won at least one of all four of the most major American entertainment awards -- Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony. Well, it was all uphill--! Puerto Rican, and proudly so, which was the ethnicity of her Oscar-winning role of Anita in the "West Side Story" film, but in an industry that cast her "exotic" look as everything else -- Chinese in "The King and I" film (black actress Dorothy Dandridge had been asked first--!--but turned down the supporting role); as a young teen from India on the "Father Knows Best" TV show; but especially the half-literate "Indian" (Native American) maiden in more cowboy Western films than Moreno could remember (or stand to sit through, she admitted, in the writing of this book!) -- at those times when they'd run out of the stereotyped oversexed "Latina spitfire" parts for her to play. There were some personal successes and setbacks along the way, too, and Moreno fills us in on many of those, the pathways of romantic relationships peculiar to actors in Hollywood. But Moreno's calling out on the various levels of quality -- especially when it was the lack thereof -- of health care that her husband received in various hospitals before passing is pertinent to anyone facing that situation. If there was one part of this book that I'd recommend everyone read, it's that one. But as I began, Rita Moreno is not finished yet. She continues to set new goals in her work and life. This is an excellently detailed and candid look back, on both the injustices and achievements in her past -- but look up and catch up, because the way for Moreno is always forward to her future. 

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Rita Moreno Interview | Archive of American Television


Friday, July 17, 2015

My July 17 2015 review of Booker T: My Rise to Wrestling Royalty by Booker T. Huffman, Andrew, William Wright

Booker T: My Rise To Wrestling RoyaltyBooker T: My Rise To Wrestling Royalty by Andrew William Wright Booker T Huffman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The book assumes that if you're reading it -- or read Huffman's previous book -- that you know various wrestling lingo by now -- which I do, so that was great. I'd honestly forgotten Huffman had written a previous book, so I took it for granted that of course, Huffman was starting with his pro wrestling career and how it came to be and has continued (and now I really want to read the previous book!). I completely missed the beginning of Booker T's career, including his partnership with his brother, Lash, and their successful tag team of Harlem Heat, with manager Sister Sherri, which sounds like it was wild! But then it was fun to re-live various solo matches of his that I had seen and see the names of wrestlers I'd known before... but that made it all the more devastating to be reminded that so many of those wrestlers have passed away, and it's searing to read Huffman experience their deaths as a colleague and/or close friend of them all. Some of them he could see the signs of trouble on the way, like partying too much. Others there was really no clue -- he had noticed that Eddie Guerrero seemed tired and had slowed down those last few weeks, but that was all, and that could have been anything. And Chris Benoit and his family was a total shock to everyone. Overall, as a reader, seeing a tabulation of these and other deaths in one place, it did cross my mind that professional wrestling might shorten your life, seeing as a lot of these wrestlers didn't make it to 50. But Booker T is still here! He acknowledges throughout the book that some close relationships, but especially the one with his teenage son, did suffer along the way as he traveled and wrestled throughout this country and beyond for months on end, save weeks off for surgeries, recovery from injuries. But then he recalls his induction into the WWE Hall of Fame a few years ago, which opened the door to reconcile with his then estranged brother -- and perform a special Spinarooni, his trademark move (which he really wasn't prepared to do, as I suspected; ouch!). I was happy to see that his relationship with Sharmell is QUITE real -- you never know with wrestling, but I had noticed their chemistry -- as the married couple recently had twins. And Booker is still putting the work in; he was reading this book on camera while providing commentary during the lead-up to this year's WrestleMania. Speaking to both books, it's important to have a record of this black American man's success story, of his particular memories and ample hard-won accomplishments in this unique world of professional wrestling entertainment.

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