East Bay Times

Celia Cruz will be first Afro Latina to appear on quarter

- By Jonah Valdez

Twenty years after her death, salsa queen Celia Cruz has made history and will become the first Afro Latina to grace the U.S. quarter.

The prolific Cuban American singer, whose career spanned seven decades, is an honoree as a part of the American Women Quarters Program, the U.S. Mint announced last week.

She will appear alongside honorees such as Patsy Takemoto Mink, the first woman of color to serve in Congress, and Zitkala-Sa, also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, an artist who fought for Native American civil rights.

“All of the women being honored have lived remarkable and multi-faceted lives, and have made a significan­t impact on our Nation in their own unique way,” Ventris C. Gibson, director of the mint, said in a statement. “The women pioneered change during their lifetimes, not yielding to the status quo imparted during their lives. By honoring these pioneering women, the Mint continues to connect America through coins which are like small works of art in your pocket.”

Quarters with Cruz's design will be released into circulatio­n mid-2023, the mint said.

Cruz, who was born in Havana, Cuba, and later moved to the U.S., recorded 70 albums and remained a dominant force in Latin music until her death in 2003 at 77. She won two Grammy awards and four Latin Grammys, along with a lifetime

achievemen­t Grammy, which she posthumous­ly received in 2016.

She was known for her unique voice and her electric stage presence, often performing in sequined gowns and extravagan­t wigs. She'd often yell her trademark call, “Azucar!”

“That was a voice God gave to nobody else,” singer Rubén Blades told the Los Angeles Times after her death. “She was our Sarah Vaughan, our Ella Fitzgerald, our Pavarotti.”

The announceme­nt of the Cruz quarter design drew praise from her fans, as well as Latina celebritie­s, such as Latin Grammy-winning singer La India of Puerto Rico and Cuban Aymée Nuviola, a Grammy winner who is known for playing Cruz in the Colombian biographic­al telenovela “Celia.”

Other previous American Women Quarters honorees include writer Maya Angelou and actor Anna May Wong.

 ?? LEE CELANO — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Cuban-born Celia Cruz, shown at the Latin Grammy Awards in 2002, has made history as the first Afro Latina to be on the U.S. quarter.
LEE CELANO — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Cuban-born Celia Cruz, shown at the Latin Grammy Awards in 2002, has made history as the first Afro Latina to be on the U.S. quarter.

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