'Devious Maids': Controversy behind new show
By Cindy Y. Rodriguez, CNN
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Editor's Note: "Devious Maids" debuts on Lifetime at 10 p.m. ET Sunday.
(CNN) - TV history will be made Sunday night with the premiere of "Devious Maids," the first prime-time program featuring an all-Latina leading cast. But even before the first episode has aired, the Lifetime show is receiving a slew of criticism.
Marc Cherry of "Desperate Housewives'' is the creator and executive producer, and he's joined by two fellow "Housewives" alums: Sabrina Wind and Eva Longoria. The soapy comedy-drama is about five Latina maids who work for wealthy families and dream of a better life.
The pilot opens with a Beverly Hills hostess scolding her maid: "I think what you people do is heroic. You wash clothes you can't afford. You polish silver you will never dine with. You mop floors for people who don't bother to learn your name," finally ending with, "That said, if you don't stop screwing my husband, I'm going to have you deported."
"Devious Maids" is loosely based on a Mexican telenovela "Ellas son la Alegría del Hogar," and stars Judy Reyes ("Scrubs"), Dania Ramirez ("Premium Rush"), Ana Ortiz ("Ugly Betty") and Roselyn Sanchez ("Chasing Papi"). Newcomer Edy Ganem plays Reyes' daughter.
Recently, some in the Latino community have expressed their disappointment for the show, calling it a "wasted opportunity" in that it will only perpetuate the ongoing issue in Hollywood that Latinas can play only stereotypical roles such as maids, gardeners and nannies.
"It is not wrong to be a maid, or even a Latina maid," wrote Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez, author of "The Dirty Girls Social Club," in an opinion piece, "but there is something very wrong with an American entertainment industry that continually tells Latinas that this is all they are or can ever be."
Longoria responded to the backlash on The Huffington Post: "I take pride in the fact that these characters are not one dimensional or limited to their job title. As the minority becomes the majority and the United States becomes more diverse, it is important that the protagonists on television embody this diversity."
"However," she continued, "television is a business. If we don't support shows that have diverse content, we won't see shows with diverse content! They will simply go away, and the hurdles to make the next show with diversity will be even more challenging."
Michelle Herrera Mulligan, editor in chief of Cosmopolitan for Latinas, countered: "Well, Eva, I've watched the show, and I'm genuinely sad to say that I disagree. It's not a complex portrait; it's an insulting disgrace."
"I saw the first [episode] and thought it was annoying," Valdes-Rodriguez said. "I just don't like the flamenco guitar tone every time there's a Latina on the screen. It's very unimaginative and predictable. I have no interest in the show at all."
Editor's Note: "Devious Maids" debuts on Lifetime at 10 p.m. ET Sunday.
The National Hispanic Media Coalition is supporting the show, stating members of the coalition watched the pilot and saw nothing wrong. They said if Lifetime were depicting Latinas in negative stereotypical roles, the coaliton would be the first ones to criticize the show.
"Some of the issues that Latinos go through in this country is characterized by each of these maids, things they are trying to overcome," said Alex Nogales, executive director of the coalition, interview with CNN. "If I came from a poor migrant experience, does that mean that story doesn't get told? That's silly."
Part of the criticism is the frustration that Hispanics don't have more characters on television that represent them as nurses, doctors and lawyers. Nogales says that to imagine Latinos being represented on-screen as successful professionals before telling the immigrant stories of hardship, assimilation and struggle first just won't work.
Actress Ramirez said on a phone interview with CNN that Cherry has hired two Latina writers, Gloria Calderon and Tanya Saracho, "to make sure that the Latino voices were really present and heard."
"We have, as Latina maids, been portrayed on television and movies, but none of them have been humanized," she said. "None of them are real life stories, choosing to take this role is more interesting to me because I get to tell a story of struggle."
For Ramirez, playing the role of Rosie Falta on the show strikes an emotional chord. Her character is a widow who left her son back in Mexico when her husband died and is working as a maid to help bring him to America.
