Frankie Muniz

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Frankie Muniz

Francisco "Frankie" Muniz IV, November 2007
Born Francisco James Muñiz IV
December 5, 1985 (1985-12-05) (age 22)
Wood-Ridge, New Jersey, USA
Years active 2000 ─ present

Francisco "Frankie" James Muniz IV (born December 5, 1985) is an American actor and now a racing driver. He was the star of the Fox Network television situation comedy, Malcolm in the Middle, as well as several films aimed at preteen and teen audiences, including Big Fat Liar, Agent Cody Banks, My Dog Skip and Stay Alive. By 2003, Muniz was considered "one of Hollywood's most bankable teens".[1] He was also the original voice of Chester McBadbat on the Nickelodeon animated television series The Fairly OddParents from 2001 until 2003, when he was replaced by Jason Marsden.

Currently he is no longer acting.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Muniz was born in Wood-Ridge, New Jersey[2], the son of Denise and Francisco Muniz III, a restaurant manager from Puerto Rico.[3] Muniz was first discovered at age eight at a talent show in the Raleigh, North Carolina living in Knightdale (shortly after the family moved from Wood-Ridge), where he was cast as Tiny Tim in a local production of A Christmas Carol. His parents divorced shortly after. Muniz subsequently moved to San Diego, California with his mother and sister. He appeared in commercials and made his film debut in the made-for-television movie, To Dance With Olivia (1997), starring Lou Gossett Jr. The same year, he appeared in the CBS Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation of What the Deaf Man Heard. A small role in the film Lost & Found (1999) led up to his breakthrough role as the title character on Malcolm in the Middle, which would make him a familiar face in millions of households.

[edit] Acting

Fox premiered Malcolm in the Middle on January 9, 2000, as a mid-season replacement, and the show was quickly swamped with accolades. The premiere episode was watched by 23 million people; and the second episode by 26 million.[citation needed]Muniz then won many awards for the series, including young star awards, young artist awards and kids' choice awards. Muniz anchored the show with his narration and central role in many of the series' plots, although he has said that he does not consider himself a comic actor and does not find himself funny.[4] He was nominated for Golden Globes in 2000 and 2001, the Emmy Awards in 2001,[5] and was honored with the Hollywood Reporter 'Young Star Award' for his work in the series.

Throughout his television career, Muniz made guest appearances on the shows Lizzie McGuire, Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, and MADtv. His first starring role in a feature film was as Willie Morris in the family period piece My Dog Skip (2000), released around the same time as the pilot for Malcolm In The Middle. He won a Young star award for his work on the movie. Muniz then contributed a voice to the animal cast of Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001). He had a moderate hit with the 2002 release Big Fat Liar, which teamed him with teen actress Amanda Bynes as a pair of students seeking revenge on a sleazy movie producer (Academy Award nominated Paul Giamatti). He was nominated for many awards but did not win any of them. He was also part of the ensemble for the gang film, Deuces Wild, released that same year. In 2003 he made a cameo appearance as Cher's under age boyfriend in Stuck on You. In 2003, Muniz appeared on the first episode of the MTV series Punk'd, hosted by Ashton Kutcher.[6] Kutcher tricked Muniz into thinking that his car had been stolen. What Muniz didn't know is that his car was being secretly driven around by Ashton Kutcher's field agent, BJ Novak. After the joke had escalated Muniz became upset and began spewing profanity at which point Kutcher told Muniz that he had been "punk'd."

Muniz subsequently played the title role in the film Agent Cody Banks, as well as its sequel, Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London. The first film opened in March 2003 and grossed $47 million; the sequel, which opened a year later, grossed $23 million.[7] Muniz trained in martial arts for the films, and performed most of his own stunts; he also commented that it was the point in his career where he should 'make the transition from child actor to an adult actor or a respectable actor'.[4]

Muniz had a cameo in the comedy Stuck on You and voiced a racing zebra, 'Stripes', in the 2005 film Racing Stripes. His latest film, the horror movie Stay Alive, opened on March 24, 2006. Malcolm in the Middle finished its run May 14, 2006. Muniz has expressed a desire to leave traditional Hollywood film roles behind, saying: 'Growing up has never scared me until last year. I started thinking about getting older, being an adult, and it scared me. Hopefully things will work out in my career. If they don't, then it was never meant to be'.[8] He also made a guest appearance on the Arrested Development episode "Mr. F" where Michael and his girlfriend Rita were taking a bus through Taramount Studios when it disrupted a filming of Malcolm in the Middle (although none of the footage was actually seen in Malcolm in the Middle) and after clearing the filming equipment to make way for the bus, Muniz sarcastically says, "It's more important to show how we film the show than actually film it." Later saying "* Beep* Taramount."

In April 2006, Muniz began filming My Sexiest Year, an independent film which will be shot in New York City and Miami, and which will star Oscar nominee Harvey Keitel as Muniz' father. Muniz' character will have a love scene in the film.[9] The same month, Muniz announced he was taking a break from acting to pursue a career in race car driving, with a full-time two year racing deal with Jensen Motorsport in the Formula BMW competition,[10] saying: 'Truthfully, I think it will be easier for me to leave for a while and come back to acting when I'm 23, 24 and be an adult and start fresh'.[11] In May 2006, despite his announcement to temporarily leave acting, Muniz signed on to star in the raunchy teen sex comedy Parental Guidance Suggested, which will be rated R.[12] The film was originally planned to be released in 2007 by Dimension Films.[13] In late 2007, he made a significant guest appearance in an episode of the popular and critically acclaimed CBS crime drama, Criminal Minds. The episode, entitled "True Night", featured Muniz playing a famous comic book writer who becomes a violent serial killer that preys on a group of local gang-bangers after they force him to watch while they rape and murder his pregnant fiancee. In December 2007 he made a cameo appearance in the movie Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story.

