I had an awful lot to say in what I wore as Romana.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I owe my career to Latina women. I was surrounded by the amazing group: my mother, my aunts, my extended family. They didn't necessarily have access to high fashion, but they had great style and looked stunning naturally at every age.
Oh, I have to say Romana; she was much more fun to do but I did enjoy the Princess when she was turning bad.
I'm the Latin artist who has been the most successful in history at representing the Latin culture. The stylings of my words are immodest, but it's the truth.
I definitely have some stereotypical qualities of being a Latina. I talk with my hands, which means I knock stuff over all the time.
I'm Dario Argento, and my style is something recognizable I think by the audience.
Yes, I'm a proud Latina woman, but before that - before the color of my skin, my accent, anything - I'm an actress, singer and dancer. I'm something bigger than just my background.
I'm totally Italian, but I'm not a diva. If you could see the way I'm dressed in daily life, that's not a diva. Appearances are so not important to me.
In my field, you can't really wear the same dress twice unless you want Isaac Mizrahi to scorn you on TV.
I don't actually think there has ever been too much emphasis on what I am wearing.
I did not try to conform to anybody's ideal of what a Latin celebrity or movie star should be. I took a lot of hits for it.
No opposing quotes found.