"Not only do I tell this real compelling immigrant story, but I get to tap into my own experience because my parents had to leave me as an infant with my older sister, Danilda, back in the Dominican Republic and that took a lot of courage," Ramirez said.
Ramirez's mother worked as a clothing factory worker but was a nurse back in the Dominican Republic, and her father was a taxi driver, although he was a chemist back in his home country.
"Now, I finally have a chance to portray the stories of the older generation," said Ramirez. "If we are going to tackle Hollywood, then we need to educate Hollywood first. You gotta start there."
However, Valdes-Rodriguez says that people form their idea of reality by what they see on television. She used the racist comments about the boy from San Antonio who sang the national anthem at the NBA finals as an example of people "who don't know anything about Latinos' different cultures."
"I would advise those people to take a closer look at the people who attacked this boy ... where did they get the idea that we're all illegal immigrants? Well, the opening of the pilot episode of 'Devious Maids' has a boss threatening to deport one of the maids. Is this the only image Hollywood sees of us?"
Ramirez hopes audiences see that the leading ladies on "Devious Maids" as more than maids who are not defined by their jobs who happen to be Latina. Even though Ramirez has played every role from "the hot girl" to a superhero, she asks audiences, "how is that better?"
Devious Maids
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Friday, June 21, 2013
Actress Judy Reyes attends the premiere of LIfetime’s new prime time soap, “Devious Maids.” (Photo/Getty Images)
Why “Devious Maids” actress Judy Reyes says the show surprised her
by Nina Terrero, @thenininsky
5:00 am on 06/20/2013
There’s intrigue, deception, lust, greed and sex. Just like any prime time soap, all those elements are right at home within the plot of “Devious Maids.” Even so, the show – despite its titillating title – has a lot more to offer audiences than just jaw-dropping murder scenes and maids dusting crystal valuables in pushup bras, says cast member Judy Reyes (although admittedly you’ll get all that and then some in the first episode).
“The subject matter of the show has had people talking since word of it first emerged,” says Reyes, who plays Zoila Del Barrio, one of five maids featured on “Devious Maids.” “But it’s a telenovela. It’s melodramatic and suspenseful, everything you’d want. But there’s a complexity in the story line that I think rings true to the experience many Latinos have had in this country.”
“Devious Maids” – which premieres this Sunday on Lifetime and is an adaptation of the Mexican drama “Ellas son la Alegría del Hogar” – has been the subject of a highly-publicized debate, both from critics slamming the depiction of Latinas in a subservient position and from those who praise the show for being the first English language soap to have a majority-Latino cast. Executive produced by Eva Longoria and “Desperate Housewives” creator Marc Cherry, “Devious Maids” has had its fair share of skeptics – and surprisingly, Reyes counts herself as one of them.
RELATED: Check out the first episode of “Devious Maids”
“I will admit that I raised an eyebrow when I was first approached about the show, like ‘oh great, why does the first project starring all Latinas have to be about maids?’” admits Reyes, who has a devoted cult following thanks to her nine-year stint on the hit show “Scrubs.” “But I’ve connected to my role in a very specific way, playing a mother and playing a maid – that’s something that really resonated with me given my own personal history.”
“Devious Maids” cast members, from left to right: Ana Ortiz, Edy Ganem, Judy Reyes, Ana Ortiz and Roslyn Sanchez. (Photo/Courtesy LIfetime)
Reyes, the daughter of Dominican immigrants, says “Devious Maids” is faithful to the many Latinas in the United States who have worked their way up from humble circumstances: the “Devious” maids are feisty and loyal; they dream big and fight for their family no matter what the cost.
“My mother was a housekeeper on and off for years,” reveals Reyes, who stars in the show alongside Roselyn Sanchez, “Ugly Betty” alum Ana Ortiz, fellow Dominicana Dania Ramirez and newcomer Edy Ganem. “I learned from her and my dad, who owned a bodega, that there is dignity in work and making sure your job, whatever it is, is well done. There was an unwritten rule that I learned as a first-generation Latino. You may be poor, but there are never dirty dishes in the sink, your clothes are clean and your walls sparkle. You earn your dollar and you do it honestly,” Reyes says.
