Parker Posey
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| Parker Posey | |
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Posey at the 2006 Toronto Film Festival |
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| Born | Parker Christian Posey November 8, 1968 Baltimore, Maryland, United States |
Parker Christian Posey (born November 8, 1968) is an American actress. She became known during the 1990s, after a series of roles in several well-received independent films. As a result, she has often been referred to as the "Queen of the Indies".[1]
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Posey was born in Baltimore, Maryland, the daughter of Lynda, a chef, and Chris Posey, who owned a Chevrolet dealership. She has a fraternal twin brother, Christopher. Posey's unisex first name was a tribute by her father to 1950s supermodel Suzy Parker. After Posey's birth, the family moved to Laurel, Mississippi where her mother worked as a chef and culinary instructor for the Viking Range Corporation in Greenwood, MS, and her father, after coming back from the Vietnam War with long time friend Bill Pearson, opened a dealership named Posey Chevrolet in Laurel, Mississippi. The family also lived in Monroe, Louisiana. Posey was raised in the Catholic religion.[2]
[edit] Film career
Posey attended the State University of New York at Purchase, where she roomed with actress Sherry Stringfield. Fellow actors in her SUNY Purchase acting company included Adam Trese, Reno Wilson, and Todd Baker.
Posey's first break was in television, when she won the role of Tess Shelby on the daytime soap opera As the World Turns. (Stringfield, Posey's roommate, was also cast on the daytime drama Guiding Light at about the same time.) Posey's first major role in a feature film was in Dazed and Confused (1993).
Throughout the late 1990s, Posey starred in a large number of independent films and was named Queen of the Indies by Time Magazine,[1] which cited 32 independent films to her credit, including Personal Velocity, Clockwatchers, Party Girl, and The House of Yes, for which she received especially positive reviews for her portrayal of a delusional woman in love with her own brother. She is part of the acting ensemble that appears in director Christopher Guest's films, including four of his mock documentaries: (Waiting for Guffman in 1996, Best in Show in 2000, A Mighty Wind in 2003, and For Your Consideration in 2006). Posey is also a favorite of director Hal Hartley. She appeared in Henry Fool (1998), two of his shorts, Opera No. 1 (1994; with Adrienne Shelley, another Hartley regular), Sisters of Mercy (2004), and his most recent film, Fay Grim (2006). Posey received acclaim for her performance in Zoe Cassavetes's directorial debut Broken English in 2007.
Though well known for her work in independent cinema, Posey has also had supporting roles in several big budget studio films, including Scream 3 (2000), You've Got Mail (1998), Josie and the Pussycats (2001), Laws of Attraction (2004), and Blade: Trinity (2004). She also had a small but notable performance in Superman Returns, playing Kitty Kowalski, an assistant to villain Lex Luthor.
Posey is also set for a role in an upcoming John Waters film Fruitcake along with Johnny Knoxville which will likely be set in her birth town of Baltimore, as with all John Waters's films.[1]
[edit] Television work
Although Posey primarily works in film, she has appeared in several television projects.
- Posey appeared in the television miniseries adaptations of the Armistead Maupin Tales of the City books; her character, Connie, was featured in the original 1993 series and the 1998 miniseries "sequel" covering the second book.
- In 2000, she provided the voice of Umbriel the mermaid in the Futurama episode "The Deep South."
- Also in 2000, Parker provided the voice of Becky in an episode of The Simpsons titled "It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Marge."
- She has also had a recurring role on the television series Will & Grace, as Dorlene, Jack's high-maintenance boss at Barneys New York.
- Posey appeared on the season one finale episode of Project Runway in 2005. She was a spectator at New York Fashion Week, and also a judge alongside Nina Garcia, Michael Kors, and German supermodel/host Heidi Klum.
- In 2006, Posey guest-starred as the ambitious, back-stabbing lawyer Marlene "The Squid" Stanger in the legal drama Boston Legal.
- In March 2008, Posey headlined the quickly cancelled Fox series The Return of Jezebel James.
