Name : Linda Cardellini
Birth Name : Linda E. Cardellini
Profession : Actress
Date of Birth : June 25, 1975
Place of Birth : Redwood City, California, USA
Height : 5' 3"
Claim to fame : Played Lindsay on NBC's show Freaks and Geeks (1999-2000); cast
as Velma in the live-action version of Scooby-Doo (2001).
Linda Cardellini - Detailed Biography
Fresh-faced Linda Cardellini racked up acting credits with parts in film and
television before landing a breakthrough role as an honor student in the midst
of an identity crisis on NBC's acclaimed high school drama "Freaks and Geeks"
(1999-2000) and while the much admired show was short-lived, she parlayed the
critical accolades into a thriving career in film and television. The attractive
and talented actress came across as strong-willed, smart and sassy on screen,
separating her from the sea of homogenized young adult performers inundating
film and television in the late 1990s.
Cardellini made her series regular debut on the ABC Saturday morning live-action
children's series "Bone Chillers" during the 1996-1997 season, and was
additionally featured in 1997 episodes of "Clueless" (UPN), "Step by Step"
(CBS), "Pacific Palisades" and "3rd Rock From the Sun" (both NBC). She hit the
big screen for the first time with a supporting role in the 1997 comedy "Good
Burger" and could next be seen in the college campus dark comedy "Dead Man On
Campus", playing the silent girlfriend of a high-strung and violent student
(future "Freaks and Geeks" co-star Jason Segel), whose roommates use his often
vacant room to house a series of troubled undergraduates in the hopes of landing
the 4.0 GPA offered to the suitemates of a suicidal student.
As one of the victims of masochistic internet predator Captain Howdy, Cardellini
was featured in the thriller "Dee Snider's Strangeland" (1998) and was a
prominent and striking figure on the theatrical poster and video cover, making
her face (albeit with sewn together lips) more familiar to the moviegoing
public. More TV work followed, including recurring parts on two series during
the 1998-99 season: ABC's "Boy Meets World", as the girl who could inadvertently
break up uber-couple Cory (Ben Savage) and Topanga (Danielle Fishel); and as a
co-worker of one of the "Guys Like Us" (UPN). She took a supporting turn in the
latter network's TV-movie drama "Dying to Live", portraying the spunky sidekick
of a deceased girl who is exacting justice on her attacker through the help of
an angel, before turning in a strong performance in AMC's miniseries "The Lot"
(1999), as June, a young starlet in this fictionalized look at small time
Hollywood in 1937.
Next up was a regular role on "Freaks and Geeks", where Cardellini served as the
bridge between the two titular high school outcast factions as new social
dropout (and aspiring 'freak') Lindsay Weir, the academically gifted sister of
awkward freshman (and 'geek') Sam Weir (John Daley). Looking to belong somewhere
and unsatisfied with her honor student lifestyle, Lindsay takes a walk on the
freak side, making friends with intense drummer Bill (Jason Segel) and
nihilistic rebel Daniel (James Franco). The series, noted for its realistic
portrayal of high school circa 1980, received a great deal of advance buzz, and
Cardellini's sympathetic spot on portrayal of a teenager searching for a place
to fit in garnered critical praise and raised her profile considerably. She also
gained considerable exposure and popularity with her role as Velma in 2002's
live-action adaptation of "Scooby-Doo" where Cardellini played alongside teen
heavyweights Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr. and Matthew Lillard (the
cast returned for the 2004 sequel).
As a result of her rising star, she was cast on the venerable NBC medical drama
"ER" in 2003 season, playing nurse and free-spirited single mom Simon Taggart,
part of the series' fresh, revitalizing wave of female characters. On the big
screen, Cardellini had a supporting role in the oddball "Jiminy Glick in
Lalawood" (2005) starring Martin Short as his chubby, doltish entertainment
reporter persona, and she was very effective as a small town cocktail waitress
who has a heartbreaking romance with the closeted gay ranch hand Ennis (Heath
Ledger) in Ang Lee's sensitive drama "Brokeback Mountain" (2005).