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| ==Lebenslauf== | | ==Lebenslauf== |
| Lou Diamond Phillips (born February 17, 1962), born Lou Diamond Upchurch, is a Golden Globe Award- and Tony Award-nominated American film, television, and stage actor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Ritchie Valens in the 1987 biopic hit La Bamba. However, he earned a supporting actor Golden Globe Award nomination for his role in Stand and Deliver and a Tony Award nomination for his role in The King and I. He has recently become notable for finishing in the top 3% of the field in the 2009 World Series of Poker World Championships No Limit Texas hold 'em main event.
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| == Early life ==
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| Phillips was born as Lou Diamond Upchurch at the Subic Bay Naval Station in Zambales, Philippines, the son of Lucita and Gerald Upchurch, naval officer.[1] His father was an American of Scottish, Hawaiian, and Cherokee descent and his mother was a Filipina of Spanish, Chinese, and Japanese descent.[2] Phillips was named after Marine legend Lou Diamond and adopted the surname "Phillips" from his stepfather.
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| He was raised in Texas where he attended Flour Bluff High School in Corpus Christi. He graduated from the University of Texas at Arlington with a BFA in Drama.
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| == Career ==
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| The first low-budget film he starred in was called Trespasses. Phillips' big break came with the starring role in 1987's La Bamba as early rocker Ritchie Valens. Though the role garnered him praise from critics, he has since found it difficult to find another leading role in a big-budget Hollywood film. In 1988, he co-starred along Edward James Olmos in the inner-city high school drama, Stand and Deliver in a role for which he was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture. He plays Angel Guzman, a wannabe cholo gangster who is inspired by his math teacher, Jaime Escalante, to challenge himself at calculus; and along the road, creates a friendship with his teacher. Stand and Deliver was actually filmed before La Bamba, but was released a year later. In 1988 and 1990, Phillips co-starred with Emilio Estevez and Kiefer Sutherland in the cowboy movies Young Guns and Young Guns II, in which he plays Chaves.
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| In 1996, Phillips made his Broadway debut as the King in Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II's The King and I. Phillips won a Theatre World Award and was nominated for both a Tony Award and a Drama Desk Award for his performance.
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| In 1998 he starred as Cisco, the counterpart of the main character Melvin Smiley (played by Mark Wahlberg, launching his career) in the comedy-action movie The Big Hit.
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| On September 11, 2007, Phillips joined the touring troup for Lerner and Loewe's Camelot in the role of King Arthur. He also played a role in the first season of the TV series 24 as secret government agent Mark DeSalvo, opposite former Young Guns star Kiefer Sutherland (who played the lead role, Jack Bauer).
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| Phillips plays the recurring role of FBI agent Ian Edgerton in the television series Numb3rs. Edgerton is an FBI tracker and sniper who works as a sniper instructor at Quantico FBI Academy when he is not working a case in the field.
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| Phillips won the second season of the NBC reality series I'm a Celebrity…Get Me out of Here! over pro-wrestler Torrie Wilson, and he has also been cast in the upcoming 2009 television series Stargate Universe playing the character Colonel Telford. At this time, it is not known if he will be a permanent cast member, recurring, or appear in 1 or 2 episodes.
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| In June 2009 Phillips started writing his autobiography titled "A Diamond Phillips in the Rough: The Life and Times of Lou Diamond Phillips." The book is slated for an early 2010 release and will be co-written with veteran celebrity biographer Michael Lackner and published by Hyperion Books.
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| Phillips has been a regular poker player since college. In May 2009, Phillips placed 31st in the 403 entrant 2009 California State Poker Championship Limit Texas hold 'em. He placed in the money at the $10,000 July 2009 World Series of Poker World Championship No Limit main event.[9] On July 12, he was eliminated as the original field of 6,494 was trimmed from 407 to 185. He entered the day in 114th place among the 407 and was eliminated on the final hand of the day finishing in 186th place and earning $36,626.
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| == Personal life ==
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| During the making of Trespasses, he met Julie Cypher, an assistant director who would become his wife on September 17, 1987. They later divorced on August 5, 1990; Cypher left him to start a relationship with rocker Melissa Etheridge. He met Jennifer Tilly, to whom he was briefly engaged, although the two never married. He later married model Kelly Phillips; they had three daughters: Grace Moorea and Isabella Patricia (twins born on October 5, 1997) and Lili Jordan (b. September 26, 1999). They separated in 2004 and their divorce was finalized in July 2007. He married Yvonne Marie Boismier less than a month later; their daughter, Indigo Sanara, was born in October 2007.
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| Phillips plays on the World Poker Tour in the Hollywood Home games. He plays for the Sierra Canyon H.S. & Santa Suzanna Montessori charity.[citation needed] Phillips took his poker game to the next level in 2009 when he entered the World Series of Poker $10,000 Main Event and was one of the survivors out of more than 6,000 players to make it to the money.
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| On August 11, 2006, he was arrested for alleged domestic violence at his Los Angeles home following a dispute with his future wife, makeup artist Yvonne Boismier. In December 2006, he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor count of domestic battery, and was sentenced to three years' probation. He also was ordered to undergo one year of domestic violence counseling and to serve 200 hours of community service.
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| ==Rolle== | | ==Rolle== |