Eliza Dushku

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Eliza Dushku

Eliza Dushku at Wizard World in Philadelphia in May 2004.
Birth name Eliza Patricia Dushku
Born December 30, 1980 (age 26)
Flag of Massachusetts Watertown, Massachusetts, USA
Notable roles Faith Lehane in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1998–2000, 2003)

Missy Pantone in Bring It On (2000)
Tru Davies in Tru Calling (2003–2005)

Eliza Patricia Dushku (born December 30, 1980) is an American film actress, who has appeared in several Hollywood movies such as True Lies, Bring It On, and Wrong Turn. She is also well known for her acting on television, such as her recurring appearances on Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel as Faith, as well as the main character in the series Tru Calling.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Dushku was born in Watertown, Massachusetts to Philip R. Dushku, an Albanian-American administrator-teacher in the Boston Public Schools and Judith (Judy) Rasmussen (a half-Danish-American university administrator and professor at Suffolk University); she was raised a Mormon, the faith of her mother (though she is not actively practicing).[1][2] She has three older brothers, Aaron, Benjamin (Ben), and Nathan (Nate), the last of whom is also an actor. Her parents divorced when she was still an infant[3].

Dushku was the only family with that surname in the United States of America in 1920 and were living in Massachusetts. Judith Rasmussen's grandfathers were both Danish, while both her grandmothers were of Colonial English ancestry and descended, among some noble Anglo-Saxon and Norman families, once from an illegitimate child of King Henry I of England, once from an illegitimate child of King Henry II of England, and twice from King Edward I of England's first marriage[4]. They belonged to the Mormon community of Utah, Idaho and Arizona, where their most noted ancestors and relatives have settled in the mid-1800's, at the very beginning of both the colonization of the State and the settlement of the religious community, coming from the traditional States of origin of the Mormon pioneers in New England, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Vermont[5] [6] [7] [8].

A young Dushku appears in the 1994 Arnold Schwarzenegger film, True Lies
A young Dushku appears in the 1994 Arnold Schwarzenegger film, True Lies

As a teenager Dushku attended Beaver Country Day School and Watertown High School.

[edit] Early career

Dushku came to the attention of casting agents when she was 10. Along with her brother, she went to a television commercial audition where she tripped on the stairs, bloodied her nose, and became an instant drama queen. She was chosen at the end of a five month search throughout the United States for the lead role of Alice, opposite Juliette Lewis in the film That Night. In 1993, Dushku landed a role as Pearl alongside Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio in This Boy's Life, a role that she said opened a lot of doors. Dushku says that DiCaprio taught her how to deal with bullies and other high school dangers, for which she is grateful.[citation needed]

The following year, she played the teenage daughter of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis in True Lies. She would also have parts as Paul Reiser's daughter in Bye Bye, Love, as Cindy Johnson with Halle Berry and Jim Belushi in Race the Sun, as well as roles in a television movie and a short film.

Dushku took some time off from acting to finish her junior and senior years of high school. She was accepted to the George Washington University in Washington, DC and Suffolk University in Boston, where her mother serves as professor of government and previously served as dean of the campus in Dakar, Senegal.

Dushku in a promotional poster for the 2003 horror movie, Wrong Turn
Dushku in a promotional poster for the 2003 horror movie, Wrong Turn

[edit] Later roles

After completing high school, Dushku returned to acting with the role of Faith, a Slayer much more troubled than the main character Buffy. Though initially planned as a five episode role, the character became so popular that she stayed on for the entirety of the third season and returned for a two-part appearance in season four, after which the remainder of her original story arc was played out as part of the first season of the Buffy spinoff series Angel. Repentant and rededicated, Faith returned as a heroine in a number of further episodes of Angel and in the last five episodes of Buffy.

