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Ele Keats
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Ele Keats : ウィキペディア英語版
Ele Keats

Ele Keats (born August 24, 1973) is an American television and film actress. Keats's most notable roles were in the Disney musical drama film ''Newsies'', Garry Marshall's ''Frankie and Johnny'', the biographical survival drama ''Alive'' and the horror film ''Insidious: Chapter 3''. She has also appeared in more than one hundred national TV commercials.
==Acting career==
Born in Paris, France, to copywriter Sacha Georgescu and Ford model Jan McGuire, Keats was raised in New York City, Europe and Los Angeles. She began her professional career as a young model, being featured in publications such as ''American Baby'', ''Ladies' Home Journal'' & ''Teen Magazine''.
After moving to Los Angeles she launched her acting career at fifteen, being featured in a Michael Jackson Pepsi Commercial.
Quickly establishing herself as a familiar face on television, Keats has appeared in more than one hundred TV commercials, including the 1990 Levi's jeans beach ad.
Building on her newfound success, small television roles quickly followed, including the pilot for ''The Outsiders'', produced by Francis Ford Coppola and episodes of the CBS sitcom ''Dear John'' starring Judd Hirsch.
When she was still in her teens, Keats landed a regular role on Fox's daily soap opera ''Tribes'' as Anny, a pregnant teen girl. Small big screen-appearances followed in ''The Rocketeer'' and Mike Figgis' ''Liebestraum''.
A rapid succession of bigger roles followed in films such as ''There Goes My Baby'' (filmed in 1990 but released in 1994 due to Orion Pictures' bankruptcy), Garry Marshall's ''Frankie and Johnny'' (opposite Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer), the Disney musical ''Newsies'' (as Sarah Jacobs, Christian Bale's love interest) and Frank Marshall's acclaimed drama ''Alive''.
During the 1990s, Keats also landed leading and supporting role on television and independent projects such as ''Lipstick Camera'', the L.A.-based comedy ''Cityscrapes: Los Angeles'', Disney Channel's ''White Wolves II: Legend of the Wild'', Frank LaLoggia's thriller ''Mother'' (opposite Diane Ladd and Olympia Dukakis) and the Fox sci-fi pilot ''White Dwarf'', again produced by Francis Ford Coppola. She also appeared in numerous popular TV series, including ''Diagnosis: Murder'', ''Class of '96'', ''Touched by an Angel'' and MTV's ''Undressed''.
With several of her films debuting at the Venice Film Festival and the Sundance Film Festival, Keats has moved her acting career forward during the 2000s, with roles in Steven Soderbergh's ''Eros'' (opposite Robert Downey Jr.), ''March'' and independent filmmaker Heidi Van Leer's comedies ''Monday'' and ''American Decaf''.
On television, she guest-starred in renowned series such as ''CSI: Crime Scene Investigation'', ''CSI: NY'', ''Cold Case'' and ''Greek'' and has continued to appear in numerous national TV commercials.
Her most recent works include ''Snowflake'', a critically acclaimed short film shot in New York City opposite Tracy Middendorf (for which she was awarded as "Best Leading Actress" at the ''Accolade Competition'' 2014 and the ''International Independent Film Awards'' 2015) and the long-awaited horror film ''Insidious: Chapter 3''.

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