'Beatriz at Dinner' star Salma Hayek: 'I have done some social damage'

The star plays a masseuse who gets stuck dining with her wealthy clients.

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That dinner opens Beatriz's eyes to a completely different experience with the family that include signs of classism, forcing Beatriz to change her outlook on them. Hayek said she knows what her character feels, having been witness to similar experiences.

"I’ve confronted some people and they said I bring the party down," Hayek, 50, told Peter Travers. "With everybody laughing I go, 'I'm sorry. This is not funny.'

And I’ve gone after some people and sometimes I’ve also been the person who didn’t have the courage to speak up and just smiled and let it fly. I’ve been both, but I have done some social damage," she said.

"He’s a man with self entitlement that feels he is superior to everyone," Hayek said of Lithgow's character. "He is sexist and racist. She realizes soon that all his pleasures are somehow based on other people’s suffering, even if he doesn’t do it on purpose," she said.

Be sure to watch the full interview with Peter Travers and Salma Hayek in the video above.

"Beatriz at Dinner" is in theaters now.