Posey was previously considered for the roles of Rachel Green in Friends (which went to Jennifer Aniston), of Kimmy in My Best Friend's Wedding (which went to Cameron Diaz), and of Althea in The People vs. Larry Flynt (which went to Courtney Love).
[edit] Other work
Posey made her stage debut in 2001, and has worked regularly on the stage since. Posey also dabbles in music; she can play the mandolin. She learned to play as preparation for her role in A Mighty Wind (2003), a film in which she also sang. She used her vocal talents on several records of her ex-boyfriend, Ryan Adams, whom she dated until early 2005. She also played the mandolin on The Dandy Warhols track "I Am Sound" from their Welcome to the Monkey House LP.
She is also the subject of several songs:
- She is the subject of a tribute song by Stuart Davis on his 2006 album ¿What.
- L.A. based rappers Trilambs also recorded a song titled Parker Posey in 2001.
- Musical project Forms of Things Unknown recorded an experimental music instrumental called From Here to Parker Posey.
Beginning in February 2006, Posey appeared in a commercial for Pepsi Cola opposite Jimmy Fallon, dancing to the song "Newton – Streamline". It was prominently aired during the FOX broadcasts of the 2006 World Series in October, and a longer version has also aired in movie theaters. She is a contributing editor to Open City, a literary magazine whose editor, Thomas Beller, she once dated.
Posey has appeared on the cover of Lucky magazine, an online shopping site.
[edit] Filmography
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Dazed and Confused | Darla Marks | |
| Coneheads | Stephanie | ||
| 1995 | Party Girl | Mary | |
| Flirt | Emily | ||
| 1996 | Frisk | Fergie | |
| Kicking and Screaming | Miami | ||
| Basquiat | Mary | ||
| 1997 | The House of Yes | Jacqueline "Jackie-O" Pascale | |
| The Daytrippers | Jo Malone | ||
| Waiting for Guffman | Libby Mae Brown | ||
| Clockwatchers | Margaret Burre | ||
| 1998 | Henry Fool | Fay Grim | |
| You've Got Mail | Patricia Eden | ||
| The Misadventures of Margaret | Margaret Nathan | ||
| 2000 | Best in Show | Meg Swan | |
| Scream 3 | Jennifer Jolie | ||
| 2001 | The Anniversary Party | Judy Adams | |
| Josie and the Pussycats | Fiona | ||
| 2002 | The Sweetest Thing | Judy Webb | |
| Personal Velocity | Greta | ||
| 2003 | A Mighty Wind | Sissy Knox | |
| The Event | Nick | ||
| 2004 | Blade: Trinity | Danica Talos | |
| Frankenstein | Detective Carson O'Conner | ||
| Laws of Attraction | Serena | ||
| 2005 | Adam & Steve | Rhonda | |
| 2006 | For Your Consideration | Callie Webb | |
| Fay Grim | Fay Grim | ||
| The OH in Ohio | Priscilla | ||
| Superman Returns | Kitty Kowalski | ||
| 2007 | Broken English | Nora Wilder | |
| 2008 | The Eye | Helen Wells | |
| Spring Breakdown | Becky | post-production |
[edit] References
- ^ a b Corliss, Richard. "Queen of the Indies", Time, 1997-02-17.
- ^ index magazine interview
[edit] External links
- Parker Posey at the Internet Movie Database
- ParkerPosey.org
- Driving Miss Posey June/July 2008 Out magazine story on Parker Posey. By Matthew Breen
- NPR's Fresh Air November 21, 2006
- It’s a Bird! It’s a Plane! It’s . . . Parker Posey! New York Magazine (July 10, 2006)
- IGN Films Bio (December 7, 2004)
- The Oakland Tribune interview (November, 2002)
- NEXT magazine interview (November, 2002)
- American Outlook article (2002)
- Indexed interview (1996)
- Parker Posey/Hal Hartley interview JewReview.net (May 2007)
- The Onion A.V. Club interview

