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Alvarado was born in New York City, the daughter of Sylvia, a [[Puerto Rican American|Puerto Rican]] [[flamenco]] dancer, and Domingo Alvarado, a Spanish-born flamenco singer.<ref name=filmr>[http://www.filmreference.com/film/35/Trini-Alvarado.html Trini Alvarado biography] at FilmReference.com</ref><ref>[http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB071FFF3D5C12728DDDAD0994D1405B898BF1D3 "12 Years Old, Beguiling And a Part-Time Actress; Both Smart New York Kids"] by Charles Kaiser, ''[[New York Times]]'', 14 September 1979</ref><ref>[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=RM&p_theme=rm&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB4D53FDF010982&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM "Actress won 'Stella' Role With A Song"] by James Ryan, ''[[Rocky Mountain News]]'', 6 February 1990 (restricted access)</ref> She attended the [[Professional Children's School]] and also studied at [[Fordham University]]. Alvarado said in a ''People'' magazine interview for the movie ''[[Stella (1990 film)|Stella]]'', "I lead kind of a quiet life. I just grew up that way."<ref name=ppl>[http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20116914,00.html "Holding Her Own Against the Divine Miss M, Trini Alvarado Is Tugging Heartstrings in Stella"] by Cynthia Sanz, ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'', 26 February 1990</ref> Alvarado more or less stays out of the limelight and is a self-described homebody; she revealed during the promotion for ''[[The Frighteners]]'', "It's just difficult to go away. I was very nervous about having to go to New Zealand for nearly seven months [to make ''The Frighteners'']. I was very tragically saying goodbye to everybody."<ref>[http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19960719&slug=2339886 "Trini Alvarado Still Fresh And Unaffected"] by Susan Stark of the ''[[Detroit News]]'', published in the ''[[Seattle Times]]'', 19 July 1996</ref>
Alvarado was born in New York City, the daughter of Sylvia, a [[Puerto Rican American|Puerto Rican]] [[flamenco]] dancer, and Domingo Alvarado, a Spanish-born flamenco singer.<ref name=filmr>[http://www.filmreference.com/film/35/Trini-Alvarado.html Trini Alvarado biography] at FilmReference.com</ref><ref>[http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB071FFF3D5C12728DDDAD0994D1405B898BF1D3 "12 Years Old, Beguiling And a Part-Time Actress; Both Smart New York Kids"] by Charles Kaiser, ''[[New York Times]]'', 14 September 1979</ref><ref>[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=RM&p_theme=rm&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB4D53FDF010982&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM "Actress won 'Stella' Role With A Song"] by James Ryan, ''[[Rocky Mountain News]]'', 6 February 1990 (restricted access)</ref> She attended the [[Professional Children's School]] and also studied at [[Fordham University]]. Alvarado said in a ''People'' magazine interview for the movie ''[[Stella (1990 film)|Stella]]'', "I lead kind of a quiet life. I just grew up that way."<ref name=ppl>[http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20116914,00.html "Holding Her Own Against the Divine Miss M, Trini Alvarado Is Tugging Heartstrings in Stella"] by Cynthia Sanz, ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'', 26 February 1990</ref> Alvarado more or less stays out of the limelight and is a self-described homebody; she revealed during the promotion for ''[[The Frighteners]]'', "It's just difficult to go away. I was very nervous about having to go to New Zealand for nearly seven months [to make ''The Frighteners'']. I was very tragically saying goodbye to everybody."<ref>[http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19960719&slug=2339886 "Trini Alvarado Still Fresh And Unaffected"] by Susan Stark of the ''[[Detroit News]]'', published in the ''[[Seattle Times]]'', 19 July 1996</ref>


She resides in New York City and is married to actor Robert McNeill.<ref name=filmr /> They have a daughter and a son.{{citation needed|date=September 2014}}
She resides in New York City and is married to actor Robert McNeill.<ref name=filmr /> They have a daughter and a son.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://frostsnow.com/little-women-s-trini-alvarado-fringe-i-lead-kind-of-a-quiet-life-i-just-grew-up-that-way|title=Little Women's Trini Alvarado Fringe: "I lead kind of a quiet life. I just grew up that way."|newspaper=FrostSnow|access-date=2017-01-17}}</ref>


== Career ==
== Career ==

Revision as of 11:12, 17 January 2017

Trini Alvarado
Born
Trinidad Alvarado

(1967-01-10) January 10, 1967 (age 57)
OccupationActress
Years active1977–present

Trinidad "Trini" Alvarado[1] (born January 10, 1967) is an American actress best known for her performances as Margaret "Meg" March in the 1994 film adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's novel Little Women and Lucy Lynskey in the comedy/horror film The Frighteners. She also has had notable stage performances and singing roles in musicals.