That’s a main point of defense for her character Zoila, the eldest of the “Devious Maids,” who works alongside her teenager Valentina (Ganem) in the grand home belonging to Genevieve Delatour (played by soap veteran Susan Lucci). Zoila is vigilant about wiping up every speck of dust in the mansion where she works; she’s even more so about making her teenage daughter stays out of trouble and out of the arms of Genevieve’s hunky, WASP-y son Remi (Drew Van Acker).
“I really had a great experience filming the show and developing my character,” says Reyes. Her family — her three-year-old daughter as well as her partner George Valencia — were with her on set in Atlanta, Georgia during the duration of the show’s taping. “To me, being Latina means being true to the person you are and not letting your circumstances define you. That’s what I want to shine through in my performance, as happy and intense as the acting was.”
And come what may – the show has yet to be picked up for a second season – Reyes says that she’s proud of her role.
“There’s a lot of temptation to judge what Eva [Longoria] and Marc [Cherry] have decided to do,” says Reyes, who says that the key to feeling glam out of her maid’s costume is an extra-sexy pair of high heels and great lipstick. “No matter what happens, my responsibilities are to speak for myself and what I can do as an actor. ‘Devious Maids’ is a little naughty in nature – you want something completely true to life? Watch a documentary or the history channel.”
“This is TV you’ll feel good about watching – and will want to gossip about with your friends and co-workers the next morning, just like any really good telenovela.”
Why “Devious Maids” actress Judy Reyes says the show surprised her
by Nina Terrero, @thenininsky
5:00 am on 06/20/2013
There’s intrigue, deception, lust, greed and sex. Just like any prime time soap, all those elements are right at home within the plot of “Devious Maids.” Even so, the show – despite its titillating title – has a lot more to offer audiences than just jaw-dropping murder scenes and maids dusting crystal valuables in pushup bras, says cast member Judy Reyes (although admittedly you’ll get all that and then some in the first episode).
“The subject matter of the show has had people talking since word of it first emerged,” says Reyes, who plays Zoila Del Barrio, one of five maids featured on “Devious Maids.” “But it’s a telenovela. It’s melodramatic and suspenseful, everything you’d want. But there’s a complexity in the story line that I think rings true to the experience many Latinos have had in this country.”
“Devious Maids” – which premieres this Sunday on Lifetime and is an adaptation of the Mexican drama “Ellas son la Alegría del Hogar” – has been the subject of a highly-publicized debate, both from critics slamming the depiction of Latinas in a subservient position and from those who praise the show for being the first English language soap to have a majority-Latino cast. Executive produced by Eva Longoria and “Desperate Housewives” creator Marc Cherry, “Devious Maids” has had its fair share of skeptics – and surprisingly, Reyes counts herself as one of them.
RELATED: Check out the first episode of “Devious Maids”
“I will admit that I raised an eyebrow when I was first approached about the show, like ‘oh great, why does the first project starring all Latinas have to be about maids?’” admits Reyes, who has a devoted cult following thanks to her nine-year stint on the hit show “Scrubs.” “But I’ve connected to my role in a very specific way, playing a mother and playing a maid – that’s something that really resonated with me given my own personal history.”
“Devious Maids” cast members, from left to right: Ana Ortiz, Edy Ganem, Judy Reyes, Ana Ortiz and Roslyn Sanchez. (Photo/Courtesy LIfetime)
Reyes, the daughter of Dominican immigrants, says “Devious Maids” is faithful to the many Latinas in the United States who have worked their way up from humble circumstances: the “Devious” maids are feisty and loyal; they dream big and fight for their family no matter what the cost.
“My mother was a housekeeper on and off for years,” reveals Reyes, who stars in the show alongside Roselyn Sanchez, “Ugly Betty” alum Ana Ortiz, fellow Dominicana Dania Ramirez and newcomer Edy Ganem. “I learned from her and my dad, who owned a bodega, that there is dignity in work and making sure your job, whatever it is, is well done. There was an unwritten rule that I learned as a first-generation Latino. You may be poor, but there are never dirty dishes in the sink, your clothes are clean and your walls sparkle. You earn your dollar and you do it honestly,” Reyes says.
