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4:47 pm - 07/21/2011

Charisma Carpenter: "You Need To Get It Out That I'm A Proud Latina!"



Her name is Charisma Carpenter and she's best known for playing all-American cheerleader Cordelia Chase on the hit TV show, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. But there's something many people don't know about Charisma—she's Latina! "I think it’s the best kept secret ever," said the sweet actress, whose grandfather was born in Spain. "You need to get it out that I'm a proud Latina!"

Charisma says she's been trying to tell people she's Latina for years—but they don't believe her. "They're not buying it," she says. "I feel a little rejected by the Latina community. I say that in jest—I don't sincerely mean it. But I mean...a little bit."

The talented actress, who has a huge fan base for her work on Buffy and its spinoff, Angel, thinks she knows why people don't believe she's Latina. "I guess I'm too white, too pale," she says. "I guess they've never seen me tan...I don't know."

The 40-year-old actress says she wasn't raised speaking Spanish—but there's a reason for that. "My grandfather had a pretty terrible experience being in America and being from Spain," she says sounding a bit more serious. "He came to this country as an immigrant with his family. He was a crop picker: strawberries, cotton, all that kind of stuff. And what would happen back in those days is that parents would go away and send their small children to a boarding house or an orphanage."

Charisma says it must have been a crooked operation because her abuelo was smuggled out of the orphanage in the middle of the night, with his aunt, and adopted out to an American family who mistreated, mocked, and humiliated them. "{They} thought it was so precious and adorable that they spoke Spanish. They would make them sing in Spanish in front of their friends. Their friends would come over and they were the entertainment, so to speak," she says.

Charisma says the ordeal was very painful for her grandfather. "He was embarrassed by it, so he chose to forget the {Spanish} language," she says. "He refused to speak it. So my parents weren't raised speaking Spanish."


Still, Charisma says she managed to learn Spanish on her own. "I took Spanish since I was in the sixth grade and I lived in Mexico for a couple of years {her dad relocated there for work} when I was in high school," she says. "I went to a school that had a strong Latino environment in Southern San Diego—about six miles from the border, so I {grew up} in the culture."

This weekend, Charisma says she's attending a Latino film festival in support of the new film, Without Men, which stars Latinas Eva Longoria, Judy Reyes, and Kate Del Castillo. "I'm going to support Eva!" she says enthusiastically.

Source
sugarcrawler 21st-Jul-2011 10:37 pm (UTC)
jw how come some people dont like being called chicano? im not very familiar with the term
leasheinyoface 21st-Jul-2011 10:45 pm (UTC)
Some people think the term is a bit outdated. I actually like it cause it specifically refers to Mexican-Americans. Since I am one myself, I like to use it from time to time.
sugarcrawler 21st-Jul-2011 10:52 pm (UTC)
Oh, i see. i rarely hear the term chicano thats why. thanks.
leasheinyoface 21st-Jul-2011 10:55 pm (UTC)
no problem :) btw cute icons <3
sugarcrawler 22nd-Jul-2011 03:32 am (UTC)
:) ty! <3
warmhearted 21st-Jul-2011 10:50 pm (UTC)
The terms Chicano and Chicana (also spelled Xicana) are used in reference to U.S. citizens of Mexican descent. The term began to be widely used during the Chicano Movement, mainly among Mexican Americans, especially in the movement's peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s. For Mexicans the meaning of Chicano meant "poorest of the poor" but during the Civil Rights movement they used the word to unite themselves.
sugarcrawler 21st-Jul-2011 10:53 pm (UTC)
thanks for explaining it for me. i did not know it meant that, so i can see why some wouldnt want to be labeled as it
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