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Elizabeth Peña

Elizabeth Peña

Peña's film career started slowly, with small roles in the Cuban/US production "El Super" (1979) and the American punk exploitation feature "Times Square" (1980), Peter Bogdanovich's "They All Laughed" (1981) and Ruben Blades' "Crossover Dreams" (1985). The spitfire role in "Down and Out in Beverly Hills" finally gained her attention from public and industry alike. Peña went on to play the battered wife of Ritchie Valens' half-brother in "La Bamba" (1987), the friend of policewoman Jamie Lee Curtis in Kathryn Bigelow's "Blue Steel" and Tim Robbins' temperamental lover in Adrian Lyne's "Jacob's Ladder" (both 1990). Her subsequent screen credits included a supporting role in "The Waterdance" (1992) and playing the girlfriend of a suddenly-dead man in "Dead Funny" (1995). She won particular acclaim for her 1996 turn as a schoolteacher and former lover of the town sheriff (Chris Cooper) in John Sayles' acclaimed mystery "Lone Star" (1996). Peña was also known for her TV work, beginning with a supporting role in the police sitcom "Tough Cookies" (CBS, 1986). She had the title role in the short-lived "I Married Dora" (ABC, 1988), which became briefly notorious for its tasteless and politically incorrect premise (a widower marries his housekeeper to prevent her deportation). Peña also played the regular role of an aggressive secretary on the John Sayles-created legal drama "Shannon's Deal" (NBC, 1990-91). Peña also turned in strong performances in nearly a dozen TV-movies, miniseries and anthologies, starting with the 1989 pilot for "Shannon's Deal" (NBC). She was also the widow of a DEA agent in the award-winning "Drug Wars: The Camarena Story" (NBC, 1990), turned up in the AIDS drama "Roommates" (NBC, 1994) and was featured in the HBO TV-movie, "The Second Civil War" (1997). As Peña continued to rack up supporting film credits--including the hit buddy comedy "Rush Hour" (1998) and rocker Dee Snider's bizarro horror film "Strangeland" (1998)--and telepic turns such as playing the wife of a notorious real life spy in "Aldrich Ames: Traitor Within" (1998), she also became a television series regular when she starred as Beatriz "Bibi" Corrales in the Showtime drama "Resurrection Blvd." (2000-2002). Always an extremely in-demand actress, Peña would regularly strike a balance between appearing in Latina-specific roles, such as her turn opposite Hector Elizondo in "Tortilla Soup" (2001)--a Latin interpretation of Ang Lee's Chinese drama "Eat, Drink, Man, Woman"--and non-ethnic parts, such as her warm, wise portrayal of a pre-operative transexual's therapist opposite Felicity Huffman in "Transamerica" (2005). Peña also had a side career as a voice actor, lending her distinctive vocals to such animated projects as "Justice League," ""Maya & Miguel" and, most notably, as the bad-girl-gone-good Mirage in Disney/Pixar's CGI-animated mega-hit "The Incredibles" (2004). While maintaining a steady career in small film and TV roles such as her recurring role as Pilar, the mother of Sofia Vergara's Gloria on the hit sitcom "Modern Family" (ABC 2009-), Peña moved behind the camera to begin her career as a director with episodes of the TV series "Resurrection Blvd." (Showtime 2000-02), "The Brothers Garcia" (Nickelodeon 2000-04), and the web series "Ylse" (2008). Elizabeth Peña died following a brief illness, later disclosed to be alcohol-related cirrhosis of the liver, in Los Angeles on October 14, 2014.
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