That’s a main point of defense for her character Zoila, the eldest of the “Devious Maids,” who works alongside her teenager Valentina (Ganem) in the grand home belonging to Genevieve Delatour (played by soap veteran Susan Lucci). Zoila is vigilant about wiping up every speck of dust in the mansion where she works; she’s even more so about making her teenage daughter stays out of trouble and out of the arms of Genevieve’s hunky, WASP-y son Remi (Drew Van Acker).
“I really had a great experience filming the show and developing my character,” says Reyes. Her family — her three-year-old daughter as well as her partner George Valencia — were with her on set in Atlanta, Georgia during the duration of the show’s taping. “To me, being Latina means being true to the person you are and not letting your circumstances define you. That’s what I want to shine through in my performance, as happy and intense as the acting was.”
And come what may – the show has yet to be picked up for a second season – Reyes says that she’s proud of her role.
“There’s a lot of temptation to judge what Eva [Longoria] and Marc [Cherry] have decided to do,” says Reyes, who says that the key to feeling glam out of her maid’s costume is an extra-sexy pair of high heels and great lipstick. “No matter what happens, my responsibilities are to speak for myself and what I can do as an actor. ‘Devious Maids’ is a little naughty in nature – you want something completely true to life? Watch a documentary or the history channel.”
“This is TV you’ll feel good about watching – and will want to gossip about with your friends and co-workers the next morning, just like any really good telenovela.”
10 Reasons to Watch Devious Maids, Which Premieres Sunday
by Megan Angelo
There are a few truly awesome shows coming out this summer—we've already discussed my rabid excitement for Orange Is the New Black—and Devious Maids is definitely the most deliciously scandalous of the bunch. You'd expect nothing less from the creator of Desperate Housewives, but you might not expect that I actually liked this pilot even better than the first episode of that show (which was such a sensation back in the day. Remember this Vanity Fair cover and ensuing catfight-filled story? Man, those were the days.)
Lucky for us, those days are here again—but in a happily 2.0 fashion. I haven't yet heard of any bad blood between the Maids cast, but they're certainly going to have made a huge splash by the time we all wake up on Monday morning. Here's why you need to set your DVR for this drama ASAP (this Sunday, 10/9 central, Lifetime):
1) It's the first show outside of Spanish-speaking programming to star five Latina actresses as the lead. (Edy Ganem, second from right, is a supporting player—Judy's daughter.)
2) Judy Reyes is back!
3) Susan Lucci is fabulous as an unstable rich lady whose candid sound bites spice up the stuffy world of the superrich.
4) The house porn is predictably out of control.
5) The central mystery (not gonna spoil a thing) grabs you immediately, and when you find out who'll be driving the investigation into it, you'll be hooked on the show for good. (In other words, they waste no time getting to the twists and turns.)
6) Dania Ramirez gets to be wily and emotional and generally do a heck of a lot more than stand behind Turtle giving updates on tequila launches. Step aside, Entourage, and let the lady work.
7) PLL's Drew Van Acker and Edy have the cutest forbidden romance going.
8) Roselyn Sanchez is impeccably cast as a conniving, aspiring singer trying to kiss up to the famous musician she's working for.
9) Oh, I should probably back up and intro the guys in the last photo, right? Yeah, they're Matt Cedeno (at left, the aforementioned singer) and Wole Parks (another member of his staff), and if I ran the world, we'd all get to sashay around with one on each arm like Roselyn does.
10) Perpetual badass Eva Longoria is executive-producing. Need I say more?
by Megan Angelo
There are a few truly awesome shows coming out this summer—we've already discussed my rabid excitement for Orange Is the New Black—and Devious Maids is definitely the most deliciously scandalous of the bunch. You'd expect nothing less from the creator of Desperate Housewives, but you might not expect that I actually liked this pilot even better than the first episode of that show (which was such a sensation back in the day. Remember this Vanity Fair cover and ensuing catfight-filled story? Man, those were the days.)
