Hayek did not reveal which two comedies were being discussed, but she added, “I got a lot of satisfaction with them coming to me and telling me because I thought it was very courageous of them. And I thought it changed something. It changed something in them. It made [me think that] maybe the next generation or the next girl that comes in was going to get a better shot because of it.”

“Nobody really looked into my value,” Hayek continued about her career. “If you are a woman and you are in a movie that is very successful and they say you are their favorite character, they will still give all credits of the box office to the guy. They don’t count who you’re bringing into the theaters. In my case, I was already a very big star in my country. I was bringing the Latino market into the theaters. I know some of the studios knew that. But they didn’t want to accept the value of the Latino market at the time.” Hayek got her Hollywood breakthrough by starring opposite Antonio Banderas in Robert Rodriguez’s “Desperado.” But even then the studio did not want to hire a Mexican actress. As Hayek revealed in an interview with Elle magazine last year, “I remember Cameron Diaz was huge at the time and her last name was Diaz, so they said she can be Mexican. She was part of the list, and I had to audition again…I’m telling you, the studio wanted Cameron Diaz as a Mexican.” The audition process for the 1993 drama “The House of Spirits” wasn’t any better. “I begged for an audition. They wouldn’t even give me an audition,” Hayek told Elle. “I was like, ‘Just hear me read.’ And this is for a Latino role. They were not hiring Latinos for Latino roles. They were not hiring Latinos period — unless it was the maid or the prostitute. And that part was not a maid or a prostitute.” Next up for Hayek are two studio tentpoles, “The Hitman’s Bodyguard’s Wife” and the MCU epic “Eternals.” Head over to Variety to read Hayek’s new cover story in its entirety. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.