Izabella Alvarez
Izabella Alvarez is an actress currently starring in the Nickelodeon animated series ‘The Casagrandes,’ a spinoff of ‘The Loud House,’ which premiered in 2019. She voices the role of Ronalda ‘Ronnie Anne’ Santiago. Prior to ‘The Casagrandes,’ Izabella had notable roles on ‘Shameless’ and ‘Westworld.’ She played Sarah on ‘Shameless’ back in season 4. She played Lawrence’s Daughter on ‘Westworld.’ Izabella is a star on the rise in Hollywood, that’s for sure. On top of her Nickelodeon show, she is set to star in the Disney+ film ‘Magic Camp,’ which is expected to start streaming in 2020. She stars alongside Adam DeVine, Jeffrey Tambor, and Gillian Jacobs. Izabella has been acting since she was 6 years old. Her first recurring role was on ‘Shameless.’ Izabella is incredibly close with her family. She has even incorporated her grandmother’s cooking into ‘The Casagrandes.’ See more exclusive portraits of Izabella in our gallery now.
Izabella Alvarez On Nickelodeon Making History
“It feels amazing,” she told HL. “I grew up watching Nickelodeon, so I totally wish that we had a show just like this when I was growing up. But now that we have it, so many people are so excited.”
Izabella Alvarez On Why She Was Drawn To Ronnie Anne
“I just wanted to really pursue that role so that other girls will be able to see it and be like, ‘Hey, that’s me reflected on the screen.’ Because I grew up never having that show, so now that I can kind of play that character and tell different stories about our culture and to be proud of it, I think that’s really awesome,” she said.
Izabella Alvarez On Her Biggest Challenge With The Show
Izabella said that the biggest challenge of voice-over work was the “technicalities of just using a mic right. With Ronnie and skateboards, I have to do a lot of ‘Ohs and ahs.’ I was just not so in tune with being able to do that.”
Izabella Alvarez On ‘The Casagrandes’ Impact
“The fact that little girls get to see themselves, it’s awesome and inspiring,” Izabella said about the show. When it debuted, the show became the first cartoon about a multi-generational Mexican-American family.