Jimmy smits: making time to give back

Jimmy smits: making time to give back

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Jimmy Smits was tired of being a photo op for causes — just another celebrity asked to say a few words and then gently trundled offstage. If this was activism, it wasn't very active. So


in 1996, while he, Esai Morales, and Sonia Braga toured with the Rock the Vote campaign, they asked themselves how they could make a difference in people's lives. The answer, says


Smits, "seemed like a no-brainer — the education quotient was very important." With that realization, the three, along with attorney Felix Sanchez, cofounded the NATIONAL HISPANIC


FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS. Since 1997, the foundation has awarded 500 scholarships­ to Hispanics working on graduate degrees in film, production, set design, direction, and acting, areas in


which they're underrepresented. Says Smits, "Media images are so important to young people feeling positive about themselves. It bothered me that the images were mostly


negative." Throughout his career, Smits, 54, has shown he's a versatile and substantive actor as well as a forceful and articulate advocate for change, appearing at CONGRESSIONAL


HISPANIC CAUCUS hearings on Latinos in the entertainment industry, working with RED CROSS relief efforts for Katrina and Hugo, and recording a public service ad for COLORECTAL CANCER.


Charitable impulses come naturally to the Brooklyn-raised star. Son of a Surinamese/Dutch father and Puerto Rican mother, he says his altruism comes from his mother and her connection to the


church: "If you're given gifts or blessings in your life, it's up to you to help the guy coming up behind you." Smits's interest in theater began in junior high and


gained momentum in high school. "He was very quiet but assured onstage, committed to the character. The role he played was not showy, but Jimmy held his own," says Mickey


Tannenbaum, who directed Smits in a production of Ossie Davis's _Purlie Victorious_ at Brooklyn's Thomas Jefferson High School. "The kid who played the lead was so powerful,


it was easy to overlook what Jimmy was doing, but there was this quiet intensity; in the back of my head it was, 'This kid really wants this." When Tannenbaum took his students


into Manhattan to see plays, says Smits, "The people who stuck out were Raul Julia and James Earl Jones. [Seeing Julia] gave me a permission in some sort of way. He's from the same


place my mother is from, and the fact he had an accent didn't impede him as an artist."