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Romeo Visca_peliplat

Romeo Visca

Director | Actor | Writer
Date of birth : No data
City of birth : No data

Romeo Visca, has been performing for local audiences in Romania, UK and US for the last seven years in Theater, Film and Television. He began his acting career at the age of 8, performing in a variety of school plays. In high-school he was an intern at the "G. Bacovia" National Theater of Bacau, Romania where he performed in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream", Tolstoi's "Anna Karenina", and Caragiale's "Mr. Goe". Later, he was cast in the hit TV Series "Secret Love" where he portrayed Vlad Dumitrescu (88 episodes) and co-presented a live TV Show, "Ms. Country-girl". He then moved to London to take the next steps in his acting career. At the start, he worked mostly in modeling, appearing in commercials for Citroen, Replay Blue Jeans, Gillette, and a campaign by UK Ministry of Defense- The Anti-Rape Campaign within the UK Army. His image appears in all UK Army camps and was featured on The Independent, The Sun, Daily Mirror, to name a few. Romeo Visca then booked some minor roles in "Spectre" and "Mission Impossible-Rogue Nation" while still working in Theater throughout London. After appearing in several independent film projects he decided to move to Los Angeles to further his studies of the craft and attain a Masters degree in acting. Since his arrival in LA he was cast in numerous stage productions ("Rabbit Hole" at Victory Theater, "The Nether" at ACME Theater, and "Angels Academy" at Berubian Theater), he then scored a main role in the feature film "Gulag Vorkuta" directed by Michael Kingsbury, had a minor role in "Female Fight Club" with Dolph Lundgren, was part of the cast in an Educational Theater Experience of "Original Elvis' Chapel No:2", starred in over 20 short- films for filmmakers all over the world; wrote, starred, co-directed, designed, and produced his first short-film "Bodies in Ruins," which was critically acclaimed in Hollywood and screened at Warner Brothers. Following this success, he then directed his first play, an adaptation of "NAN" by Catherine Tate.

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