Muniz already finished the movies Parental Guidance Suggested and My Sexiest Year, and will be out on DVD in 2008. Muniz also made the voice of Manu in the movie The Legend of Secret Pass which will also be out in 2008 in DVD release.

[edit] Writing and producing

Muniz started writing in 2004, when he wrote the screenplay of the TV movie Granted. To date, that is his only screenplay. In 2004, he was the executive producer of the movie Granted. In 2006, he also executive produced the movie Choose Your Own Adventure: The Abominable Snowman. A year later (2007) he became the associated producer of the film Choose Connor.

[edit] Racing

Muniz's career in racing traces back to 2005, when he won the Toyota Pro/Celebrity Race as a celebrity participant. While investigating the possibility of joining a racing team as an owner, Muniz was granted a test in a car and instead signed a two year deal with Jensen Motorsport as a driver.

The American entered fourteen races during the 2006 Formula BMW USA series and failed to finish in a points scoring position. Despite this, Muniz was selected as one of the thirty–six drivers to compete in the annual Formula BMW World Final. The event, dominated by German Christian Vietoris, saw Muniz make a small impact, as he finished twenty–ninth.[14]

For 2007, Muniz moved up to the more competitive Champ Car Atlantic Series[15] where he competed in the entire season of 12 races. For the season, his best finish was ninth place and he officially earned a total of 41 points and $17,000 in prize money. Even though he languished in the bottom half of the pack by avoiding breakdowns and accidents, he was able to log 351 season laps. This was more race mileage than most other drivers except for the winners, indicating he has more endurance and consistency but less outright speed than other drivers of similar performance.[16]

In January of 2007, he placed second at the Sebring Winter National SCCA race.[17]


[edit] Personal life

Muniz has been home schooled since the sixth grade. Muniz was shy as a young kid, which led him to push back his plans to attend college, choosing to concentrate on his racing career.[18] Frankie is believed to be a Clippers fan as he was seen many times at their home games.

[edit] Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
2000–2006 Malcolm in the Middle Malcolm TV series
2000 Miracle in Lane 2 Justin Yoder Disney Channel Original Movie
My Dog Skip Willie Morris
2001 The Fairly Oddparents Chester McBadbat voice only
Deuces Wild Scooch
2002 Big Fat Liar Jason Shepherd
2003 Agent Cody Banks Cody Banks
Stuck on You Cher's Boyfriend
2004 Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London Cody Banks
2005 Racing Stripes Stripes voice only
2006 Choose Your Own Adventure: The Abominable Snowman Benjamin North voice only
Stay Alive Swink Sylvania
2007 Criminal Minds Johnnie True Night
My Sexiest Year Jake
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story Buddy Holly cameo
2008 Parental Guidance Suggested Chuck
The Legend Of Secret Pass Manu voice only

[edit] References

  1. ^ CBS News. Frankie Muniz: Hollywood Star. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.
  2. ^ Rohan, Virginia. "'MALCOLM' STAR STAYS GROUNDED", The Record (Bergen County), March 6, 2000. Accessed May 7, 2008. "On the phone from Los Angeles, at 7:30 a.m. his time, the 14-year-old actor from Wood-Ridge seems just as friendly and chipper as he did before his Fox comedy "Malcolm in the Middle" debuted -- and became an instant hit."
  3. ^ Frankie Muniz Biography (1985-) (2008). Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
  4. ^ a b About.com. Transitioning to adult roles with Jason Riner. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.
  5. ^ Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. 58th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.
  6. ^ IMDb - "Punk'd". "Punk'd" Episode #1.1 (2003) on IMDb. Retrieved on October 13, 2007.
  7. ^ The Numbers. Frankie Muniz - Box Office Data Movie Star. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.
  8. ^ The Decatur Daily. Malcolm grows up. Retrieved on March 29, 2006.
  9. ^ National Ledger. 19NBC's 'ER' To Bring Awareness to Genocide in Darfur. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.
  10. ^ ABC News. Malcolm's Muniz Shifts Into Pro Racing. Retrieved on April 13, 2006.
  11. ^ BBC News. TV's Malcolm takes career break. Retrieved on April 9, 2006.
  12. ^ Reuters. Muniz heads cast seeking sex "Guidance". Retrieved on June 15, 2006.
  13. ^ Dimension gains sexual 'Guidance'. United Press International. Retrieved on July 3, 2006.
  14. ^ Formula BMW USA (2008). Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
  15. ^ Frankie Muniz at Jensenmotorsport.com
  16. ^ http://www.champcaratlantic.com/CONTENT/PDF/Results/2007/20070812PDFR_0005.pdf
  17. ^ http://www.champcaratlantic.com/News/Article.asp?ID=2792 Champ Car Atlantic News
  18. ^ New York Daily News. Frankie can relax. Retrieved on March 23, 2006.

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