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Carmine Giovinazzo Biography: A true case of fate intervening in the most unexpected of ways, the career of aspiring baseball star Carmine Giovinazzo seemed decidedly grim when a major back injury dashed any hopes of achieving his childhood dreams of running the bases as millions of fans screamed in excitement. If those
dreams weren't meant to come true, however, the fallen athlete would turn the negative into a positive by using his injury as a means of pushing himself to find his talent as an
actor and realizing his true calling before the camera. A native of Staten Island, NY, Giovinazzo spent much of his childhood
making short films as a hobby. The athlete-turned-actor was pounding the pavement soon after recovering from his career-altering
injury. With the support of his family and an impressive resume that included many short films from NYU and SUNY Purchase,
Giovinazzo was soon setting his sights on Los Angeles. The up-and-comer achieved an impressive feat by landing his very first
audition for a small role in the pilot of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and a feature debut in the 1996 drama No Way Home, proving without a doubt that he could captivate on the big screen as well. If many of his subsequent screen roles weren't exactly memorable, he did prove promising as the lead in the 1998
thriller Fallen Arches before returning to the diamond for Spider-Man director Sam Raimi's 1999 baseball drama For Love of the Game. A stab at television with the short-lived and regrettably titled Shasta McNasty
didn't further his career nearly as much as bit roles in such high-profile features as Black Hawk Down, though he did carry the 2001 crime drama The Learning Curve with suitable charm. In 2004 Giovinazzo's career was finally on the verge of breaking through with his role as forensic scientist
Danny Messer on the CBS CSI spin-off CSI: NY. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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