Kelly Marie Tran
Kelly Marie Tran was born in San Diego, California, United States on January 17th, 1989 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 35, Kelly Marie Tran biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 35 years old, Kelly Marie Tran has this physical status:
Tr?n Loan (born January 17, 1989), also known as Kelly Marie Tran, is an American actress.
She has appeared in short films and television episodes, but her role as Rose Tico in the 2017 film Star Wars: The Last Jedi drew her attention.
Early life
Kelly Marie Tran was born in San Diego, California, on January 17, 1989. Her parents, who immigrated from Vietnam after the Vietnam War, fled the country. Her father was homeless as a child and grew up on Vietnam's streets. Her father worked at Burger King to help the family, and her mother worked at a funeral home after moving to the United States.
Tran attended Westview High School in San Diego and worked at a yogurt store to earn money for head shots. Tran obtained a B.A. at UCLA. In communications, we're in touch.
Personal life
Tran became the object of racial and sexist abuses on the internet, including racial and height. On Twitter, she was the object of racial trolling; in one example, internet personality Paul Ray Ramsey mocked her size. Rose Tico's Wookieepedia, an online encyclopedia about the Star Wars universe, was edited by internet trolls to include racist and vulgar words, which attracted national media notice. The domain's administrator, Fandom, has taken down the offensive edits, secured the website, and publicly condemned the vandalism.
Tran deleted all of her Instagram messages in June 2018 and replaced the account name with "Afraid, but doing it anyway." Following the bullying, she also tried therapy. Many actors and crew members of The Last Jedi also condemned the attacks and spoke out in favour of Tran, including writer-director Rian Johnson and actor John Boyega, Domhnall Gleeson, and Mark Hamill, who posted a snapshot of himself with Tran and wrote the caption, "What's not to love?" "GetALifeNerds" is a popular hashtag. Johnson referred to the attackers as "manbabies" and that they represent a "healthy lot" rather than the "vast majority" of Star Wars fans. Other celebrities, including Stephen Colbert, Josh Gad, Kumail Nanjiani, Gabrielle Union, Elijah Wood, and Edgar Wright, expressed love for Tran. More than 20,000 followers responded to Tran's message of support for the manbabies on Twitter in less than a day. She was also on hand at the 2018 San Diego Comic-Con in cosplay attire as her Star Wars character Rose Tico or in "Rose for Hope" T-shirts, where fans were dressed in cosplay attire as her Star Wars character Rose Tico. The event was broadcast on social media using the hashtags #ForceOutHate and #RallyForRose.
Tran penned an article for The New York Times in August 2018 titled "Kelly Marie Tran: I Won't Be Marginalized by Online Harassment." In stories and real life, she reflected on how the attacks made her self-conscious, writing that the assaults reinforced the ones she had long encountered as a Vietnamese-American and reinforced a myth that Asians should be marginalized and treated only as minor characters. Tran continued to believe the debating of her, saying that they had brought her "down a spiral of self-hate, into the darkest recesses of my mind, places where I tore myself apart, where I put their words above my own self-worth." "You might remember me as Kelly," she said. I am the first woman of color to play a leading role in a Star Wars movie. I am the first Asian woman to be featured on the front page of Vanity Fair. Loan is my real name. And I'm just getting off; I'm just getting off. Tran later said that the essay was difficult to write, but that it was also "probably one of [her] career's best moments" so far.
Career
She began with mainly collegeHumor videos and small TV appearances. Tran recruited a commercial agent in 2011, who arranged for Tran to attend improv classes at the Upright Citizens Brigade. Tran is a member of the all-female, Asian-American improv group Number One Son at The Second City.
In 2013, she appeared in the web series Ladies Like Us. Tran was working as an assistant at a creative recruiting company in Century City in 2015.
Tran was cast as Rose Tico in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, 2015, in 2015. Rose Tico is a rebel mechanic who joins Finn after her oldest sister's death, Paige Tico (Veronica Ngo), a Resistance gunner trained by Resistance commander Poe Dameron, is killed. When she arrived in England in early 2016, she was expected to keep her identity private, so she told her family that she was making a Canadian independent film. Tran was the first Asian-American woman to play a major role in a Star Wars film. She became the first woman of Asian descent to appear on the front of Vanity Fair in 2017 as the first woman of Asian descent to be on the cover of the summer 2017 issue with actress John Boyega (who played Finn) and Oscar Isaac (who played X-wing fighter pilot Poe Dameron).
In Radiotopia's suspense thriller podcast Passenger List, Tran plays Kaitlin Le. She appeared on Facebook Watch's series Sorry for Your Loss.
Tran portrayed Raya in the Walt Disney Animation Studios' Raya and the Last Dragon, replacing Cassie Steele. Tran was supposed to appear Val Little in the Disney+ series Monsters at Work, but Mindy Kaling replaced him. Dawn has also been cast in the film The Croods: A New Age, replacing Kat Dennings.
Tran is a producer on Jeremy Workman's 2021 film Lily Topples the World, which follows 21-year-old domino toppling artist Lily Hevesh. The documentary premiered at the 2021 South by Southwest Film Festival, where it received the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary.
Tran is also a producer of Summertime, the spoken-word poetry ensemble film starring Raya and Carlos López Estrada, marking her second collaboration with Raya and the Last Dragon director Carlos López Estrada.
Tran will appear in The Young Wife, T.K. Clemons' second feature film, and in Me, Myself & The Void, Tran will appear. Amanda Nguyen, a civil rights lawyer and her close friend, Amanda Nguyen, is also starring in a biopic about a civil rights activist and her close friend Amanda Naughten.