[go: up one dir, main page]

    Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV News
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily Entertainment GuideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsPride MonthAmerican Black Film FestivalSummer Watch GuideSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign In
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
  • Biography
  • Awards
  • Trivia
IMDbPro

Alexandria Smothers

  • Actress
  • Producer
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Alexandria Smothers
The story follows a Mexican immigrated family‘s life  in America. They are Carmen (Alejandra Walker) who is a  single and religious mother, wants to test the “confused”  sexuality of her teenager son, Bess (Ellen Clifford), a  young girl who is discriminated for her unattractive  appearance, and Andrea, the young son falls in love with a  mid-age man, as they try to survive their loneliness and  obsessions by going through different unusual experiences  and relationships with their new neighbor Lucy, a  prostitute. Influences like religion, environment and  prejudices are, in occasions, very destructive to the  social environment.    DESIRE STREET is an independent feature film exploring the  social and family issues with a melodramatic, but at times  humoristic tone and with very bold/colorful characters and  dynamic narration. The message that directors bring to the  film, which is “respect for others”, independently of their  sexuality, race or profession, is very relevant. Also the  film highlights the importance of the family support, for  any teenagers who are struggling for their sexuality and  differences to the stereotype that the society creates.
Play trailer1:48
Desire Street (2011)
9 Videos
16 Photos
Alexandra Smothers was born at Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto. Her father was a third generation Cardinal at Stanford. She jokes that she must have been a "smart baby" to be born at such a prestigious school. Her Dad became a well-respected attorney and her mom was a waitress at their family restaurant for 50 years known as the "Rainbow Hut" on the Central Coast. She moved a lot as a child, between her biker mom and protective sister, her intellectual giant of a Dad, and ultimately the two who had a great impact on her life, her grandparents. She is grateful to them for raising her, with the help of her great aunt and uncle from Palo Alto for taking her from foster care and providing her with a boarding school education. Alexandra experienced living at every economic level and had a myriad of life experiences that give her a rich well to draw from as an actress.

Academy Award Nominated Actress Carrie Snodgress befriended Smothers in line for a ride at Magic Mountain and mentored her in her journey to becoming a working actress and a mom. She stressed the value of volunteering one's time to worthy causes. Smothers studied with Mr. Cochran, former Yale professor who taught Meryl Streep and Danny Glover. Smothers credits Oliver Stone for inspiring her to come to Los Angeles to work as an actress in films after meeting him at the Fiesta Five Movie Theater in Santa Barbara, where Alexandra gave him a tiny little slide that a photographer nearby just happened to have on him. She had just finished her first film, "The Legend of Shokar" that premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival in 1992. He encouraged her to come to LA. She moved from Santa Barbara where she was attending school and living on a boat to Los Angeles.

Her Dad came into her life again after a ten-year absence. He was a resident at the Betty Ford Center. His roommate was unit publicist, Thomas Gray, who took Alexandra under his wing and taught her what he new about the business of show. By 1996, she was getting hundreds of auditions and a few small roles that ended up mostly on the cutting room floor. Her film and TV credits include Will Smith's breakthrough series "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" which she was fired from for trying a different accent each take, "I was green!" she laughs, red-faced.

Her first agent was Joel Tappis. They met while she sat alone waiting for a man for whom she had decided to buy some teeth so that he could look for a job. (He didn't have any in the front)

Smothers agreed to travel to see about a picture and was brought in on Tim Burton's "Mars Attacks!" (in which the film pioneer cast her as a Cleopatra cocktail waitress) by Marilee Lear. She had her own trailer and was on set for a week with Tim Burton, Danny DeVito and Annette Bening. Smothers couldn't help but be inspired by them, and the cinematographer Peter Suschitzky taught her about creating meaningful moments on film.

