Quando me deito a primeira coisa que eu penso é em você , se você está bem , se está precisando de alguma coisa , se está se sentindo só e se está sentindo a minha falta .
(Source: neverneverfoorget)
Actress Theresa Harris with Marlene Dietrich in the 1941 film, The Flame of New Orleans. From Donald Bogle’s Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood:
Harris - who was both outspoken and highly intelligent - didn’t mince words about the plight of colored actresses. She told Fay M. Jackson, of the California Eagle in August 1937: “I never felt the chance to rise above the role of maid in Hollywood movies. My color was against me. The fact that I was not ‘hot’ stamped me as either an uppity ‘Negress’ or relegated me to the eternal role of stooge or servant. I can sing but so can hundreds of other girls. My ambitions are to be an actress. Hollywood had no parts for me.
I’m going to take a wild guess on how Theresa Harris would have felt about “The Help.”
Não adianta gritar que você não vai me escutar , não adianta querer aparecer que nem assim você vai querer saber de mim , então o me resta é desistir e por fim nesse amor que está dentro de mim .
(Source: neverneverfoorget)