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The sweet and sour flavors of ethnicity were never far away. Moreno was a talented beauty but pigeonholed in films as a "spitfire" or some other kind of exotic nonwhite. Even after she won an Oscar as a supporting actress in "West Side Story," released in 1961, many doors remained closed. As she neared and then passed 40, she fought to continue her career in spite of the burdens of age and ethnicity. No wonder Moreno, now 81, thought from the beginning that it would all come crashing down eventually. Outward confidence aside, she was bedeviled by doubts and fears and secretly believed that she was faking it all. Her relationships with domineering men, particularly Marlon Brando, reflected her low self-esteem. She broke up with Brando a half-dozen times, returning to the notorious narcissist again and again. Driven to despair by an abortion and a suicide attempt
-- both stemmed from her affair with Brando -- she managed to summon the strength to begin years of psychic healing. That may well be Rita Moreno's greatest accomplishment. Surrounded by the Oscar, Emmy, Tony and Grammy
-- she is one of the few to win all four top show business awards -- she is a survivor who defeated her own demons as well as those conjured by others. Her book celebrates that victory and the spirit behind it.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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