EGOT winner Rita Moreno to receive the documentary treatment from American Masters

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EGOT winner Rita Moreno to receive the documentary treatment from American Masters
Rita Moreno accepting another award, a Peabody Photo: Bryan Bedder

Since American Masters debuted on PBS in 1986, it has covered a wide variety of performers, from Maya Angelou to Bob Newhart to Neil Young. PBS announces today that the latest person to be so honored is none other than EGPT winner Rita Moreno, most recently star of the former Netflix series One Day At A Time.

“Rita Moreno: The Girl Who Decided to Go For It” (working title) is a partnership between Thirteen’s American Masters “and Norman Lear’s Act III Productions in association with Maramara and executive producer Lin-Manuel Miranda.” The documentary will be directed by Mariem Pérez Riera, who enthused in the official press release, “As a filmmaker, woman and Puerto Rican, I am proud to have the opportunity to tell Rita’s story… Hopefully, this film will give strength to the women all over the world, who today, face a similar fight towards equality.”

Moreno’s career encompasses an astonishing seven decades, including an Oscar for her role in the 1956 classic musical West Side Story, a stint on PBS’ own The Electric Company, and playing a nun on the HBO prison series Oz. The special will feature those and other highlights from her long career, as well as reenactments from her childhood, and interviews with luminaries like Lear, Miranda, Morgan Freeman, Mitzi Gaynor, Eva Longoria, Justina Machado, and Chita Rivera, as well as Moreno herself.

In typically peerless fashion, Moreno stated, “How I wish my Puerto Rican mother were alive to see this: her child’s story being celebrated by the likes of American Masters. It is not something she or I could ever have imagined. I’m astonished. I’m humbled.” No release date has been announced.

9 Comments

  • rogar131-av says:

    This is so well deserved, that it almost seems impossible amidst all the other crap going on. Really, we can have something good, too?

  • cinecraf-av says:

    She may have an EGOT, but her life will remain incomplete so long as she doesn’t have a Pulitzer, and Olympic gold and a Nobel Prize in Economics.  

  • blackoak-av says:

    For anyone interested this weeks American Masters (assuming the same episode is run in all markets I guess) is profiling author Ursula K. LeGuin.

  • kleptrep-av says:

    That reminds me, I want to make a film with her some day. With her, Lenny Henry, Michael Douglas, Sunmi and someone else. A movie set in a diner. Like D-Tox but in a Diner. Lenny Henry plays a bad guy. But that is the twist.

  • khalleron-av says:

    ‘paying a nun’? Really? What for?

  • LadyCommentariat-av says:

    I’m glad she’s getting recognized now while she can deservedly bask in the accolades. Apparently she’s great to work with, too: a friend of mine crewed her one-woman show a number of years back and had nothing but good things to say about her.

    • slider6294-av says:

      I adore her. She’s incredibly talented, intelligent, funny, humble and still quite a very good looking broad after all these years. An amazing lady and i can’t wait to watch this.

  • douglasd-av says:

    I love her.  Apparently she’s discovered the secret of never aging as well.  She’s 87 and could easily pass for 60.

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