Asia Argento
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| Asia Argento | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Asia Aria Anna Maria Vittoria Rossa Argento |
| Born | September 20, 1975 Rome, Italy |
| Other name(s) | Aria Argento |
| Official site | Asia Argento Official site |
Asia Aria Anna Maria Vittoria Rossa Argento (born September 20, 1975 in Rome) is an Italian television and film actress and director. The City of Rome's register office refused to acknowledge Asia as an appropriate name, and instead officially inscribed her as Aria Argento. Despite this, she uses the name Asia Argento professionally. ("Asia" is pronounced[help] [ˈaːsia] in Italian).
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Her mother is the actress Daria Nicolodi and her father is Dario Argento, an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter well known for his work in the Italian giallo genre, and for his influence on modern horror and slasher movies. Her first child, Anna Lou, was born on 20 June 2001. Italian rock and roll musician Marco Castoldi (lead singer of Bluvertigo), also known as Morgan, is the father.
Asia Argento was directed by her father Dario Argento in one of her first works, Trauma (1993), when she was 16. During this film she also had her first nude scene. She received the David di Donatello (Italy's version of Hollywood's Academy Award) for Best Actress in 1994 for her performance in Perdiamoci di vista!, and again in 1996 for Compagna di viaggio, which also earned her a Grolla d'oro award. In 1998, Argento began appearing in English-language movies, such as B. Monkey and New Rose Hotel, with Christopher Walken.
Argento has proven her ability to work in multiple languages, adding French to the list of languages in which she has performed, with a role in 1994's La Reine Margot. That same year, she made her first foray into directing, calling the shots behind the short films Prospettive and A ritroso. In 1996, she directed a documentary on her father, and in 1998 a second one on Abel Ferrara, which won her the Rome Film Festival Award. She directed and wrote her first movie called Scarlet Diva (2000), and four years later directed her second movie, The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things (2004), based on a book by JT LeRoy, this time in the United States. According to a Paris Review interview with author and con artist Laura Albert, who was the brain behind JT LeRoy, Argento and Savannah Knoop, who "played" JT at the time, became lovers.[1]
In addition to her cinematic accomplishments, Argento has written a number of stories for magazines such as Dynamo and L'Espresso, while her first novel, titled I Love You Kirk, was published in Italy in 1999. She has modeled for and endorses the brand "Miss Sixty". The band Hondo Maclean from South Wales, gained Argento's interest when they wrote a track named after her. She liked the track so much she sent them pictures which they used as the cover of their 2004 EP Chasing Angels.
From the 17th to the 25th of October 2006, Argento contributed a video diary to Nick Knight's website, SHOWstudio. The title of the 54 entries/episodes was "Don't Bother To Knock" and detailed Argento's daily life with three entries (noon, 6 pm and midnight) posted every day. The content of the entries were partially controlled by a discussion forum and together formed a cohesive whole, a sort of "mini-movie" anyone could view for free. In the clips Argento discusses topics such as freaks, her father, Fellini and her sexuality; she also journals a pregnancy, a new love interest and her unraveling psyche. All of these issues come to a head before Argento's final revelations and good-byes. The last visual of the diary is a digitally manipulated portrait of Argento taken by Knight, slowly burning away.
- An Eye
- "It's on my shoulder, I got it on my first trip to Amsterdam when I was 14. I was so high on hash, and while I knew that I wanted an eye, I really didn't know how I wanted it. The guy at the tattoo place felt sorry for me, and anyway he did it."
- Two Snakes and a Sun
- "It's over my ass. I did the two snakes in Minneapolis when I was shooting Trauma. I was 16. The sun that's in between, I did that in Amsterdam (again) when I was 17. The snakes were taken from a Medusa statue that I saw in Rome, and they were intertwined around her waist. And the sun... I dunno, I drew it... but all these tattoos, I have to say, I would have a million symbolic reasons that were very true at the time I was having the tattoo, very romantic in a way. You could say: "I got this tattoo for a reason" but not really, I really liked those drawings, and this is the bottom line."
- An Angel
- "It's taken from a painting by the Belgian painter Delvaux... But she's not an angel, I added the wings. And I did it there (rising from her pubis mound) not for some sexual iconography of a flying pussy, but more to hide it from my father, who was not so happy about me having all these tattoos. I remember when I finally showed it to him, like three years after, 'cos I managed to hide it for a couple of years, he said that now I could fulfil my dream and work in the circus as the tattooed wonder"
- Anna
- "The last one I got, and maybe it's the only one I got for a reason. It's my sister's name (the deceased Anna - who Scarlet Diva is dedicated to) on my ribs. Because I remembered this line by Blixa Bargeld: "I don't know who has cut you off my ribs" - as of Eve for Adam. it looks like a jail tattoo, something very dirty"
- 23
- Located on the back of her neck.
- Désengagement (2007)
- The Mother of Tears (2007)
- Transylvania (2006)
- Coin Locker Babies (2006)
- Marie-Antoinette (2006)
- Sean Lennon's Friendly Fire (2006)
- Land of the Dead (2005)
- Cindy: The Doll Is Mine (2005)
- Last Days (2005)
- The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things (2004)
- The Keeper (2004)
- (s)AINT (2003) (Marilyn Manson music video)
- xXx (2002)
- Red Siren (2002)
- Scarlet Diva (2000)
- The Phantom of the Opera (1998)
- B. Monkey (1998)
- New Rose Hotel (1998)
- The Stendhal Syndrome (1996)
- La Reine Margot (1994)
- Trauma (1993)
- La Chiesa (1989)
- Palombella Rossa (1988)
- Demoni 2 (1986)
- Authorized Asia Argento fansite
- Asia Argento at the Internet Movie Database
- Asia Argento Official site
- IHT: Asia Argento (05/2007)
- Guardian: Asia Argento (07/2006)
- Index magazine interview (2001)
- SWINDLE Magazine Interview
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Argento, Asia |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Argento, Asia Aria Anna Maria Vittoria Rossa |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Actor, film director |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 1975-9-20 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Rome, Italy |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from August 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Italian film actors | Italian television actors | Italian film directors | Italian screenwriters | Italian voice actors | People from Rome (city) | People of Brazilian descent | Female film directors | 1975 births | Living people