She flew from the set in Vegas to see her Dad marry his wife Heidi at the Little Chapel in Yosemite Valley. Two months later, Alexandra's son, Isaac, was conceived to her free-spirited globetrotting new boyfriend. She moved back to the Central Coast to raise her newborn son, Isaac, and to help her sister, Tasha who was sick. She changed her name from Brandy to Alexandra. In contemplating the naming of her son, she realized the importance of a name and its meaning. " 'Brandy' means 'conqueror.' 'Alexandra' means 'helper of mankind'. Smothers wanted to devote her time to her son. Two years later, while on a good-will ambassador trip to aid an orphanage in Mexico, a producer took notice of her. Three months later, Smothers, living in a small country town of 282 people, received a phone call. She was hired to fly to Belize as an on-screen narrator to make the case for the conservation of the rainforests, providing clean drinking water to the world and building safe homes for "Target Earth" and "Eden Conservancy". When she got back, she met the disciplined and compelling director Patti Kane, who created a theatre in Paso Robles that debuted with Smothers' performance as Cherie in 'Bus Stop' in the year 2000, Classic American Theatre was born. For the next five years Smothers worked closely with artist-in-residence Jeffrey Schultz and Director Patti Kane bringing powerful leading ladies to life to packed houses and standing ovations. She played Maggie in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" which was produced by Rob Stevens who was known to the Los Angeles theatre community for producing the awards show "The Robbies."

Alexandra missed out on knowing her father as a child. She and her son spent every Christmas with him and his wife Heidi in Ahwahnee, just outside of Yosemite. While Smothers and her dad didn't enjoy the close-knit relationship she longed for, her dad told her that he was her biggest fan after seeing Smothers in "Bus Stop" as Cherie, a role brought to the screen by the late Marilyn Monroe.

The desire to share her work with a larger audience led her back to Los Angeles. Her first appearance on stage in Los Angeles was as Blanche DuBois in "Streetcar Named Desire," and at the Improv Comedy Lab as Mrs. Brown in "National Velvet. " Again, with the audience limited to those who could make it to the theatre, Smothers set out in search of a wider audience.

In 2007, Alexandra represented Lucky Jeans and Liz Claiborne as a model in Sri Lanka, and had a very emotional journey down the coast hosted by Hidiramani Corporation, the clothing manufacturer. They took her to the village built for the survivors who had lost family members in the tsunami following the magnitude 9.1 earthquake in 2004. When she got there, they held a town hall meeting to tell her of their desire for peacekeeping, language education, and technology. Smothers would still like to establish aide to the region.

After hearing Producer Ralph Winter speak about the importance of making movies and not just dreaming about it, Smothers engaged the help of a very talented cinematographer Paolo Cascio to create a short film about her sister's recent death at 37 in a head- on collision. The story was originally titled "Illa Ensis" but at the last second was changed to "Broken" It was a very personal journey that premiered at the Alex Theatre on April 4, 2009. WGA writer Jeff Wilber wrote the non-linear script.

In 2010, on their third collaboration with Smothers, Directors Roberto Fernando Canuto and Xiaoxi Xu wrote a feature script with Alexandra in mind to play one of the leads in an ensemble piece, and asked Alexandra to join them.

The first day of filming for her first feature film, Smothers learned her father was dying of Pancreatic cancer. "Desire Street" with Alejandra Walker, Ellen Clifford, Javier Lopez and Alexandra Smothers, first screened a rough cut on November 13, 2009 In Theatre 3 on the Universal Studios lot. Her father passed away on May 4, 2010 and she doesn't know if he ever saw that film. She hastily married someone she hadn't dated five days later in her grief.

In the summer of 2010 Alexandra Smothers played Margie the waitress in "Silent Crossroads" set in the 60's in rural Echo, Utah and directed by her husband. She won the "Best Performance in an Acting Role" award from 'Action on Film' Film Festival WithOutaBox Award in 2012, and was nominated for Best Actress from the Movieville Film Festival in Sarasota Florida. They created another short film shortly thereafter where she plays a spy. Their relationship ended upon its completion and separation was a rocky one. Smothers delved into volunteering to keep her life in perspective.

