Allisson Lozz with Sebastian Zurita in 2008 while recording the novel In the Name of Love. (Photo by the Mexican agency)
Allisson Lozz rose to fame early in her life. It was’nt easy. And no, it wasn’t normal. The entertainment industry has a special reverence for child artists. The process was particularly complicated in her case because she had to deal with this world since childhood.
The Exactriz, which marked an era in children’s soap operas like Alegrijes and Rebujos, brought the topic to the table in an Instagram live reminiscing about her acting days. “I died inside because I saw the other children playing. Being famous is a very difficult thing. People aren’t looking for you for who you are, there’s really an interest involved. I didn’t like it, I want to be a normal person.” Lozz decided to answer his followers’ most recurring doubts about a period of his life that was traumatic from multiple points of view.
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In the collective ideology, the stereotype has taken root that child actors earn a lot of money very early and solve their whole life. Lozz assures that this is not true. “I was making a fifth of what an actress or actor was making who went two or three times a week. I worked all week and my whole family depended on me. One thing doesn’t matter. If you say, ‘I’m sick’, they don’t say anything, just keep working,” said the former actress-turned-beauty entrepreneur who uses her public Instagram for her career.
During this time he saw his childhood and youth pass by normality. “I suffered a lot of shouting and abuse, the people at Televisa were very cruel. That’s why Televisa Ninos was closed, it was overkill. We didn’t go to school, we didn’t have time for anything. I haven’t talked about it for 10 years because it was in the contract. I cried every day. When I got sick, they yelled at me.”
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After what he experienced during his career at Televisa, which ended in 2008, Allisson retired completely from the world of entertainment.
Allisson Lozz in 2009 while she was still in The Name of Love. (Photo by the Mexican agency)
Lozz assures that the exploitation she suffered at Televisa also affected her relationship with her parents as she was cold and distant. Those somber memories return to her routine from time to time from fans wanting to learn more about that period, but she’s made it clear she doesn’t want anything to do with fame or those days. Today he has a completely different life. She married Eliu Gutiérrez in 2011 and is the mother of two girls. He lives in Colorado and according to People Magazine, before the Covid-19 pandemic, he took to the streets preaching the Word of God since becoming a Jehovah’s Witness after ending his career on the small screen.
Photos of Allisson Lozz as a girl in Rebelde, left, and with her husband and daughters in 2017. (Photo by Agencia México)
On his social networks, which he uses to promote his business and when he goes to events, he receives countless comments alluding to his former facet. This fact has made it inevitable for her to evoke memories of a past that wants to go away.. But for a long time he was determined to stop doing it.
“When they come up to me and ask me details of my past life and it’s so hard for them to understand the damage I remember, I say, ‘Why? Why when I’ve said so many times it frustrates me? that it frustrates me? It hurts me, it hurts me to remember my past life, why do they cling to keep asking me, keep hurting me?
“I love inspiring women for my new life. If you ask me for a photo of my past life, my answer is ‘no’. Now I live a very happy life. I’ve finally found a life that fits my principles.” Lozz and this testimony are a turning point in his life. She does not want to return to a past that hurt her and whose effects are still felt today. Far from the candy world of children’s soap operas, he is now living the new life he always wanted, without the limelight or fame.