Personal life

Alvarado was born in New York City, the daughter of Sylvia, a Puerto Rican flamenco dancer, and Domingo Alvarado, a Spanish-born flamenco singer.[1][2][3] She attended the Professional Children's School and also studied at Fordham University. Alvarado said in a People magazine interview for the movie Stella, "I lead kind of a quiet life. I just grew up that way."[4] Alvarado more or less stays out of the limelight and is a self-described homebody; she revealed during the promotion for The Frighteners, "It's just difficult to go away. I was very nervous about having to go to New Zealand for nearly seven months [to make The Frighteners]. I was very tragically saying goodbye to everybody."[5]

She resides in New York City and is married to actor Robert McNeill.[1] They have a daughter and a son.[6]

Career

Alvarado made her show business debut at the age of seven when she joined her family's dance troupe,[7] and that led to roles on stage, including the role of Melinda in Elizabeth Swados' Broadway musical Runaways in 1978. Alvarado was featured, along with Karen Evans, on the song "Lullaby From Baby to Baby", denoted by Swados as the "theme song" of the musical.[8] The next year, she starred in Rich Kids alongside John Lithgow and Jeremy Levy, and she lent her vocals to the ending song "Happy Ida and Broken-Hearted John".[9] The same year, she appeared in the ABC Afterschool Special "A Movie Star's Daughter" as Dena McKain, her first of two appearances in the series (her second was the 1981 special Starstruck).

In 1980, Alvarado appeared in Times Square with Tim Curry and Robin Johnson, in which she and Johnson sang together "Your Daughter is One."

There followed roles in a string of TV shows and movies before she appeared on the big screen again, in Gillian Armstrong's 1984 drama Mrs. Soffel. In 1985, Alvarado took on the role of Anne Frank in the off-Broadway musical Yours, Anne. The following year, she starred as the title character in Maggie Magalita, another off-Broadway production.

Her next roles — the young Lisa Titus in the ill-fated 1987 film The Chair, the tough, smart-aleck May "Mooch" Stark in the frank, girl-dominant teen movie Satisfaction — led up to playing the daughter of Stella Claire (portrayed by Bette Midler), in another version of Stella. Midler and Alvarado bonded on set and even performed an impromptu duet of the chorus of the Beatles' "If I Fell" during Alvarado's screen test, which led to Alvarado being cast.[4]

After Stella, Alvarado played the role of Elinor Hartley in American Friends, which Michael Palin both wrote and starred in. Alvarado later worked alongside John Goodman again on the 1992 biopic The Babe, playing the role of Helen Woodford Ruth.

Alvarado would get the chance to work with director Gillian Armstrong again on the 1994 film adaptation of Little Women. When asked about the role, she said, "I am Hispanic and Meg... is not a Hispanic, but even so they gave me the part. But I understand the situation. I understand it because sometimes I see a film about Hispanics, where none of actors is Hispanic, and I feel bad about that. I'd feel particularly bad if they hadn't allowed me to audition, when they said that they'd already seen all the Hispanics in Hollywood, which isn't true."[10] She and her cast mates endured lessons in Victorian life, including proper etiquette, and restricting dresses. About the women's limiting garb, Alvarado said, "It's so obvious why women were thought of as the weaker sex. I don't know if it was a subconscious desire of designers to hold women back, but you can't even take a full breath [in these dresses]."[10] Generally well received by critics and audiences, Little Women showcased Alvarado in one of her most-known roles to date, alongside Pamela Pearl from Times Square.

Alvarado's next film was 1995's The Perez Family, co-starring Alfred Molina, Anjelica Huston and Marisa Tomei. The next year saw the release of The Frighteners, Peter Jackson's horror/comedy film about a con artist who sees ghosts, and The Christmas Tree, the directorial debut of actress Sally Field. Alvarado is better known for the first, even though The Frighteners wasn't hugely popular during its initial release. In the making-of documentary included with the revamped DVD, Alvarado admitted to enduring bruises because of the active, violent scenes in the movie and to being "cursed"; an ice cream truck from a local New Zealand vendor would go by playing "Greensleeves" every time Jackson did a close-up on her and make her break character.[11]

After making an appearance in the last minutes of Paulie (1998), as the grown-up Marie Altweather, Alvarado would not appear on the big screen again until 2006, in the critically acclaimed film Little Children.

