Grab a friend and enjoy lunch with Laura Gomez, one of the stars of Netflix mega-hit Orange is the New Black in New York City!
Actress, voiceover artist, writer, and director Laura Gómez has been making a name for herself in the entertainment industry over the past decade. Gómez is best known for transforming herself into “Blanca Flores,” a cunning and disheveled inmate on the award-winning smash NETFLIX hit series Orange is the New Black. Some memorable moments for Blanca include managing to hide a cellphone within the prison wall of a restroom stall, and warding off other inmates by continually talking to herself and “El Diablo.” Season 4 of Orange is the New Black premiered on June 17, 2016.
On the film front, Gómez was seen in EXPOSED as “Eva De La Cruz” opposite Keanu Reeves, Ana DeArmas and Mira Sorvino. She recently finished shooting the film SAMBÁ, directed by award winning filmmakers Laura Amelia Guzmán and Israel Cardenas, where she stars as a boxing promoter.
On television, aside from OITNB Gómez recurred as “Selena Cruz,” on Law & Order SVU, a former prostitute working as a sex trafficker enforcer, and on the HBO Mini-Series Show Me A Hero (created by David Simon and directed by Paul Haggis) which tells the story of the Yonkers desegregation crisis of the 1980’s.
Gómez started her journey in her native country, Dominican Republic, studying advertising with a focus on television production. After growing up in Santo Domingo and working as an actress and journalist, Gómez moved to New York City at 21 years old to study acting. Within three years of being in the states, she had landed theatre and voiceover work. Today, Gómez is a member of Spanish Repertory Theater, where she has participated in critically acclaimed plays, like Doña Flor and her Two Husbands and The House of the Spirits, directed by José Zayas and written by Obie Award playwright, Caridad Svich. She is also an established voiceover actor, working as the Spanish announcer for the brand CoverGirl and has also lent her voice for audiobooks including, Of How the García Girls Lost Their Accent by Julia Alvarez and The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, by Junot Díaz. In 2011, Gómez was a recipient of the IX Screenwriting Developing Grant from the Carolina Foundation in Spain. An aspiring filmmaker, Gómez has studied film courses at the prestigious New York University and screenwriting at the Jacob Krueger Studio, and has starred in several short films including TO KILL A ROACH -winner of the NYU Fall 2012 Technisphere Award for Outstanding Achievement- and HALLELUJAH, both of which she also wrote, directed and produced. Most recently she directed and co-produced the short film THE IRON WAREHOUSE, written by Juilliard alumni, Hilary Bettis.