Saturday, June 6, 2015

Zoe Saldana"s husband Marcos Perego takes her last name, their Mixed-Race Family and Feeling "Stronger" After Twins!

Zoe Saldana


Actress Zoe Saldana revealed in the new issue of Instyle magazine that her artist husband, Marco Perego, who she married in 2013 and welcomed twins Cy and Bowie with late last year, has chosen to take her surname, despite her trying to “talk him out of it.”

“I tried to talk him out of it. I told him, ‘If you use my name, you’re going to be emasculated by your community of artists, by your Latin community of men, by the world.’ But Marco looks up at me and says, ‘Ah, Zoe, I don’t give a sh-t.’”



Zoe SaldanaZoe Saldana


The actress has everything she could ever want. “I don’t want to get back to where I used to be. I want to feel healthy, and not just fit into the old jeans I used to wear,” Saldana, 36, says in InStyle‘s July issue. “I’m a woman now. My body has changed forever. It’s softer…and stronger.”


Becoming a mother has changed Saldana in other ways, too. “Since I’ve been with Marco, I’ve been lowering my guard. Finally when we had our boys I looked at my husband and I realized: I was meant for you and you were meant for me. I’ve always felt comfortable around men as long as they were friends. Now I finally feel comfortable with my lover. I don’t want to be separate. I want my church. I want to live inside the religion of our own little family.”


According to Saldana, Perego is unlike anyone else she’s dated. “It’s not like I’ve had issues with men; I’ve always just been independent to a fault. I’ve always believed it’s my birthright to behave as an equal on this earth and to be entitled to everything and anything,” she says of past relationships. “That said, I’ve had my experiences of heartbreak when it comes to choosing partners who wanted to be equals but didn’t have the ability to actually reciprocate the respect.”


In the wide-ranging cover story, Saldana also addresses critics who argued that she is too light-skinned to play the role of Nina Simone in the upcoming movie Nina.


“I didn’t think I was right for the part, and I know a lot of people will agree, but then again, I don’t think Elizabeth Taylor was right for Cleopatra either. An artist is colorless, genderless…It’s more complex than just ‘Oh, you chose the Halle Berrylook-alike to play a dark, strikingly beautiful, iconic black woman.’ The truth is, they chose an artist who was willing to sacrifice herself,” the actress tells the magazine.


“We needed to tell her story because she deserves it.”


Race is something she thinks about a lot, particularly after her boys’ arrival.


“What was important for my mother is that we married somebody who still had dreams and aspirations—not what color or class they were from,” Saldana tells InStyle. “We were all colors but we never talked about it. We all ate the same food. I look at Cy and he looks almost Cambodian. I look at Bo and it’s like, ‘Oh, our little pharaoh."”




Zoe Saldana"s husband Marcos Perego takes her last name, their Mixed-Race Family and Feeling "Stronger" After Twins!

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