Lucky for us, those days are here again—but in a happily 2.0 fashion. I haven't yet heard of any bad blood between the Maids cast, but they're certainly going to have made a huge splash by the time we all wake up on Monday morning. Here's why you need to set your DVR for this drama ASAP (this Sunday, 10/9 central, Lifetime):
1) It's the first show outside of Spanish-speaking programming to star five Latina actresses as the lead. (Edy Ganem, second from right, is a supporting player—Judy's daughter.)
2) Judy Reyes is back!
3) Susan Lucci is fabulous as an unstable rich lady whose candid sound bites spice up the stuffy world of the superrich.
4) The house porn is predictably out of control.
5) The central mystery (not gonna spoil a thing) grabs you immediately, and when you find out who'll be driving the investigation into it, you'll be hooked on the show for good. (In other words, they waste no time getting to the twists and turns.)
6) Dania Ramirez gets to be wily and emotional and generally do a heck of a lot more than stand behind Turtle giving updates on tequila launches. Step aside, Entourage, and let the lady work.
7) PLL's Drew Van Acker and Edy have the cutest forbidden romance going.
8) Roselyn Sanchez is impeccably cast as a conniving, aspiring singer trying to kiss up to the famous musician she's working for.
9) Oh, I should probably back up and intro the guys in the last photo, right? Yeah, they're Matt Cedeno (at left, the aforementioned singer) and Wole Parks (another member of his staff), and if I ran the world, we'd all get to sashay around with one on each arm like Roselyn does.
10) Perpetual badass Eva Longoria is executive-producing. Need I say more?
'Devious Maids' stars and EP Eva Longoria on criticism: 'It doesn't define our culture'
By Rick Porter June 21, 2013 5:46 PM ET
Follow @Zap2itRick on Twitter | Google
Lifetime's new series "Devious Maids" has come in for some criticism over the fact that its five lead actresses, who are all Latina, are playing domestic workers.
The soapy drama, which premieres Sunday (June 23), is based on a Mexican telenovela and comes from "Desperate Housewives" creator Marc Cherry. "Housewives" star Eva Longoria is an executive producer, and she and the five women -- Ana Ortiz, Judy Reyes, Roselyn Sanchez, Dania Ramirez and Edy Ganem -- who star in the show want people to actually see it before judging it. (Lifetime has the full pilot episode online, incidentally.)
"Honestly, my first reaction was not unlike the blowback we're getting," Ortiz tells the L.A. Times. "I understand where people are coming from because, as a Latina and being in this business as long as I have, I was like 'Really? "Devious Maids"? What, are we all going to be called Maria?' But it was a show from Marc Cherry, who I respect greatly, so I resisted the urge to write it off completely."
In taking the part, Ortiz says she now has the chance to play a charcter who's "strong, powerful and well-educated" -- a type she's never played before.
"We know there's a responsibility we have to make it successful because if it doesn't, industry people will be like, 'Oh, well that didn't work!,'" Ortiz adds. "And then who knows when the next opportunity like this will happen."
Longoria, who has been a vocal defender of the show, tells the Times, "It doesn't define our culture if we are playing these roles."
By Rick Porter June 21, 2013 5:46 PM ET
Follow @Zap2itRick on Twitter | Google
Lifetime's new series "Devious Maids" has come in for some criticism over the fact that its five lead actresses, who are all Latina, are playing domestic workers.
The soapy drama, which premieres Sunday (June 23), is based on a Mexican telenovela and comes from "Desperate Housewives" creator Marc Cherry. "Housewives" star Eva Longoria is an executive producer, and she and the five women -- Ana Ortiz, Judy Reyes, Roselyn Sanchez, Dania Ramirez and Edy Ganem -- who star in the show want people to actually see it before judging it. (Lifetime has the full pilot episode online, incidentally.)
