This Article is From Sep 07, 2012

Trio of Hollywood starlets take stage for Barack Obama

Trio of Hollywood starlets take stage for Barack Obama
Charlotte, North Carolina: Hollywood starlets Eva Longoria, Scarlett Johannson and Kerry Washington took to the convention stage Thursday to try to persuade American voters to re-elect Barack Obama.

The trio laid out ordinary early lives far from the bright lights of Hollywood with Longoria using her previous existence as a server at fast-food chain Wendy's to have a dig at Obama's Republican rival Mitt Romney.

"The Eva Longoria who worked at Wendy's flipping burgers -- she needed a tax break. But the Eva Longoria who works on movie sets does not," she said, pressing the charge that Romney is only interested in protecting the rich.

Washington, the 35-year-old star of "Ray" and "The Last King of Scotland" was first up.

"I'm here not just as an actress but as a woman, an African-American, a granddaughter of immigrants," she said.

"A person who could not have afforded college without the help of student loans and as one of millions of volunteers working to re-elect President Obama!"

Next was 27-year-old Johansson, who told of her hard-scrabble childhood in New York City far from the bright lights of Hollywood.

"My father barely made enough to get by. We moved every year, and we finally settled in a housing development for lower middle income families. We went to public schools and depended on programs for school transport and lunches, as did most of my friends," she said.
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Last on stage as the anticipation built before Obama was due to address the nation for his biggest re-election pitch yet was "Desperate Housewives" star Longoria, the co-chair of the president's re-election campaign.

She resurrected the theme of First Lady Michelle Obama's convention speech on Tuesday, saying it is life experiences that make you who you are and drawing a sharp contrast between the president and multi-millionaire Romney.

"I signed up for financial aid, Pell Grants, work study, anything I could," Longoria said.

"Just like our president and First Lady, I took out loans to pay for school. Then I changed oil in a mechanic shop, flipped burgers at Wendy's, taught aerobics and worked on campus to pay them back.

"We're lucky our president understands the value of American opportunity, because he's lived it!"



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