Ashton Whitty and Asia Argento
Ashton Blaise Whitty is an American actress born in Berkeley on the 1st October 1996. She is an American actress who has appeared on screen in Choices (2010) as well as The Heart and Other Small Shapes (2004).
Asia Argento began her career as an actor at the age of nineteen in Rome. She is part of a family that is also a group of filmmakers. When she was nine and acting, she made her debut in the film of Sergio Citti, Sogni e Bisogni. In 1988, she played the lead role in Cristina Comencini's first feature film Zoo. Additionally, she was an integral part of Michele Soavi's acting cast for The Church. She played Nanni's daughter the following season in Red Wood Pigeon. It was her acting career that truly took off with Close Friends, written and directed Michele Placido. The film received an enthusiastic review in the Cannes International Film Festival. Daria Nicolodi is Argento's most loved actress, and she played a young anorexic woman looking for her father's murderer in Trauma. Asia was a part of Dario's Phantom of the Opera, the third movie she made with her dad. Other films included Trauma as well as The Stendhal Syndrome. In 1993, she co-starred as Arianna a disabled child in Carlo Verdone's Perdiamoci di vista. It was an intricate and demanding role in which she received the David di Donatello. In 1995 she worked together alongside Michel Piccoli to produce Peter Del Monte Compagna di viaggio in which she was awarded the David di Donatello. Asia began her directing career in 1994 and released two short films and an episode from the film De Generazione. In 1996 she made an documentary on her father and AbelAsia which was a documentary about the legendary film maker Abel Ferrara. In 1998, Asia directed AbelAsia, which won awards by the Rome Film Festival. Asia produced her debut feature in Scarlet Diva (1999), in which she was both the lead actress and also the creator of its screenplay. The film was released in May 2000 across Italy as well as the rest of the world. The film won an distinction in Brooklyn at the Williamsburg International Film Festival.






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