BFF-06 After ‘Roma’ glory, actress Aparicio has new role – activist

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After ‘Roma’ glory, actress Aparicio has new role – activist

MEXICO CITY, Feb 3, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – A year after the movie “Roma”
catapulted her from obscurity to an Oscar nomination, Mexican actress Yalitza
Aparicio is using the spotlight to promote causes close to her heart:
indigenous and women’s rights in her country.

Taking a break from film sets, the 26-year-old from the Mixtec community in
the southern state of Oaxaca is dedicating this year to working as a UNESCO
goodwill ambassador for indigenous peoples.

In her new role, Aparicio — the first indigenous woman ever nominated for
a best actress Oscar — returned to school this week to give a talk at
Harvard University’s Mexico Conference 2020.

In an interview with AFP in Mexico City, she said she understood that fame
and her career would be “a series of ups and downs.”

“So the thing is to use this current high to lend visibility [to indigenous
communities] and to explain to more people the things that I have been
concerned about,” she said.

“It’s been gratifying.”

Aparacio became an inspiration to many Mexicans when she earned rave
reviews for her role in “Roma,” by Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron. The film
ended up winning three Oscars.

Her “Roma” character Cleo is a domestic worker inspired by Cuaron’s own
childhood nanny.

The film’s success not only brought her international plaudits, but she
ended up doing interviews and photo shoots for top magazines such as Vogue
and Vanity Fair — where indigenous faces are rare.

Of course, the praise was accompanied by some vitriol on social media.

Many with indigenous roots in Mexico have experienced discrimination, in a
society that has been reluctant to acknowledge its own racism.

“We are not new faces, we are simply the people we always were, but who
nobody had ever bothered looking at before,” she said.

“May we never again be afraid to say, ‘Enough! We exist too!'”

– ‘I am a feminist’ –

On the back of “Roma,” Aparicio connected with many ordinary women in
Mexico, and pushed celebrities to lend their support to the Latin American
feminist movement.

Chilean singer Mon Laferte invited Aparicio to appear in the video for her
song “Plata Ta Ta,” a high-octane reggaeton performance in which Aparicio
wore a green headscarf, the international symbol of the struggle for women’s
rights.

In her native Oaxaca — the second place in Mexico after the capital to
decriminalize abortion — conservatives have criticized her liberal stance,
but she is holding firm.

“Every one of us is free to decide for themselves, depending on their
situation,” she said.

“I am simply supporting the right which all women have: we are free to make
decisions about our own bodies.”

Violence against women in Mexico — 10 are killed every day, according to
the United Nations — and female empowerment come up often when Aparicio
speaks, and she describes herself as a “feminist for equality.”

“I am a feminist and I always have been,” she said.

“Lots of times, people think being a feminist means being ‘more than men’
when in reality, it’s just a question of seeking the equality that so many of
us lack.”

– Back to her roots –

Aparicio stumbled into the world of movies by chance.

Having recently graduated as a teacher, she accompanied her sister to a
casting call — with no idea that she herself would be cast and it would
change her life.

Her sudden flurry of globetrotting due to the success of “Roma” left her
longing to return to her hometown of Tlaxiaco, a community of 40,000 people
in the mountains who now see her as a star.

“When I go back home, they say to me, ‘What are you washing the dishes for?
You just sit down, you’re a celebrity!’ and I quip back that the plates
aren’t going to suddenly slip out of my hands,” she said.

Aparicio used to dream that one day her students would come back to her and
show off their university degrees: she now hopes her work will inspire
others.

“I bump into more and more people who say ‘Yes I can do this,’ and that
gives me lots of energy,” she said with a smile.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0857 hrs