
‘Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go For It’ review: The ‘West Side Story’ star and EGOT winner shines in a new ‘American Masters’ documentary
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Yet as director Mariem Pérez Riera’s crisply made film makes clear, for the little girl who moved from Puerto Rico to New York with her mother as a child, fulfilling that dream meant overcoming all the impediments thrown at her, and enduring the indignities that went with being an actress of color — even one who consciously sought to resemble Elizabeth Taylor when she auditioned as a teenager — during those years.
Moreno met with studio mogul Louis B. Mayer at age 16, impressing him enough to land a studio contract. But those years came with being “treated like a sex object,” as she recalls, which included being sent on “pretend dates” with actors by the studio’s publicity department and being cast in an assortment of “native girl” roles that prompted her to perfect an all-purpose accent.
“I wanted to turn the parts down, but that’s all that was offered,” Moreno says, noting that the message from her bosses came through “loud and clear: Shut up and be sexy.”
Unlike Rita Hayworth, who masked her cultural identity, Moreno turned it into an asset with “West Side Story,” although even her acclaimed role in that movie didn’t open the floodgates as one might have expected. The paucity of worthwhile parts forced her to keep reinventing herself, from her Tony-winning stage role in “The Ritz” to TV work ranging from children’s series “The Electric Company,” whose album earned her a Grammy, to the grim prison drama “Oz.”
Off screen, Moreno engaged in activism that included the civil-rights movement and endured a lengthy and toxic romance with Marlon Brando. Clips from her role opposite Brando in the 1969 movie “The Night of the Following Day” take on a different hue hearing her discuss their dysfunctional relationship and the emotional scars she bore from it.
The net effect is a tribute to all that Moreno achieved over the course of a 70-year career, tempered by an equally bittersweet asterisk: How high would this “girl” have flown, given her talents, without facing those formidable headwinds?
“Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decided to Go For It” premieres in theaters on June 18.
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