"Honestly, my first reaction was not unlike the blowback we're getting," Ortiz tells the L.A. Times. "I understand where people are coming from because, as a Latina and being in this business as long as I have, I was like 'Really? "Devious Maids"? What, are we all going to be called Maria?' But it was a show from Marc Cherry, who I respect greatly, so I resisted the urge to write it off completely."
In taking the part, Ortiz says she now has the chance to play a charcter who's "strong, powerful and well-educated" -- a type she's never played before.
"We know there's a responsibility we have to make it successful because if it doesn't, industry people will be like, 'Oh, well that didn't work!,'" Ortiz adds. "And then who knows when the next opportunity like this will happen."
Longoria, who has been a vocal defender of the show, tells the Times, "It doesn't define our culture if we are playing these roles."
Lifetime's 'Devious Maids' is devilishly entertaining
Lifetime
From left: Ana Ortiz, Edy Ganem, Judy Reyes, Dania Ramirez and Roselyn Sanchez in "Devious Maids." Lifetime photo
11 minutes ago • By Gail Pennington gpennington@post-dispatch.com
They’re not really devious, and one of them isn’t actually a maid. But “Devious Maids,” adapted from a telenovela — a Spanish-language soap opera — by Marc Cherry (“Desperate Housewives”), is just as juicy and entertaining as the title suggests.
Like “Desperate Housewives” before it, “Devious Maids” starts with a death. This is no spoiler; the murder that happens before the opening titles sets the whole story in motion.
Flora (Paula Garces) was being preyed on sexually by her creepy employer, Adrian Powell (Tom Irwin). His wife, Evelyn (Rebecca Wisocky), confronts her with a condescending speech about “you people” and “your determination to succeed in this great country of ours.”
That said, she warns, if Flora doesn’t stop sleeping with her husband, “I’m going to have you deported — comprende?”
Not necessary. Quickly, Flora is dead, and an arrest is made. But is the person who was charged really guilty?
That’s a subject for debate even among Flora’s friends, the other maids who work in the nearby mansions in Beverly Hills.
They’re a diverse and appealing group: Carmen (Roselyn Sanchez), an aspiring singer; Rosie (Dania Ramirez), a widow with a son back in Mexico; Zoila and Valentina (Judy Reyes and Edy Ganem), mother and daughter; and newcomer Marisol (Ana Ortiz), whose employers think she has “an attitude” because she’s educated and has no accent.
All they really have in common is that they clean rich people’s houses. And that’s why, long before its premiere, “Devious Maids” drew sharp criticism from Latino advocacy groups for advancing the stereotype that all Latina women are maids and showing the cast with mops and buckets.
Executive producer Eva Longoria, in a Huffington Post column, countered that the show is an opportunity to break the stereotype by providing “a deeper, more complex side to the women who live beyond the box that some choose to put them in.”
In the two episodes provided for preview, the maids are not portrayed in an insulting way. All are smart and, in various ways, going after what they want. Even the more cliched storylines, including one in which young Valentina tries to land her employer’s handsome (and rich) son, is portrayed with sympathy and surprising nuance.
Nuance, in a Marc Cherry show? Never fear; the silliness here is well supplied by the employers, some of whom are cartoonishly horrible. The worst of the bunch are the Powells, who don’t even clean up after the murder because they can’t find a maid to do it for them.
Rooting for the housekeepers to teach these awful people a lesson is one good reason to watch “Devious Maids.” But so is getting to meet all these interesting, likable Latina women.
MEET THE ‘MAIDS’
Flora Hernandez (Paula Garces) works for the Powells (Tom Irwin and Rebecca Wisocky) and is victimized by him sexually. Her murder before the opening titles sets the story in motion.
Marisol Duarte (Ana Ortiz) is newly hired by the newly married Stappords (Brianna Brown and Brett Cullen). But she has an ulterior motive for wanting to join the community of maids.
Rosie Falta (Dania Ramirez) is a widow whose young son is back in Mexico, while she raises a baby for two wildly self-absorbed actors (Grant Show and Mariana Klavenko).
Carmen Luna (Roselyn Sanchez) is an aspiring singer working as a maid for a pop superstar (Matt Cedeno) and wrangling with his terrifying housekeeper (Melinda Page Hamilton).
