
Acteur
Autres noms: Elizabeth Pena, Elizabeth Maria Peña, Elizabeth Anne Dickinson
Date de naissance
23 septembre 1959
Date de décès
14 octobre 2014
(décédé à 55 ans)
Lieu de naissance
Elizabeth, New Jersey, USA
Popularité
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Elizabeth Maria Peña (September 23, 1959 – October 14, 2014) was an American actress, and the daughter of a theater-company co-founder, who has also compiled experience as a television director in her own right. Peña was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, daughter of Estella Margarita (née Toirac), an arts administrator and producer, and Mario Peña, the Cuban-born actor, writer, and director who jointly founded the Latin American Theatre Ensemble. It is unknown whether Peña was named after the town of her birth. Peña graduated from New York's High School of Performing Arts in 1977. Her classmates included Ving Rhames, alongside whom she would later co-star in Jacob's Ladder, and Esai Morales, alongside whom she would later co-star in La Bamba. She is also a founding member of the Hispanic Organization of Latin Actors. In 1979, Peña appeared in her first film, El Super, "an exceptionally moving and melancholy comedy about a family of lower-middle-class Cuban refugees attempting to adjust to life in Spanish Harlem.", New York City. Peña worked once again with film director, Leon Ichaso in his next feature Crossover Dreams opposite Ruben Blades. Peña has appeared in movies such as La Bamba, Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Lone Star, Vibes, and Rush Hour. In 2002, she starred in Showtime's Resurrection Blvd. as Tia Bibi Corrades in the episode "Justicia," which she also directed. During the next year, 2003, she appeared in and directed "It Was Fun While It Lasted," an episode of The Brothers Garcia. She also provided the voice of the character Mirage in Pixar's animated film The Incredibles. She guest starred in the 18th episode of Numb3rs, Season Two, as Sonya Benavides. Although the actress does speak Spanish, she does not dub her own voice for Spanish releases. Peña is also noted for having starred in I Married Dora, a sitcom that lasted only 13 episodes in 1987, as Dora Calderon, the "Dora" of the show's title. In the final show, the cast broke the "fourth wall" of suspended disbelief by announcing their cancellation on-camera and taking a curtain call. Writer-director John Sayles produced the critically acclaimed but short-lived television series Shannon's Deal (1989–1991) co-starring Peña alongside series lead Jamey Sheridan. In 1996 Sayles wrote and directed the mystery film Lone Star and again cast her in a co-starring role. Peña died on October 14, 2014 at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California at the age of 55.





Lina Reyes
2003 • 1 épisode

Pilar Ramírez
2009 • 2 épisodes

Store Owner (voice)
2005 • 1 épisode

Mercedes Escalante
2002 • 1 épisode

Rosie Diaz
2002 • 1 épisode

Marla
2005 • 1 épisode

Sonya Benavides
2005 • 1 épisode

Jinx Baldasseri
1986 • 4 épisodes

1981 • 1 épisode

Mirage (voice)
2004

Superintendent Elizabeth Vasquez
2000 • 2 épisodes

Maria
1982 • 1 épisode

Dr. Jennifer Martinez
1995 • 1 épisode

1982 • 1 épisode

Johnson
1998

Paran-Dul (voice)
2004 • 1 épisode

Paran Dul (voice)
2001 • 3 épisodes

Rosa Santos (voice)
2004 • 70 épisodes

Debra
1990 • 1 épisode

Travis' Foster Mother
2012 • 1 épisode