Stefania LaVie Owen | |
---|---|
Born | [1] [2] [3] [4] | December 15, 1997
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 2009–present |
Stefania LaVie Owen is a New Zealand-American actress. She is known for her roles as Puddle Kadubic in the television series Running Wilde and as Dorrit Bradshaw in the teen drama television series The Carrie Diaries . She starred as Melanie in the film Paper Spiders , as Bear in the Netflix show Sweet Tooth , and as Nicole Chance in the Hulu original psychological thriller Chance .
Owen was born in Miami, Florida, to an American mother and a New Zealand father. Her mother is of Cuban descent. [5] Owen moved to New Zealand at age four, settling in Pauatahanui, a village 30 km (19 mi) north of the Capital City Wellington. [6]
Owen lives between New York City and Wellington. She attended Pauatahanui school, where she won the cup for performing arts, and which helped begin her career in acting. [7] She also attended Chilton Saint James School, an all-girls private school, in Lower Hutt, Wellington. [8] Her sisters Lolo and Carly accompanied her there as well, and she was involved in many school productions and dancing classes.[ citation needed ]
Owen made her acting debut in the 2009 Peter Jackson film The Lovely Bones , playing Flora Hernandez. [9] From 2010 to 2011, she played the character Puddle Kadubic in the Fox comedy series Running Wilde . [7] Owen co-starred as Dorrit, Carrie Bradshaw's rebellious younger sister, in The CW's The Carrie Diaries , which aired in 2013 and 2014. [10]
She had a role in the 2015 comedy horror film, Krampus , directed by Michael Dougherty. [11] She also portrayed Deedee in the drama film Coming Through the Rye . [12] She starred opposite Lili Taylor in the drama Paper Spiders . [13] She also co-starred in Messiah as Rebecca in 2020.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | The Lovely Bones | Flora Hernandez | Film |
2010–2011 | Running Wilde | Puddle Kadubic | Main role |
2011 | Home Game | Charlotte | Unsold television pilot |
2013–2014 | The Carrie Diaries | Dorrit Bradshaw | Main role |
2015 | Krampus | Beth | Film |
2015 | Coming Through the Rye | Deedee | Film |
2016 | All We Had | Ruthie Carmichael | Film |
2016–2017 | Chance | Nicole Chance | Main role |
2018 | I'm Dying Up Here | Amanda Robbins | Recurring role |
2019 | The Cat and the Moon | Eliza | Film |
2019 | The Beach Bum | Heather | Film |
2020 | Messiah | Rebecca Iguero | Main cast |
2020 | The Wilds | Becca Gilroy | Episode: "Day Sixteen" |
2021 | Paper Spiders | Melanie | Film |
2021-2023 | Sweet Tooth | Bear | Main role |
2022 | Don't Make Me Go | Sandra |
Lili Anne Taylor is an American actress. She came to prominence with supporting parts in the films Mystic Pizza (1988) and Say Anything... (1989), before establishing herself as one of the key figures of 1990s independent cinema through starring roles in Bright Angel (1990), Dogfight (1991), Household Saints, Short Cuts, The Addiction (1995), I Shot Andy Warhol, Girls Town, Pecker (1998), and A Slipping-Down Life (1999). Taylor is the recipient of four Independent Spirit nominations, winning once in the category of Best Supporting Female. Her other accolades include one Golden Globe Award and nominations for three Primetime Emmy Awards.
Chloe Marisa Suazo Devine, known professionally as Chloe Bridges, is an American actress. She is known for her roles as Zoey Moreno in the sitcom Freddie (2005–2006) and as Dana Turner in the Disney Channel original film Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam (2010). She has starred in the films Forget Me Not (2009), Family Weekend (2013), Mantervention (2014), The Final Girls (2015), and Nightlight (2015). She has also portrayed Donna LaDonna in The Carrie Diaries, Sydney in Pretty Little Liars, and Kibby in Daytime Divas.
Frances Rose McIver is a New Zealand actress. She played Olivia "Liv" Moore in The CW supernatural comedy-drama series iZombie (2015–2019), Summer Landsdown the Yellow Ranger in Power Rangers RPM (2009), and Amber Moore in the romantic comedy film A Christmas Prince (2017) and its two sequels The Royal Wedding (2018), The Royal Baby (2019).
Isobel Dorothy Powley is an English actress. Born and raised in London, Powley was educated at Holland Park School. She began acting as a teenager on television, starring on the CBBC action television series M.I. High (2007–2008), the period miniseries Little Dorrit (2008), the crime series Murderland (2009), and the ITV sitcom Benidorm (2014).
Peyton Roi List is an American actress. List began her career as a child model for tween magazines and companies before transitioning to acting. A child actress at the time, List made her acting debut with the film 27 Dresses in 2008, and soon became recognized for playing Holly Hills in the 2011-2012 Diary of a Wimpy Kid film series.