Zoila Diaz (Judy Reyes) and Valentina Diaz (Edy Ganem) are a mother and daughter who work for wealthy and emotionally fragile Genevieve (Susan Lucci). Valentina likes Genevieve’s son, Remi (Drew Van Acker).
What “Devious Maids” • When 9 p.m. Sundays • Where Lifetime • More info mylifetime.com/shows/devious-maids
Lifetime
From left: Ana Ortiz, Edy Ganem, Judy Reyes, Dania Ramirez and Roselyn Sanchez in "Devious Maids." Lifetime photo
11 minutes ago • By Gail Pennington gpennington@post-dispatch.com
They’re not really devious, and one of them isn’t actually a maid. But “Devious Maids,” adapted from a telenovela — a Spanish-language soap opera — by Marc Cherry (“Desperate Housewives”), is just as juicy and entertaining as the title suggests.
Like “Desperate Housewives” before it, “Devious Maids” starts with a death. This is no spoiler; the murder that happens before the opening titles sets the whole story in motion.
Flora (Paula Garces) was being preyed on sexually by her creepy employer, Adrian Powell (Tom Irwin). His wife, Evelyn (Rebecca Wisocky), confronts her with a condescending speech about “you people” and “your determination to succeed in this great country of ours.”
That said, she warns, if Flora doesn’t stop sleeping with her husband, “I’m going to have you deported — comprende?”
Not necessary. Quickly, Flora is dead, and an arrest is made. But is the person who was charged really guilty?
That’s a subject for debate even among Flora’s friends, the other maids who work in the nearby mansions in Beverly Hills.
They’re a diverse and appealing group: Carmen (Roselyn Sanchez), an aspiring singer; Rosie (Dania Ramirez), a widow with a son back in Mexico; Zoila and Valentina (Judy Reyes and Edy Ganem), mother and daughter; and newcomer Marisol (Ana Ortiz), whose employers think she has “an attitude” because she’s educated and has no accent.
Executive producer Eva Longoria, in a Huffington Post column, countered that the show is an opportunity to break the stereotype by providing “a deeper, more complex side to the women who live beyond the box that some choose to put them in.”
In the two episodes provided for preview, the maids are not portrayed in an insulting way. All are smart and, in various ways, going after what they want. Even the more cliched storylines, including one in which young Valentina tries to land her employer’s handsome (and rich) son, is portrayed with sympathy and surprising nuance.
Nuance, in a Marc Cherry show? Never fear; the silliness here is well supplied by the employers, some of whom are cartoonishly horrible. The worst of the bunch are the Powells, who don’t even clean up after the murder because they can’t find a maid to do it for them.
Rooting for the housekeepers to teach these awful people a lesson is one good reason to watch “Devious Maids.” But so is getting to meet all these interesting, likable Latina women.
MEET THE ‘MAIDS’
Flora Hernandez (Paula Garces) works for the Powells (Tom Irwin and Rebecca Wisocky) and is victimized by him sexually. Her murder before the opening titles sets the story in motion.
Marisol Duarte (Ana Ortiz) is newly hired by the newly married Stappords (Brianna Brown and Brett Cullen). But she has an ulterior motive for wanting to join the community of maids.
Rosie Falta (Dania Ramirez) is a widow whose young son is back in Mexico, while she raises a baby for two wildly self-absorbed actors (Grant Show and Mariana Klavenko).
Carmen Luna (Roselyn Sanchez) is an aspiring singer working as a maid for a pop superstar (Matt Cedeno) and wrangling with his terrifying housekeeper (Melinda Page Hamilton).
Zoila Diaz (Judy Reyes) and Valentina Diaz (Edy Ganem) are a mother and daughter who work for wealthy and emotionally fragile Genevieve (Susan Lucci). Valentina likes Genevieve’s son, Remi (Drew Van Acker).
What “Devious Maids” • When 9 p.m. Sundays • Where Lifetime • More info mylifetime.com/shows/devious-maids
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