Domenica Cameron-Scorsese Explained

Domenica Cameron-Scorsese
Birth Date:1976
Alma Mater:Wesleyan University
Years Active:1980–present
Parents:

Domenica Cameron-Scorsese (born 1976) is an American actress and filmmaker. Her acting career started with small roles in Cape Fear (1991) and The Age of Innocence (1993), both directed by her father Martin Scorsese.[1] [2]

Early life and education

Domenica Cameron-Scorsese was born in 1976 to Julia Cameron and Martin Scorsese. As a newborn, her mother took her from the hospital straight to the set of New York, New York, which her father was directing.[3] Cameron-Scorsese's parents divorced about a year after she was born, and she lived with her mother for the majority of her childhood.[4] She often visited her father. One of her earliest was eating M&Ms in the editing room of Raging Bull, and she appeared in his films Cape Fear (1991) and The Age of Innocence (1993) as a teenager.[5] She also acted in her mother's play, God's Will, in 1989. She appeared in the three-part anthology film New York Stories in the second segment, which was directed by Francis Ford Coppola and written by Coppola and Sofia Coppola.[6] Cameron-Scorsese spent her childhood in different cities including New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Taos, New Mexico, where she graduated from high school. She attended Wesleyan University, where she was a member of the Middletown Chapter of the Alpha Delta Phi Literary Society.[7] She took a class on Alfred Hitchcock that deepened her appreciation of film. During a yearlong study abroad program at Trinity College Dublin, she wrote and directed a play about date rape. She graduated in 1998 with a degree in French. She was not one of the filmmakers “who picked up a camera at the age of 5 and decided that this is what I want to do with my life,” she said. One of the people who inspired Cameron-Scorsese's interest in cinema was Jeanine Basinger, head of Wesleyan's film school and cinematic archives.[8]

Career

After graduating from Wesleyan, Cameron-Scorsese moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in acting even though her father discouraged her from acting, telling her, "Why that? It’s the least power, the most rejection." Her first jobs after graduating were the film Another Happy Tear and the play Four Roses, written by her mother. In 2003, she acted in the play Franny's Way with co-stars including Elisabeth Moss, Penny Fuller, and Susan May Pratt.[9]

In 2017, Cameron-Scorsese's feature-length directorial debut Almost Paris was screened at the 2017 Golden Door International Film Festival.[10] Almost Paris tells of a former Wall Street banker who has to return home after the mortgage lending crisis.[11]

In 2011, she got married in Chicago.[12]

Filmography

YearFilmRole
1989God's WillNancy
1991Cape FearDanny's Girlfriend
1992Straight TalkGirl
1993The Age of InnocenceKatie Blenker
2000Another Happy TearBeverly
2000BullfighterLaila
2003A House on a HillJennifer
2004Au Pair ChocolatRaven
2005God's Forgotten HouseAlice
2006The Still LifeArt buyer
2009AbsenceChristina
2016First StringEvelina Axel
2018Atomic Apocalypse (Black Flowers)Icon
2019The LurkerMrs. Wilson

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alba And Goldberg Among 2010 Tribeca Film Festival Jurors . October 20, 2012 . Buddy TV.
  2. Web site: April 24, 2009 . Scorsese's Daughter Eyes A New Movie With Her Dad . October 21, 2012 . Express News.
  3. News: 2006-05-06 . A Scorsese In Her Own Right . 2024-05-28 . Hartford Courant . D01.
  4. News: 2000-07-10 . Scorsese's daughter in 'Tony'-winning role . 2024-05-28 . Daily News . 336.
  5. News: 2000-01-09 . Hollywood Heirs Tell About Parents . 2024-05-28 . .
  6. News: 1988-05-24 . Stars over Chicago . 2024-05-28 . Chicago Tribune . 16.
  7. Cameron-Scorsese, Domenica, Box: 103, Folder: 13. Alpha Delta Phi Wesleyan Chapter records, 2016-ADP. Special Collections & Archives.
  8. News: 2006-05-06 . Two Films From Two Daughters . 2024-05-28 . Hartford Courant . D04.
  9. News: 2003-06-20 . Shades of life, death and everything in between . 2024-05-28 . The Los Angeles Times . 132.
  10. Web site: 2017 Golden Door International Film Festival To Screen Over 175 Films. New Jersey Stage. September 25, 2017.
  11. Web site: Domenica Cameron-Scorsese: Why It Took 10 Years to Make Her Jump to Feature Film Directing. April 22, 2016.
  12. Web site: Martin Scorsese Talks 'Hugo,' Recurring Nightmares and How His 12-Year-Old Rules the Roost. The Hollywood Reporter. November 16, 2011.