In a meeting with NBC News, Moreno discusses visitor featuring in a show with “every one of the makings of an effective family parody,” Latino underrepresentation on television and the significance of becoming “involved residents.”
Rita Moreno was snared when she was tapped to play a phantom in the TV satire “Lopez versus Lopez,” featuring joke artist George Lopez and his girl, Mayan Lopez.
The show, which presents an entertaining yet fictionalized rendition of the Lopezes’ genuine dad girl relationship, returns Friday with another episode zeroing in on the family’s association with brujerÃa, or Latin American black magic, and otherworldliness after their house is upset by a phantom.
Moreno visitor stars in the episode as Dolores, the phantom of George’s late grandma. Dolores’ chancla-tossing soul gets back from the dead requesting a legitimate internment, an errand that powers George to stand up to past injuries and useless relational peculiarities.
“I adored why she resurrects,” Moreno said about her personality on the show, which airs on NBC (NBC News and NBC are essential for NBCUniversal). “She returned thundering, dreadful as usual, in that family and requesting regard.”
At the point when “Lopez versus Lopez” maker Debby Wolfe, whom Moreno worked with in Netflix’s “Each Day In turn,” imparted the idea to her, she was moved by it.
“The thought truly intrigued me,” Moreno said, adding that the dynamic among Dolores and George is hilarious, however with a serious hint.
Obviously, I love the closure, which we would rather not part with,” Moreno said. “That is what truly prevailed upon me. I believed that was so entertaining.”
In the same way as other Americans on Tuesday, Moreno was stuck to her television watching what turned into the principal flopped round of deciding in favor of speaker of the House.
“As a resident, we have an obligation,” said Moreno, who likes to stay aware of recent developments.