Monday, October 27, 2014

A00014 - Elizabeth Pena, Actress on the Big and Small Screens

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Elizabeth Peña and Chris Cooper in John Sayles’s “Lone Star” (1996), for which she won an Independent Spirit Award. CreditAlan Papp/Castle Rock Entertainment
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Elizabeth Peña, an actress who appeared in major studio pictures like “Rush Hour,” independent films like John Sayles’s generational drama “Lone Star,” and a host of television shows, died on Tuesday in Los Angeles. She was 55.
Her manager, Gina Rugolo, confirmed her death, saying it followed a brief illness.
Ms. Peña played everything from love interest to comedic sidekick in movies and on television for 35 years. She was a demolition specialist alongside Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker in “Rush Hour” (1998). As Pilar Cruz, a history teacher who rekindles a romance with a small-town Texas sheriff in “Lone Star” (1996), she won an Independent Spirit Award for best supporting actress. “The sultry Ms. Peña gives an especially vivid performance as the character who is most unsettled by the shadows of the past,” Janet Maslin wrote in The New York Times in 1996.
Her first major film role was as Tim Robbins’s lover in Adrian Lyne’s psychological thriller “Jacob’s Ladder” (1990). She reportedly won the part over stars like Julia Roberts, Andie MacDowell and Madonna.
A television regular, Ms. Peña appeared on shows like “L.A. Law,” “American Dad” and “Boston Public.” In the mid-1980s, she starred as a maid who marries her employer to stay in the United States in the short-lived sitcom “I Married Dora,” and starting in 2000 she played a hairdresser in “Resurrection Blvd.,” the Showtime drama about an upwardly mobile Latino family.
More recently she played the mother of Sofia Vergara’s character on the hit ABC sitcom “Modern Family,” even though she was only 13 years older than Ms. Vergara.
Elizabeth Peña was born in Elizabeth, N.J., on Sept. 23, 1959. Her father, Mario, was a Cuban actor, director and playwright, and Ms. Peña spent much of her childhood in Cuba before returning to the United States. She graduated from what is now the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music and Art and Performing Arts in Manhattan.
She performed in a production of “Romeo and Juliet,” translated into Spanish by the poet Pablo Neruda, at the Gramercy Theater in 1979 and made her film debut in the Spanish-language film “El Super” that year.
Ms. Peña went on to play the mistreated wife of Ritchie Valens’s half brother in the biopic “La Bamba” (1987); Jamie Lee Curtis’s confidante in the action film “Blue Steel” (1989); and Richard Dreyfuss’s and Bette Midler’s maid in the comedy “Down and Out in Beverly Hills” (1986).
She also did voice-over work in the animated film “The Incredibles” (2004) and cartoons like “Justice League.”
She married Hans Rolla in 1994. He survives her, as does their son, Kaelan; their daughter, Fiona Rolla; her mother, Estella Margarita Peña; and a sister, Tania Peña.
Ms. Peña said that she researched Mexican-American culture to prepare for her part in “Lone Star.”
“I recorded people’s voices to get the proper inflection,” she told The Ottawa Citizen in 1996. “I crossed the border a whole bunch to collect a lot of history. I would sit for hours looking at the women, how they dressed.”


“In the United States, all Spanish-speaking people are lumped into one category,” she continued. “But we’re all so different.”

Friday, October 10, 2014

A00013 - William Lopez, Prisoner Exonerated After 23 Years in Prison

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William Lopez in January.CreditMichael Kirby Smith for The New York Times
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William Lopez, who was convicted of murder in Brooklyn and imprisoned for 23 years before being exonerated last year, died on Sept. 20 in the Bronx. He was 55.
He had suffered an asthma attack and died at Jacobi Medical Center, his wife, Alice Lopez, said. He lived in the Bronx.
In 1989, Mr. Lopez was convicted of shooting a drug dealer in a crack house in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, with a shotgun. No weapon or forensic evidence was found at the scene, and prosecutors relied on the testimony of two witnesses.
One witness, a crack courier, testified that the gunman was a “tall, dark, black man,” about 6 feet 3 inches tall. Mr. Lopez was more than half a foot shorter and had light skin. When asked to look around the courtroom and identify the gunman, the witness said she did not see him, though Mr. Lopez was sitting at the defense table.
The other witness had been bingeing on crack cocaine just before the murder occurred. She later recanted her testimony, revealing that she had discussed a deal with the prosecution under which she would testify in exchange for a reduced sentence on a drug charge.
The conviction was overturned in 2013 by Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis in Federal District Court in Brooklyn. In his ruling, he said that the Brooklyn district attorney’s office had been “overzealous and deceitful,” that Mr. Lopez’s lawyers had been “indolent and ill prepared,” and that the ruling of the original judge was “incomprehensible.”
Mr. Lopez was born on Jan. 18, 1959, in Brooklyn. He and his wife married in 1993. She survives him, as do his mother, Lydia; a brother, Eugene; a daughter, Crystal; and three grandchildren.
Throughout his incarceration, Mr. Lopez maintained his innocence. In 2012 he contacted Jeffrey Deskovic, an advocate for the wrongfully imprisoned, and Mr. Deskovic’s foundation began investigating his case. (Mr. Deskovic had been exonerated after serving time for rape and murder.)
“It had serious problems, as many trials do,” Charles J. Hynes, the Brooklyn district attorney, told The New York Times in 2013. Mr. Hynes nevertheless filed a brief to overturn Judge Garaufis’s decision. The brief was withdrawn by his successor, Kenneth P. Thompson, who defeated Mr. Hynes in his bid for re-election.
“It feels great to be back on Earth,” Mr. Lopez said after his release. “I’m looking forward to restoring my life as best as I can.”
At his death, Mr. Lopez was preparing a lawsuit against the district attorney’s office.