She played various roles on the small screen, appearing alongside Eric Stoltz for the third time, in 2000's The Last Dance amid a string of TV guest appearances and movies. Most recently, she played the role of Samantha Loeb in the Fox TV sci-fi drama Fringe, appearing in two episodes in 2008 and 2009. Alvarado had a role in the films All Good Things, which also starred former co-star Kirsten Dunst, and The Good Guy, which had been screened at the Tribeca Film Festival on 26 April 2009.

Alvarado has provided the voice-over for the audio books Trickster's Choice, Trickster's Queen and the series Alanna: Song of the Lioness Quartet, written by Tamora Pierce. Alvarado has also voiced Debbie Macomber's Changing Habits.

In May 2014, she appeared in the episode "Forget Me" of the single-season ABC series Black Box, her first acting job in over four years.[citation needed]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1977 The Magic Pony Ride Jump Rope Girl (uncredited) Short film
1978 Big Apple Birthday Goldilocks Short film
1979 Rich Kids Franny Philips
1979 ABC Afterschool Special Dena McKain Episode: "A Movie Star's Daughter"
1980 Times Square Pamela Pearl
1981 ABC Afterschool Special Alicia Marin Episode: "Starstruck"
1982 American Playhouse Gail Brock Episode: "Private Contentment"
1982 Dreams Don't Die Teresa TV movie
1983 Jacobo Timerman: Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number Lisa Castello TV movie
1984 Mrs. Soffel Irene Soffel
1986 Kate & Allie Mindy Episode: "Winning"
1986 Kay O'Brien Sarah Avery Episode: "Big Vacation"
1987 Sweet Lorraine Molly Garber
1987 Spenser: For Hire Laurie Kincaid Episode: "Sleepless Dream"
1988 Satisfaction Mooch
1988 Frank Nitti: The Enforcer Anna TV movie
1988 The Chair Lisa Titus
1990 American Playhouse Younger Elinor Episode: "Sensibility and Sense"
1990 Stella Jenny Claire
1991 American Friends Miss Elinor Hartley
1991 American Blue Note Lorraine
1992 The Human Factor Episode: "Pilot"
1992 The Babe Helen Woodford Ruth
1994 Little Women Meg March
1995 The Perez Family Teresa Perez
1996 The Frighteners Dr. Lucy Lynskey
1996 The Christmas Tree Beth TV movie
1998 Paulie Adult Marie Alweather
2000 The Last Dance Denise Cope TV movie
2001 Bitter Winter TV movie
2004 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Maggie Shaye Episode: "Ritual"
2004 The Jury Sandra Saramago Episode: "Three Boys and a Gun"
2006 Little Children Theresa
2008-2009 Fringe Samantha Loeb Episodes: "In Which We Meet Mr. Jones" / "Bound"
2009 The Good Guy Sylvia
2010 All Good Things Sarah Davis
2014 Black Box Beatrice King Episode: "Forget Me"

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Trini Alvarado biography at FilmReference.com
  2. ^ "12 Years Old, Beguiling And a Part-Time Actress; Both Smart New York Kids" by Charles Kaiser, New York Times, 14 September 1979
  3. ^ "Actress won 'Stella' Role With A Song" by James Ryan, Rocky Mountain News, 6 February 1990 (restricted access)
  4. ^ a b "Holding Her Own Against the Divine Miss M, Trini Alvarado Is Tugging Heartstrings in Stella" by Cynthia Sanz, People, 26 February 1990
  5. ^ "Trini Alvarado Still Fresh And Unaffected" by Susan Stark of the Detroit News, published in the Seattle Times, 19 July 1996
  6. ^ "Little Women's Trini Alvarado Fringe: "I lead kind of a quiet life. I just grew up that way."". FrostSnow. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  7. ^ Trini alvarado biography at the Turner Classic Movies website
  8. ^ "The Gathering of the Runaways" by Elizabeth Swados, at The Guide to Musical Theatre 's website
  9. ^ Rich Kids (1979) cast and crew from Yahoo Movies
  10. ^ a b Little Women, at ErasOfElegance.com, 1994]
  11. ^ "Trini's Curse" video clip from YouTube