Sarah Jessica Parker is an American actress and television producer. She is the recipient of numerous accolades, including six Golden Globe Awards and two Primetime Emmy Awards. Time magazine named her one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2022.
The Carrie Diaries is a young adult novel, the first in a series of the same name by American author Candace Bushnell. The series is a prequel to Bushnell's 1997 collection Sex and the City, and follows the character of Carrie Bradshaw during her senior year of high school during the early 1980s and part of her life in New York City working as a writer. The Los Angeles Times described it as "addictive" and "ingenious."
Running Wilde is an American sitcom created by Mitchell Hurwitz for the Fox Network. It stars Will Arnett as Steve Wilde, a self-centered, idle bachelor and heir to an oil fortune. The series follows Wilde's awkward attempts to regain the affection of his childhood sweetheart, Emmy, an environmentalist who had been living in the South American jungle, but whose young daughter does not want to return there and who secretly enlists Steve's help to keep Emmy at his mansion, leading to farcical situations and misunderstandings.
Dame Miranda Catherine Millais Harcourt is a New Zealand actress and acting coach.
The Carrie Diaries is an American teen comedy-drama television series that aired for two seasons on The CW from January 14, 2013, to January 31, 2014. It is a prequel to the HBO television series Sex and the City and based on the 2010 book of the same name by Candace Bushnell. The first season focuses on Carrie Bradshaw during her junior year of high school in 1984 as she explores life in New York City while interning at a law firm office, and also secretly working at a magazine company, while the second season focuses more on her expanding life in the city as well as the lives of her friends and boyfriend.
The first season of the American comedy-drama television series The Carrie Diaries premiered on The CW on January 14, 2013, and concluded on April 8, 2013, consisting of 13 episodes. Developed by Amy B. Harris, the series is based on the novel of the same name by Candace Bushnell, and serves as a prequel to the HBO series Sex and the City.
The second and final season of the American comedy-drama television series The Carrie Diaries premiered on The CW on October 25, 2013, and concluded on January 31, 2014, consisting of 13 episodes. The series serves as a prequel to the HBO series Sex and the City.
Ian Michael Nelson is an American actor. He played the teen version of werewolf Derek Hale in the television series Teen Wolf, Eric Palmer in the drama film The Judge, and Andy in the Hulu series There's...Johnny!.
Allison Cara Tolman is an American actress. She is best known for her role as Molly Solverson in the first season of the FX television series Fargo, earning Emmy and Golden Globe nominations.
Chilton Saint James School is a private single-sex girls composite school located in central Lower Hutt, New Zealand. The school was founded in 1918 by Geraldine FitzGerald, and was a combined day and boarding school until the dormitories closed in the late 1970s. Chilton St James has a roll of 263 students from Years 1 to 13 as of April 2023. The school also has a co-educational preschool for boys and girls from the age of 2.
Krampus is a 2015 Christmas horror comedy film based on the eponymous character from Austro-Bavarian folklore, directed by Michael Dougherty, who co-wrote with Todd Casey and Zach Shields. The film stars Adam Scott, Toni Collette, David Koechner, Allison Tolman, Conchata Ferrell, Emjay Anthony, Stefania LaVie Owen, with Krista Stadler, and introducing Lolo Owen, Queenie Samuel, Maverick Flack, and Sage Hunefeld. In the film, a dysfunctional family squabbling causes a young boy to lose his festive spirit. Doing so unleashes the wrath of Krampus, a fearsome, horned demonic beast in ancient European folklore who punishes naughty children at Christmas time. As Krampus lays siege to the neighborhood, the family must band together to save one another from a monstrous fate.
Lili Bayliss is a New Zealand singer from Wellington who was the eighth contestant eliminated on the second season of The X Factor.
Chance is an American television series created by Kem Nunn and Alexandra Cunningham which stars Hugh Laurie. The series is based on Nunn's 2014 book of the same name and was ordered straight-to-series in January 2016 with a straight two-season order containing twenty episodes. It premiered on Hulu on October 19, 2016. The second season premiered on October 11, 2017. On January 9, 2018, the series was cancelled.
"Twelve Days of Krampus" is the 8th episode and midseason finale of season 3 of the supernatural drama television series Grimm and the 52nd episode overall, which premiered on December 13, 2013, on the cable network NBC. The episode was written by Dan E. Fesman, and was directed by Tawnia McKiernan. The episode aired alongside the previous episode, Cold Blooded.
Paper Spiders is a 2020 American drama film directed by Inon Shampanier, written by Natalie and Inon Shampanier, and starring Lili Taylor and Stefania LaVie Owen. It tells the story of a high school girl struggling to help her mother, whose paranoid delusions spiral out of control. It is described as "a bittersweet story about coming of age in the shadow of mental illness."