Because of her convincing portrayal of a sociopath, she became an icon to many criminals. She was inundated with piles of fan mail from legions of prisoners. She said that:

I've been getting fan mail from maximum security penitentiaries and death row. What are the authorities thinking of in playing a show with young teenage girls to Death Row inmates? They write everything — disgusting things that you don't even want to know about. And they send me pictures — 'Oh, here's a picture of me before I was incarcerated!' — and there's some guy sat on the sofa with a bottle of beer and a moustache, and a big gut. It's so creepy. Way more creepy than Buffy.[9]

In 2000, Dushku starred in Soul Survivors, reuniting her with Race The Sun co-star Casey Affleck. She followed that up with the cheerleader comedy Bring It On with Kirsten Dunst, which was a surprising success at the box office that spawned straight-to-DVD sequels. 2001 saw a busy time for her: shooting The New Guy in Texas and having to shuttle up to New York where she was reunited with actor Robert De Niro and director Michael Caton-Jones in City by the Sea. She played James Franco's junkie girlfriend and mother of his child. The film garnered attention from a wider adult audience and several good reviews.

Dushku appears on That '70s Show, alongside actors Topher Grace and Ashton Kutcher
Dushku appears on That '70s Show, alongside actors Topher Grace and Ashton Kutcher

The same year Kevin Smith invited Dushku to be a part of Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, where Dushku co-starred with Shannon Elizabeth, Ali Larter, Ben Affleck, and others.

2003 saw the release of Wrong Turn, a horror film in which Dushku had the starring role, and The Kiss, an independent comedy-drama. Starting that same year, she also starred in a new Fox TV series, Tru Calling, where she played the main character, Tru Davies, a medical student whose grant is pulled out from under her, forcing her to take a job at a local morgue where she discovers that she has the power to "re-live" the previous day over again, an ability she used to right wrongful deaths.

She has had many roles as a "bad girl" in movies and relishes the opportunities. In an an interview with Maxim Magazine in May of 2001, Eliza says of her roles, "It’s easy to play a bad girl: You just do everything you’ve been told not to do, and you don’t have to deal with the consequences, because it’s only acting."[2]

Dushku starred in an off-Broadway production entitled Dog Sees God from December 2005, playing "Van's sister", a character paralleled with Lucy from original Peanuts comic strip that the play production is based on. She quit in February 2006 along with several other members of the cast amongst rumours of alleged abuse from the producer, which were later dismissed.

Dushku voiced the role of Yumi Sawamura in the English language version of the PlayStation 2 video game Yakuza, published and developed by SEGA, and released in September 2006.

She was almost cast as the love interest to Sean Astin in The Final Season and word got around that she was already cast, confirming her involvement to the extent the crew assembled a wardrobe for her. However, she later dropped out to visit Albania.

[edit] Future projects

  • Other forthcoming projects include On Broadway, an independent movie filmed in her native Boston due for release in 2007.
  • She will play Eve, the lead character on "Nurses" (also known as Philadelphia General), a hospital comedy/drama for Fox. This will be her 2nd FOX pilot she has been cast in. The first was 2003's "Tru Calling".[10]

[edit] Personal life

She is currently dating Los Angeles Dodgers' starting pitcher, Brad Penny.[11] Dushku lives in the Los Angeles area.

[edit] Eliza Dushku Foundation

Dushku has started The Eliza Dushku Foundation, a new project with her father to help Camp Hale, a summer camp for inner city Boston boys open since 1974, where the Dushku family are closely involved. Through the sale of props and fan memorabilia, the Dushkus hope to generate increased contributions in order to pay for the maintenance of Camp Hale for generations to come.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Tv Series

[edit] References

  1. ^ Q&A - Eliza Dushku
  2. ^ a b Paul Young (May 2001). Faith No More. Maxim Online.
  3. ^ name="newguy">Eliza Dushku Interview-The New Guy. about.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-03.
  4. ^ http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=gdtrowbridge&id=I15644
  5. ^ http://www.sanfordporter.org/
  6. ^ http://www.porterfamily12.com/
  7. ^ http://nathantannerporter.homestead.com/index.html
  8. ^ http://aaronandrebeccaporter.homestead.com/index.html
  9. ^ http://news.eliza-dushku.com/archives0102/na050101.html
  10. ^ Dushku joins Fox's 'Nurses'. Variety (2007-03-11). Retrieved on 2007-03-20.
  11. ^ Ben Widdicombe's gossip column in the New York Daily News, 18 January 2007

[edit] External links

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Persondata
NAME Dushku, Eliza
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Dushku, Eliza Patricia
SHORT DESCRIPTION Actor
DATE OF BIRTH December 30, 1980
PLACE OF BIRTH Watertown, Massachusetts
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH