Tony Plana Movies
The slightly gritty and wizened Cuban-American actor
Tony Plana boasts a resumé that is no less than extraordinary. Whatever the limitations of Hispanic typecasting,
Plana soared high above them from the time of his debut in the early '80s, seeking out roles in several of Hollywood's most respected and venerable films -- ethnically themed and otherwise. He first culled attention as Rudy in
Luis Valdez's stylized, theatrical period piece
Zoot Suit (1981), starring a then-unknown
Edward James Olmos.
Plana's subsequent efforts read like a best-of early-'80s cinema; he tackled
An Officer and a Gentleman (1982),
Love and Money (1982),
Valley Girl (1983), and
El Norte (1983), all within a few years of one another.
Plana was particularly effective as Fr. Manuel Morantes in
John Duigan's wondrous, overlooked biopic
Romero (1989, about archbishop and activist
Oscar Romero) and as Carlos Bringuier in
Oliver Stone's
JFK (1991). In the 2000s,
Plana unveiled a heightened interest in television, gracing the casts of such series as
Ally McBeal and
The Drew Carey Show as an occasional guest performer.
Plana is best known to younger viewers, however, for two small-screen portrayals: that of cutthroat terrorist Omar in
24, and -- on a very different note, Ignacio -- the widower dad of the title character -- on the comedy drama
Ugly Betty.
Educationally,
Plana trained in the drama programs at Loyola Marymount University and London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He made the leap from acting to directing with two projects:
A Million to Juan (1994, co-helmed with
Paul Rodriguez) and
The Princess and the Barrio Boy (2000). The latter constitutes
Plana's directorial debut. It tells of a young well-to-do Hispanic woman (
Marisol Nichols) who bucks convention by falling for a working-class boy, and simultaneously attempts to stand in the way of her father's marriage to a wicked lover. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi