It’s been an emotional year for Eva Mendes to say the least.
The 42-year-old actress welcomed her second daughter with Ryan Gosling in May, Amada Lee Gosling, and also mourned the death of her older brother,
Carlos Mendez, just a month earlier. Mendez died in April after
battling throat cancer, and was just 53 years old. The notoriously
private mother of two opens up for the first time about the two
significant life events in an interview with Latina.
“Losing
my brother brought our family closer, and we were already close to
begin with,” Mendes tells the magazine. “So, to just see everybody be
there for one another and show up, I feel so lucky to have them. And
then they were there for me when Amada was born. We had a funeral
service for him and that same week I had the baby. So it was really,
really intense and obviously beyond heartbreaking, but also kind of
beautiful.”
“And being totally honest, I don’t feel like I’ve really processed that yet,” she adds.
The Place Beyond the Pines
actress talks about baby Amada for the first time, explaining why she
and longtime love Ryan Gosling decided to re-use the unique name. The
couple named their first child Esmeralda Amada, and Mendes’ grandmother
is also named Amada.
“We
had a few names picked out for our new baby, and when she was born, we
didn’t feel like those names were her,” she explains. “We came up with a
few more, even that morning, and tried them out. We were like, ‘What
about Viviana?’ But we just kept going back to Amada. In true Latin
fashion, we reuse names all the time.”
“I
actually told Ryan, 'This is common in Latin culture, so it wouldn’t be
crazy,’” she continues. “So we went with Amada because it was something
we kept going back to. And it was an emotional time with the passing of
my brother. We thought how beautiful to go with what made us emotional
and with what felt like her. When we looked at her, we thought, 'Aww,
Amadita.’”
Although Mendes calls having two girls “a lot,” she is clearly loving her role as mom.
The
Miami-born actress says she’s definitely wants 1-year-old Esmeralda and
3-month-old Amada to grow up with a sense of Cuban culture.
“We’re
constantly playing Cuban music. I speak to them in Spanish, and my mom
speaks to Esmeralda in Spanish,” she says about passing down her
heritage to her two kids. “Well, now she speaks to both of them in
Spanish. Any time I have an opportunity to introduce her or them – I
have to say 'them’ now, though my newborn just sleeps all the time – to
my culture, whether it’s through music, or through food, I do. That is a
main priority, for sure.”
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