America Ferrera: My identity is a superpower -- not an obstacle
America Ferrera believes stories have the power to make people better. She uses her voice to speak up for more humanity and justice in the world. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to the made-for-TV movie "Gypsy,"
and the burning desire of a nine-year-old
anyone who looked like me
and teachers all constantly warned me
didn't make it in Hollywood.
that anyone could achieve anything,
immigrated from Honduras,
for cable subscriptions
is that the casting director asked me,
but just this time, sound more Latina."
to do it in Spanish?" I asked.
just sound Latina."
so isn't this what a Latina sounds like?"
thank you for coming in, bye!"
to realize that by "sound more Latina"
to speak in broken English.
real-life, authentic Latina
people were willing to see me for:
that existed for someone like me.
and saw as too brown, too fat,
from my own reality
who were complex and multidimensional,
of their own lives.
in the background of someone else's.
to my manager --
to help me find opportunity --
she has unrealistic expectations."
that wasn't a poorly written stereotype,
to cast this role diversely."
but she's too specifically ethnic."
one Latino in this movie."
again and again and again.
I had to overcome.
I'll just follow the playbook,
that people said were wrong with me.
so that my skin wouldn't get too brown,
and more expensive clothes.
too brown, too poor Latina.
that would make all my dreams come true,
to be exactly who I was.
like her, anyone like me,
of her own life story.
ethnicity, body type,
to fulfill her unlikely dream.
I had been told my whole life,
want to see stories about people like me.
represented in the culture
and financial success.
was rushing to tell more stories
and willing to pay to see them.
when I got to play Ugly Betty,
to 16 million viewers
for 11 Emmys in its first year.
thriving in the world
living in the Swat Valley of Pakistan.
her hands on some DVDs
of becoming a writer reflected.
could make a difference
the "Ugly Betty" DVDs
presence in the culture.
presence creates possibility.
presence in the culture
in the mainstream,
I wasn't getting a role in a movie.
to cast diversely,
until they cast the white role first."
with a broken heart
"I understand how messed up this is."
hundreds of times before,
stop crying over a job."
of accepting the failure as my own
that I couldn't overcome the obstacles.
were not about losing a job.
was actually being said about me.
and agents and managers
and straightening irons
in this deeply entrenched value system.
the system to change.
and those aren't the same thing.
what a system believed about me,
the system believed about me.
for me to exist in my dream as I was.
trying to make myself invisible.
was that it is possible
who genuinely wants to see change
keep things the way they are.
is that change isn't going to come
and the bad guys.
lets us all off the hook.
are neither one of those.
values and beliefs.
lead to our best intentions.
that in order to fulfill my dreams,
my talents to the world
as my full and authentic self.
dancing in the den, dreaming her dreams,
what the world actually looks like.
to reflect that,
resisting the one we already live in.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
America Ferrera - Actor, director, producer, activistAmerica Ferrera believes stories have the power to make people better. She uses her voice to speak up for more humanity and justice in the world.
Why you should listen
America Ferrera is an award-winning actress and producer known for her breakthrough role as Betty Suarez on ABC's hit comedy Ugly Betty. For her performance, Ferrera was recognized with a Golden Globe, Emmy and Screen Actors Guild Award, as well as ALMA and Imagen Awards. She currently produces and stars in the NBC workplace comedy Superstore, which is in its fourth season.
Ferrera recently released her first book, American Like Me, landing on the New York Times best-seller list. The book is a vibrant and varied collection of first-person accounts from prominent figures about the experience of growing up between cultures in America. A longtime activist, Ferrera co-founded HARNESS with her husband, Ryan Piers Williams, and Wilmer Valderrama in 2016. HARNESS is a community of artists, influencers and grassroots leaders that provides education and engagement opportunities to amplify the work of organizations and individuals working on behalf of social justice. In July 2016, Ferrera spoke at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia on behalf of women's rights and immigration in support of Hillary Clinton. She was a chair for the Artists' Committee for the Women's March on Washington and spoke at the historic Women's March the day after the 2017 Presidential Inauguration. In 2006, Ferrera founded her own television and film production company, Take Fountain.
America Ferrera | Speaker | TED.com