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Parker Posey - Biography

Parker Posey
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Biography - Born 11/08/1968

An eccentric, dark-haired actress best known for her work in 1990s independent films, Parker Posey trained at SUNY Purchase before spending over a year (1991-92) playing Tess Shelby, a bratty teen on the long-running CBS daytime soap "As the World Turns". Named after 50s model Suzy Parker, she entered features in 1993 with "Joey Breaker", a low-rent version of "The Player", and followed with small roles in "Coneheads", based on early "SNL" sketches, and "Dazed and Confused" (both 1993), Richard Linklater's personal ode to youth. In the latter, Posey embodied every freshman girl's nightmare: the fascistic senior.

Posey subsequently appeared briefly in the acclaimed PBS miniseries "Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City" (1994), as a ditsy friend of heroine Laura Linney. Her career accelerated that year and she has since earned the sobriquet 'Queen of the Indies' for her appearances in non-studio features like "Sleep With Me" (1994), Hal Hartley's "Amateur" (1995) and most especially in "Party Girl" (1995). In the latter, as Mary, the title character who evolves into a librarian, she demonstrated her ability to carry a film. The busy actress made memorable appearances in "Frisk" (1996), as psychotic murderess, and in Christopher Guest's comedy "Waiting for Guffman" (also 1996), as a Dairy Queen worker with showbiz aspirations. That same year, she lent her quirky presence to "Basquiat" (portraying gallery owner Mary Boone), "The Daytrippers" (as Hope Davis' younger sister) and Linklater's "subUrbia" (as a press agent). She continued her winning streak in 1997 with an award-winning turn as a woman with an unhealthy identification with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in "The House of Yes" and nearly stole Hartley's "Henry Fool" as a sexy and sarcastic woman who eventually marries the title character.

Over the next five years, Posey took on several characteristically unique roles in both independent and big-budget films. In 2000's "Best in Show" Posey played a yuppie wife with braces and a high-strung attachment to her dog and husband. She again played an uptight wife in the Jennifer Jason Leigh directed film "Anniversary Party" (2001) but this time she loosened up after taking extacy.

2002 found Posey taking a different turn in her career by taking on the lead role in the dramatic mystery "The Event" (lensed 2002) and co-starring with Kyra Sedwick and Fairuz Balk in "Personal Velocity". She did not abandon her comedic roots though, and was working again with Christopher Guest on his latest semi-improvised mockumentary "A Mighty Wind" (lensed 2002), playing one of a large ensemble of "family" folk singers. She next appeared opposite Pierce Brosnan and Julianne Moore in the romantic comedy "Laws of Attraction" (2004), playing a famous woman locked in a bitter divorce battle with her rock star husband.

A couple of uncharacteristic roles in the horror genre found their way onto Parkers resume. She played Detective Carson OConnor in a modern rendition of Frankenstein (USA Network, 2004), a backdoor pilot originally penned by Dean Koontz. Posey then appeared as the vampire Danica in Blade: Trinity (2004), the third installment in the trilogy. Not typically cast for such roles, Posey relied on her camp sensibilities, making her character a sassy punk annoyed with the whole undead thinga choice that pleased writer-director David Goyer. Next, Posey performed in a successful off-Broadway run with Ethan Hawke in David Rabes cocaine- and alcohol-fueled morality tale about show business, <I>Hurlyburly</I>. She then was tapped to play Kitty Koslowski, the sexy sidekick of evil genius Lex Luthor in director Bryan Singer's revival of the original comic book superhero franchise "Superman Returns" (lensed 2005).