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Jude Herrera

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Jude Herrera
Herrera in 2024
Born
New Mexico, United States
NationalityAmerican
EducationAMDA, NYC
University of New Mexico
OccupationActress
Years active1995–present

Jude Herrera is an American actress. She began her career in theater and made her onscreen debut starring with Ann-Margret and Kris Kristofferson in the television movie, Blue Rodeo, for director Peter Werner.

Early life and education

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Herrera was born in central New Mexico to her mother, a kindergarten teacher and former Franciscan nun, and her maternal grandparents (grandmother née Salazar). She was raised in a tight-knit Roman Catholic family in central and northern New Mexico. One of her great grandfathers served as the first chief of police of Española, N.M., also helping nearby communities of Ohkay Owingeh and Santa Fe. Highly educated and well-respected, this grandfather would become a great influence on Herrera.[1]

Herrera began formal dance training at age six and was performing publicly at age seven. She was introduced to acting by her mid-school English teacher who also ran the drama club. By her senior year of high school, while performing in a run of Brighton Beach Memoirs at her school's new state of the art theater, Herrera decided to pursue acting as a career. She was working as an engineer intern for a U.S. D.O.E. lab at the time. Herrera graduated from a private performing arts conservatory in Manhattan and also enrolled at the University of New Mexico, majoring in religious studies and minoring in communication. While at UNM, she was inducted into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi.[2]

Career

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Herrera's onscreen debut was portraying a deaf youth in Blue Rodeo, a 1996 CBS Sunday Night Movie of the Week based on a novel of the same name by Jo-Ann Mapson.[3] She has since appeared in television shows such as ER, Felicity, and Walker, Texas Ranger, as well as in independent and studio films.

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
1997 The Postman Carrier
1997 Melting Pot Dolores
1998 East of Hope Street Alicia Montalvo
1998 Yellow Wooden Ring Greta short film
1998 Restons Groupés Desawenta
1998 Legend of Two-Path Ascopah docu-drama
1999 The Green Mile Bitterbuck's Daughter deleted scene[4]
2000 The Independent Carole/Blue Sky
2001 Tortilla Soup Eden
2001 The Doe Boy Geri
2002 The Flats Paige
2007 Tortilla Heaven Dinora
2010 Inhale Claudia

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1996 Blue Rodeo (TV Movie) Bonnie Tsotsie TV movie
1997 ER Pedes Nurse Episode: "Friendly Fire"
1998 Felicity (Guest-star role) Episode: "Drawing the Line: Part 1"
1999 Walker Texas Ranger Rachel Falcon Episode: "Team Cherokee Part I"
Episode: "Team Cherokee Part II"
1999 Air America (Guest-star role) Episode: "Engraved Danger"
2000 Camp P (Recurring role) TV pilot for MTV
2006 Wildfire Leanne Diaz Episode: "A Good Convict is Hard to Find"
2008 Living Hell (aka Organizm) Pfc. Una Fernandes TV movie

Stage

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  • The Barber of Seville (Operetta) by Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, as adapted by Sheila Biggs and Katherine Rosati - Role: Arlequina - National Theatre for the Performing Arts - National Tour, NY
  • End Town (1995) by Dante Ventresca - Role: Allegra - Directed by Thor Steingraber - Nailing The Kipper Presents Theatre Company - Hollywood Moguls Theatre, Los Angeles
  • Bellyfruit (1996) by Maria Bernhard, Janet Borrus, Susannah Blinkoff and Kristen Scheimer - Role: Araceli - Directed by Kerri Green - Los Angeles Theatre Center Main Stage

Awards and nominations

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Year Award Category Nominated work Result
1997 FAITA Awards Outstanding New Performance Won
1998 New Orleans Urban Film Festival Best Actor Award Won
2000 FAITA Awards Performance Award (Guest Star) Won
2001 American Indian Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Award Won
2008 ALMA Awards Outstanding Performance of a Lead Latino/a Cast in a Motion Picture Nominated (Shared)

References

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  1. ^ Herrera, Jude:Reynon (n.d.)
  2. ^ Herrera, Jude:Reynon (n.d.)
  3. ^ "Traveling With Jo-Ann Mapson: A 21st Century Western Writer". literarytraveler. 9 July 2007. Retrieved July 25, 2024
  4. ^ "The Green Mile 1999 Deleted Scenes - With Commentary by Director Frank Darabont". DailyMotion. 7 September 2015. Retrieved Nov 7, 2019
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