Melissa Mars

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Melissa Mars
Melissa Mars Deauville 2012.jpg
Melissa Mars at the 2012 Deauville American Film Festival
Born
Marseilles, France
NationalityFrench
Occupationactress, singer-songwriter, director, photographer
Websitewww.melissamars.net

Melissa Mars is an actress and French singer-songwriter. She appeared alongside John Travolta in From Paris With Love produced by Luc Besson (Nikita, Lucy). She won a best supporting actress award for her performance in The Cabining, and had her song "Beautiful" included in Coca-Cola's "52 Songs of Happiness" worldwide music compilation.

She released three solo albums with Universal Music, and featured on duets, including "1980" which reached number 5 in the charts. She was in Mozart the Rock Opera, which sold more than 1,500,000 tickets sold.[citation needed]

Biography[]

Mars started acting at the age of 13 in her hometown of Marseilles. At 16 she moved to Paris with her single mother and continued acting while pursuing a curriculum of math and science at the Lycée Louis-Le-Grand.

She made her film debut in the Laurent Heynemann feature, One Way Ticket. She became a singer-songwriter, partnering with Lilas Klif, her mother, to co-author lyrics. She released three solo albums with Polydor - Universal Music as well as several duets. Her single 1980 reached number 5 in the charts.

In 2009 she combined her vocal and acting talents for a leading role in the rock musical, Mozart The Rock Opera, directed by Olivier Dahan. She played the role of Aloysia for 346 shows in front of over 1,500,000 spectators, resulting in three NRJ Music Awards, a diamond record (over 700,000 sales), and a 3D movie filmed by FX guru Mark Weingartner (The Matrix, Inception).[citation needed]

She appeared in the Super Bowl spot for From Paris with Love alongside John Travolta. Five more American feature films followed in less than a year, in which she starred alongside the likes of Vivica A. Fox (Kill Bill), Tom Sizemore (Saving Private Ryan), David Proval (Mean Streets, The Sopranos), and Vinnie Jones (Snatch, X-Men).

In 2014, Coca-Cola included her bossa nova song Beautiful in its 52 Songs of Happiness compilation.[citation needed]

In November 2014, her role in The Cabining garnered a best supporting actress award at the FANtastic Horror Film Festival in San Diego, California.

Mars uses her fluency in Arabic, one of five languages she speaks besides French, English, Spanish, and German, for her series regular role as a spy on a TV show, Khamsa. She is also one of the leads in Curse of Mesopotamia, the first international feature film shot in Kurdistan, Iraq.[which?] The movie was interrupted by the events with ISIS in Iraq, but shooting resumed and wrapped six months later in Jordan.

She had her American TV debut on Lifetime in Deadly Delusions, a thriller alongside Haylie Duff (Napoleon Dynamite) and Teri Polo (Meet the Parents, The Fosters).

Her series of Children of China portraits was exhibited in Paris for a month during the International Children’s day, printed on canvas, which measured nearly six feet long.

Discography[]

Studio albums[]

  • 2003: Et alors! (Polydor, #104 France)
  • 2005: La Reine des abeilles (Polydor, two versions)
  • 2007: À la recherche de l'amour perdu (Polydor, #93 France)
  • 2009–2010: Mozart, l'opéra rock, cast musical studio album (Warner, #2 in France)

EPs[]

  • 2006: Remixes (including Apocalips)
  • 2011: Et je veux danser (single and remixes)
  • 2011: Just Only Wanna Dance (single and remixes)
  • 2014: Tweet N' Roll (single and remixes)
  • 2016: I Will Rise (single and remix)

Singles[]

Year Title Album
2000 "T'am – Tam" (single)
2000 "Qu'Elles Aillent Se Faire Voir" (single)
2003 "Papa M'Aime Pas" (#70 France) Et alors!
2003 "Et Alors!" Et alors!
2003 "Quelqu'un" Et alors!
2005 "And … I Hate You" La Reine des abeilles
2005 "Dans Ma Bulle Antisismique" La Reine des abeilles
2006 "Apocalips" La Reine des abeilles
2006 "1980" (duet with Pascal Obispo) (#3 Belgique, #5 France, #43 Suisse) Les Fleurs du bien
2007 "Love Machine" (#93 France) À la recherche de l'amour perdu
2007 "Horror Movies" À la recherche de l'amour perdu
2008 "Et Si Nous 2" ((feat. Pascal Obispo) À la recherche de l'amour perdu
2009 "Army of Love" À la recherche de l'amour perdu
2010 "Digital" feat Riot in Paris (single)
2011 "Et Je Veux Danser"
2011 "Just Only Wanna Dance" Just Only Wanna Dance E.P
2012 "Week-End Love", duet with Dogwalker (single)
2014 "Beautiful" (Coca-Cola Music) 52 Songs of Happiness Vol. 1
2014 "Tweet n' Roll"
2016 "I Will Rise" Curse of Mesopotamia soundtrack

Collaborations[]

  • 2002: Garonne, she performs 4 songs in Garonne TV miniseries soundtrack
  • 2005: Les Homéricains, duet with Lara Fabian, released on Lara Fabian 9
  • 2006: La Machine, duet with Pascal Obispo, released on Les Fleurs du Bien (#5 in France)
  • 2006: 1980, duet with Pascal Obispo, released on Les Fleurs du Bien (#5 in France)
  • 2006: Les Frôleuses, duet with Louis Bertignac
  • 2007: Eden Log, she performs on 2 tracks of the movie Eden Log's soundtrack
  • 2009: Mozart, l'opéra rock, musical studio album (#2 in France)
  • 2010: Digital, Duet with Riot in Paris
  • 2012: Week-end Love, duet with Dogwalker
  • 2012: Je reprends ma route, with 40 other French artists, they record the single for the children's organisation Les voix de l'enfant
  • 2012: Dead Flower, she composes the score for the short movie Glimpse, and performs the closing credits song.
  • 2014: Staying Alive, she records the closing credits song for the movie The Cabining
  • 2016: I Will Rise, she records the closing credits song for the movie Curse of Mesopotamia

Filmography[]

  • 1996: Titane, by
  • 1998: Locked-in Syndrome, by (short subject)
  • 1998: Le Rire du bourreau, by (short subject)
  • 1999: Virilité et autres sentiments modernes, by
  • 2000: P.J. on France 2, by (TV series)
  • 2001: Un aller simple, by
  • 2002: Garonne (TV series directed by Claude d'Anna, in which she also sings the title song)
  • 2010: From Paris with Love, by Pierre Morel
  • 2010: Mozart, l'opéra rock, filmed-in-3D version of the musical
  • 2013: Glimpse, by Daryl Ferrara (short movie)
  • 2013: My Cage, de Guillaume Campanacci (short movie)
  • 2014: The Cabining, by [1] (multi-awarded horror comedy)
  • 2015: Sorrow, by Millie Loredo, starring Vannessa Vasquez
  • 2015: Assassin's Game, by Anoop Rangi, Lionsgate Digital, starring Tom Sizemore, Vivica A. Fox
  • 2015: Lost Angelas, by Ana Maria Manso & William Wayne - in post-production
  • 2016: Six Ways To Die, by Nadeem Soumah, eOne, starring Vinnie Jones, Dominique Swain
  • 2016: Curse of Mesopotamia, by Lauand Omar (first international movie shot in Iraq)
  • 2016: Virtual Revolution, by Guy-Roger Duvert (multi-awarded science fiction movie)
  • 2018: Puzzled, by Michael Bergmann, original comedy series pilot
  • 2018: Deadly Delusions, by Nadeem Soumah, movie for Lifetime, starring Haylie Duff, Teri Polo...
  • 2018: The Letter Red, by Joston Theney, modern adaptation of Macbeth

Awards[]

  • Nomination: Best ensemble cast in « Virtual Revolution » @ First Glance Film Festival
  • Best supporting actress in « The Cabining » @ the Fantastic Horror Film Festival 2014, San Diego, CA
  • Best Ensemble Cast in « Mozart The Rock Opera » @ NMA 2010, FR

References[]

  1. ^ "The Cabining Opens in January". Dread Central. 13 November 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""