Sunday, June 28, 2009

sexy melonie diaz pics





Monday, June 1, 2009

the melonie diaz bio and movie credits list

Melonie Diaz (born April 25, 1984) is an American actress who was proclaimed queen of the 2008 Sundance Film Festival.

Biography

Diaz was raised along with her elder sister in New York's lower east side by parents of Dominican descent. She became interested in acting at the Henry Street Settlement and subsequently attended professional performing arts high school.

She recently completed a degree in Film Production at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts and has made numerous off-Broadway and workshop appearances include Medea at the Bullet Space, the Hip Hop Theater Festival at P.S. 122, and the New York City Fringe Festival.

She started her film career with a supporting role in Tom DiCillo's Double Whammy (2001) and later landed roles in Jim McKay and Hannah Weyer's From an Objective Point of View and Peter Sollett's Raising Victor Vargas (both 2002). Television work at this time included an episode of Law & Order and a pilot for Queens Supreme (both 2003).

Her breakthrough roles came as Blanca in Catherine Hardwicke's Lords of Dogtown (2005) and as Laurie in Dito Montiel's A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2006) which earned her a Independent Spirit Awards nomination for Best Supporting Female. She was subsequently cast by Jamie Babbit in the lead role of Anna in Itty Bitty Titty Committee (2007).

Filmography

Double Whammy (2001) as Maribel Benitez

From an Objective Point of View (2002) as Kelly

Raising Victor Vargas (2002) as Melonie

Law & Order: Ill-Conceived (2003) as Bettina (television)

Queens Supreme: Pilot (2003) (television)

Lords of Dogtown (2005) as Blanca

A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2006) as Young Laurie

Emil (2006) (short)

Itty Bitty Titty Committee (2007) as Anna

Remember the Daze (2007) as Brianne

Feel the Noise (2007) as Mimi

I'll Come Running (2008) as Veronica

American Son (2008) as Cristina

Be Kind Rewind (2008) as Alma

Assassination of a High School President (2008) as Clara

Hamlet 2 (2008) as Ivonne

Humboldt Park (2008) as TBA

melonie diaz queen of sundance festival

MELONIE DIAZ is excited, anxious, overwhelmed, joyous, overstimulated and super-happy. "It's bananas," the 23-year-old actress proclaims, seeing the hundreds-strong mob lined up in the snow for the Sundance premiere of her first studio film, Michel Gondry's "Be Kind Rewind," which opens nationwide next month.

She needs to breathe. She needs chewing gum. She needs to find the ladies' room.

Such is life for a freshly minted star at the most prestigious independent film festival in the world. It is a scene that will be replayed the next day at the first screening of Andrew Fleming's twisted high school musical comedy, "Hamlet 2," which later was sold to Focus Features for a hefty $10 million. There, the director will publicly announce what has been on the tip of everyone's tongues: "Melonie Diaz is the queen of Sundance," he said, setting up a punch line. "She's in 27 films this year."

Melonie who? Queen of what?

In a ritual almost as old as the festival itself, the media single out one prolific actress each year for what is widely seen as a career-boosting coronation. Being anointed is a confirmation of status in the independent film world and a step toward studio movie stardom. Diaz, who this year is actually in four festival entries -- "American Son," "Assassination of a High School President," "Be Kind Rewind" and "Hamlet 2" -- is the latest to be handed the crown. She joins such esteemed predecessors as Parker Posey, Lili Taylor, Christina Ricci, Kirsten Dunst, Chloë Sevigny, Catherine Keener and Patricia Clarkson.

"It's an honor," Diaz says, "but it's intimidating, and a little embarrassing. In industry terms, I'm still a newbie."

The first in a lineage of Latina actresses that includes Rosie Perez, Rosario Dawson and America Ferrera to ascend the throne, Diaz is already a Sundance veteran. At 15, she made her film debut in Tom DiCillo's "Double Whammy," which screened at the 2001 festival. The following year she appeared in "Raising Victor Vargas" and returned in 2006's "A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints."

This year, in a sort of heat-seeking perfect storm, Diaz's Sundance films illustrate both her vivacity and versatility. In leading roles, she plays the comic foil to Jack Black and Mos Def in "Be Kind Rewind" and Nick Cannon's romantic interest in Neil Abramson's Iraq-themed drama "American Son."

"Melonie is such an open soul and so passionate about life," says Cannon, who shares some tastefully intimate scenes with the actress. "When you do independent film it takes a certain level of skill to jump into doing so much in such a short amount of time, and she just blew me away."

A vintage fashion plate

Diaz, a film student at New York University, is also serving on the Sundance jury for this year's short film competition and will present the awards Saturday. By the time the festival wraps on Sunday, she will have spent two weeks in Park City, much of it with a full contingent: two friends, two managers, two reps from United Talent Agency, a publicist from the high-powered firm PMK-HBH, and hair and makeup artists.

There is no wardrobe stylist on the payroll and, with four films to promote, no time to visit celebrity gift suites for "clothes I'm not sure I'd wear." Not that the practical Diaz, a vintage fashion aficionado, is bothered. At a midnight party for "Hamlet 2," she arrived from another cast party in the same ocher sweater, black jeans and boots she'd had on at noon.

"I bring my own style," Diaz declares. She has been getting compliments for a 1960s double-breasted black wool swing jacket that, she says, "I got at Burlington Coat Factory for a hundred bucks."

Starting her days at 8 a.m., Diaz must be indefatigable. There are scores of interviews, photo sessions and TV appearances, red-carpet walks at premieres, question-and-answer sessions after screenings and parties to attend. It is a more arduous schedule than most 16-hour-plus workdays on a tightly budgeted film. And for Diaz, it replays itself daily, like something out of "Groundhog Day.

melonie diaz interview

Actor Melonie Diaz, 23, says that most of the roles she's offered are uneducated and lost Latina girls. But this Lower East Side born-and-bred New Yorker refuses to play that game. "I don't do the Latina ghetto girl or the Mexican girl in the 'hood, and I don't play pregnant," she says. "I may be jobless and I may be broke, but I have to keep my integrity." Fortunately, no one needs to send Diaz a charity check anytime soon. From her debut as Luis Guzmán's daughter in 2001's Double Whammy to a string of wickedly fierce, fun and independent females in films including Raising Victor Vargas and Lords of Dogtown, Diaz is blazing new images of strong-willed young Latina women onto celluloid.
"All the roles I've gotten so far have accentuated different parts of myself in a certain time of my life," explains Diaz. "It's very cool -- it's like I'm documenting myself." And she plans to go right on ahead and continue her reign as self-documentarian-cum-indie ingenue. In her next film, Be Kind Rewind, from visionary director Michel Gondry, Diaz plays a nerdy dry-cleaner employee opposite Jack Black and Mos Def. So will the brainy beauty ever play a ditzy-blonde type? It's possible she could be persuaded: "Maybe it would be fun to play opposite of yourself."