She worked worked briefly on the mob comedy feature "Pizza With Bullets" starring Talia Shire, Vincent Pastore, Ronnie Marmo, Tony Amendola, Tony Devon and directed by Robert Rothbard.
BornOctober 12, 1973
  • More at IMDbPro
    • Contact info
    • Agent info
    • Resume
BornOctober 12, 1973
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • View contact info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos16

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 9
    View Poster

    Known for

    Desire Street (2011)
    Desire Street
    7.7
    • Lucy(as Alexandra Smothers)
    • 2011
    Silent Crossroads (2010)
    Silent Crossroads
    Short
    • Margie the Waitress(as Alexandra Smothers)
    • 2010
    You're the Bomb (2011)
    You're the Bomb
    Short
    • Agent 9(as Alexandra Smothers)
    • 2011
    Ports Of Call
    Video
    • Brandy(as Alexandra Smothers)
    • 2018

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Actress



    • Ports Of Call
      Video
      • Brandy (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2018
    • You're the Bomb (2011)
      You're the Bomb
      Short
      • Agent 9 (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2011
    • Desire Street (2011)
      Desire Street
      7.7
      • Lucy (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2011
    • Silent Crossroads (2010)
      Silent Crossroads
      Short
      • Margie the Waitress (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • The Secret Bikini Pool Party (2010)
      The Secret Bikini Pool Party
      Short
      • Sexy Woman at the Door (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • Mei Mei (2010)
      Mei Mei
      8.8
      Short
      • CoCo (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • Alexandria Smothers, Andrea Centazzo, Roberto F. Canuto, Marielvy D'Apollo, Alexander Aguila, Kylan James, Kjord Davis, and Xiaoxi Xu in Toto Forever (2010)
      Toto Forever
      7.3
      Short
      • Mysterious Woman (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • Pizza with Bullets (2010)
      Pizza with Bullets
      6.6
      • Alexandra (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • Broken
      Short
      • Sarah (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2009
    • 60 Seconds on a Steward's Journey (2005)
      60 Seconds on a Steward's Journey
      Video
      • Stressed Woman (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2005
    • James Dean: Live Fast, Die Young (1997)
      James Dean: Live Fast, Die Young
      4.6
      • Wild Suzy (uncredited)
      • 1997
    • Pierce Brosnan, Jack Nicholson, Glenn Close, Danny DeVito, and Annette Bening in Mars Attacks! (1996)
      Mars Attacks!
      6.4
      • Cleopatra Cocktail Waitress (uncredited)
      • 1996
    • Alliance interdite (1996)
      Alliance interdite
      4.4
      TV Movie
      • Foxy Lady (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 1996
    • Will Smith in Le prince de Bel-Air (1990)
      Le prince de Bel-Air
      7.9
      TV Series
      • Girl with Beach Ball (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 1996

    Producer



    • Desire Street (2011)
      Desire Street
      7.7
      • co-producer (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2011
    • Silent Crossroads (2010)
      Silent Crossroads
      Short
      • producer (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2010
    • Broken
      Short
      • executive producer
      • producer (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2009

    Writer



    • Ports Of Call
      Video
      • Writer (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2018
    • Broken
      Short
      • story (as Alexandra Smothers)
      • 2009

    Verified affiliations

    Learn more at IMDbPro
    SAG-AFTRA

    Videos9

    Film Clips ~ Alexandra Smothers
    Demo Reel 2:35
    Film Clips ~ Alexandra Smothers
    Silent Crossroads
    Demo Reel 14:06
    Silent Crossroads
    Silent Crossroads
    Demo Reel 14:06
    Silent Crossroads
    You're the Bomb
    Demo Reel 14:51
    You're the Bomb
    Broken
    Demo Reel 11:08
    Broken
    Reel
    Demo Reel 2:35
    Reel
    Full Scene work with Alexandra Smothers
    Demo Reel 4:00
    Full Scene work with Alexandra Smothers

    Personal details

    Edit
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Alternative names
      • Alexandra Smothers
    • Height
      • 1.70 m
    • Born
      • October 12, 1973
      • Palo Alto, California, USA
    • Relatives
      • Tom Smothers(Cousin)
    • Publicity listings
      • 1 Article

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Distant cousin of Tom Smothers and Dick Smothers of The Smothers Brothers.
    • Quotes
      Passion, vision, purpose. Dare to dream. -- personal motto

    Contribute to this page

    Suggest an edit or add missing content
    • Learn more about contributing
    Edit page

    More to explore

    Recently viewed

    Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
    Get the IMDb app
    Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
    Follow IMDb on social
    Get the IMDb app
    For Android and iOS
    Get the IMDb app
    • Help
    • Site Index
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • License IMDb Data
    • Press Room
    • Advertising
    • Jobs
    • Conditions of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, an Amazon company

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.