Christina Vidal

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Christina Vidal
Born
Christina Vidal

Whitestone, Queens, New York City, U.S.
Other namesChristina Vidal
OccupationActress, singer, producer
Years active1993–present
Spouse(s)Marcus Mitchell (2016-present)
Children2
RelativesLisa Vidal (sister)
Tanya Vidal (sister)

Christina Vidal Mitchell is an American actress, singer, and producer. She is best known for her roles in films such as Life with Mikey, Brink!, Freaky Friday, and See No Evil and for her role in Nickelodeon sitcom Taina, in which she played the title character (2001–2002), as Gina Perrello in Code Black (2015–2016), and as Detective Valeria Chavez in Training Day (2017).

Early life and education[]

Vidal was born and raised in Whitestone, an area in Queens, New York, the daughter of Manny Vidal, a tax consultant and businessman, and his wife Josie, a secretary, both of Puerto Rican ancestry.[1][2] She attended the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School. When she was 17 she joined a girl group called Gemstone (along with Jade Villalon and Crystal Grant). Vidal later moved to Orlando, Florida, to proceed with the filming of Taina. Her sisters Lisa and Tanya are also actors and have appeared on TV and in theatre; she also has a brother, Christian.[3]

Career[]

Acting[]

Vidal's acting career began when one of her teachers told her there was an audition for the movie Life with Mikey (1993), starring Michael J. Fox. She auditioned and got the part of "Angie Vega", becoming the first Puerto Rican child actress to play a lead in an American film.[4] Since then, Vidal has appeared in numerous films and television series. Her most notable role was Taina Maria Morales in the Nickelodeon show Taina. The sitcom was successful and ran for two seasons until increasing production and music-recording costs caused its cancellation in the summer of 2002.

The next year she played Maddie in the film Freaky Friday alongside Lindsay Lohan and starred in the short-lived ABC action TV series about police officers called 10-8: Officers on Duty until she suddenly left after two months on the show. Also in 2003 she guest-starred in Sabrina, the Teenage Witch as Paris Fate. In 2006 she did an untitled sitcom pilot with her sisters for ABC (which was executively produced by George Lopez). The show was not picked up, but later that year she starred in the film See No Evil and also had a brief stint on the hit sitcom Girlfriends. More recently she has made cameo appearances in the films I Think I Love My Wife, Mask of the Ninja, and the Internet comedy short "Love Automatically", written by Mylinda Royer and directed by Allison Haislip.[5] Most recently, Vidal played a supporting character in the film Magic Man, which was released in 2009.

Music[]

When Vidal was in the band Gemstone, she recorded songs with herself as well as bandmate Jade Villalon performing vocals. A few of these tracks would surface many years later on albums consisting of demos, rare tracks, and special songs of Villalon's music project, Sweetbox. In 2002, she was briefly signed to MCA Records and in that time she was supposed to release her first single "Tropical" and her solo debut album White in the summer of 2002, but never did. That same year she provided guest vocals on the remix of Will Smith's summer hit "Black Suits Comin' (Nod Ya Head)" from the Men in Black II soundtrack. She was a part of Lupe Fiasco's 1st & 15th Entertainment.[6] She also recorded a track for the work out cd called Byou from Sabrina Bryan of The Cheetah Girls. The song she recorded was "Anything Is Possible". She also sang the song "Take Me Away" in the film Freaky Friday.

Filmography[]

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1993 Life with Mikey Angie Vega
1995 Welcome to the Dollhouse Cynthia
2000 Details Maggie Short film
2003 Chasing Papi Festival Singer
Freaky Friday Maddie
2005 The Mosquito Tia
2006 See No Evil Christine
2007 I Think I Love My Wife Candy
2010 Magic Man Elena
TBA The Guilty Post-production
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1994 The Cosby Mysteries Ramona Suarez Episode: "Camouflage"
1995 The Commish Julianna Muldoon Episode: "Off Broadway: Parts 1 & 2"
1997 F/X: The Series Theresa Episode: "Bad Influence"
1997–98 Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher Sophia Del Bono Main Role (Season 2); 21 episodes
1998 Brink! Gabriella TV movie
1999 Providence Street Girl Episode: "Saint Syd"
Touched by an Angel Ilena Episode: "Hearts"
2001–02 Taina Taina Maria Morales Lead Role; 26 episodes
2003 Hotel Gisel TV movie
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch Fate Paris Episode: "Romance Looming"
2003–04 10-8: Officers on Duty Deputy Gabriela Lopez Main Role; 14 episodes
2004 Beck and Call TV short
Second Time Around Gabrielle Herrera Episode: "Secrets", "A Kiss Is Still a Kiss"
2005 Clubhouse Carmen Episode: "Between First and Home"
2006 Girlfriends Samantha Stephens Episode: "Bad Blood"
Episode: "Just Joan"
2007 ER Elena Vega Episode: "In a Different Light"
2008 Play or Be Played TV movie
Mask of the Ninja Mercedes TV movie
2009 Monk Winona Episode: "Mr. Monk Goes Camping"
2009–10 House Sandy Episodes: "Wilson", "Private Lives"
2010 The Deep End Rachel Esposito Episode: "Nothing Personal"
In Plain Sight Amber Whitman Episode: "Son of Mann"
Castle Jamie Ruiz Episode: "Almost Famous"
2011 Things We Do for Love Episode: "Best Friend"
Fairly Legal Sofia Peña Episode: "Coming Home"
2014 Stalker Christina Richards Episode: "Skin"
2015 Being Mary Jane Lilly Episode: "Reading the Signs"
The Player Mrs. Cruz Episode: "A House Is Not a Home"
Major Crimes Carmen Tamayo Episode: "Thick as Thieves"
2015–16 Code Black Gina Perrello Recurring role; 7 episodes
2016 Limitless Lucy Church 2 episodes
Blue Bloods ADA Marta Avila Blowback
2017 Training Day Det. Valeria Chavez Main role; 13 episodes
2018 Sneaky Pete Valerie The Reluctant Taxidermist
2019 Grand Hotel Det. Ayala 4 episodes
2020 United We Fall Jo Ryan Main role

Discography[]

Soundtracks[]

Awards and nominations[]

Year Group Award Result Film/Show
1994 Young Artist Award Best Leading Role in a Motion Picture Comedy – Youth Actress Won[7] Life with Mikey
Most Promising New Youth Actress (special award) Won[7]
2002 ALMA Award Outstanding Actress in a Television Series Nominated Taina

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ [1] Archived July 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Lisa Vidal Biography (1965–)". Filmreference.com. 1965-06-13. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  3. ^ [2] Archived June 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "May 2006 | An Interview with Christina Vidal". Blackfilm.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  5. ^ "Love Automatically (remix)". YouTube. 2009-07-29. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  6. ^ "1st & 15th | Listen and Stream Free Music, Albums, New Releases, Photos, Videos". Myspace.com. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b "15th Annual Awards". Youngartistawards.org. Retrieved 2014-06-04.

External links[]

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