Birth Name: Amy Smart
Birthday: 25 March 1976
Birth Place: Topanga Canyon, California, USA
Height: 168cm (5' 6")
Weight: 55kg (120lbs)
Hair: Natural hair color is kind of a dark blonde)
Eyes: Blue
Claim to fame: as Julie Jules Harbor in Varsity Blues
(1999)
Nationality: American
Occupation: Actress
Amy Smart, talented & lovely actress, born March
25th, 1976 in Topanga Canyon, California, was a relatively
new arrival when she first gained notice for her supporting
roles in the 1999 hit teen films "Varsity Blues"
and "Outside Providence." With her blonde,
carefree California girl good looks, the Los Angeles
native got her start in TV-movies and made her feature
debut in Stephen Kay's "The Last Time I Committed
Suicide" screened at 1997's Sundance Film Festival.
She was briefly seen in Paul Verhoeven's big-budget
sci-fi actioner "Starship Troopers" and had
an impressive turn in the vastly different, quirkily
independent "How to Make the Cruelest Month."
In the latter she played Dot, the graceful golden girl
who seduces the one-time boyfriend of her sister, the
troubled protagonist Bell (Clea DuVall). The by-the-numbers
horror film "Campfire Tales" followed in 1998,
along with the topically chilling but clumsily executed
internet stalker thriller "Dee Snider's StrangeLand,"
written, produced and starring the titular Twisted Sister
frontman as a deranged torturer who meets his victims
in web chatrooms.
Amy would reach her widest audience with a co-starring
role opposite James Van Der Beek in Brian Robbins' surprise
box office hit "Varsity Blues." The actress
played Jules Harbor, a girl who longs for life beyond
her small town's high school football-obsessed culture
but who, as sister of the injured star quarterback (Paul
Walker) and girlfriend of his idealistic replacement
(Van Der Beek), is tied to it. With her darkened hair,
sad eyes and intelligent portrayal of the strong-willed
Jules, Smart reminded audiences of Van Der Beek's "Dawson's
Creek" co-star Katie Holmes. She would next be
featured as Shawn Hatosy's upper-class love interest
in Michael Corrente's poignant 1970s era comedy "Outside
Providence."