Julieta Randall was born in CDMX to a Hollywood-born American father and a Mexican/Spanish mother. In her early teens, her love for music and horror movies was solidified when she picked up the mic (and drums) and joined the LA-based cinematic metal trio Rusty Eye.
After graduating from a Recording Engineering program granted by Musicians Institute, she helped produce 5 studio and 2 live albums. Notable past collaborations in "Possessor" included the great Claudio Simonetti of Goblin fame in songs such as "Wings of a Demon" and "Mondo Cane." Julieta worked as a sound engineer in several Sunset Strip venues, and her day job consisted of being a legal assistant at a boutique entertainment law firm in Century City, learning a thing or two about film production.
On the side, she worked alongside film producer Fabrice Lambot in the film market business with his then-company, Metaluna Productions. As of late, she holds an M.S. in Integrated Marketing and works as a Creative Project Manager for known Bay Area tech companies. She has taken film studies lessons and acting at West LA College as well as Improv training at Curious Comedy Portland.
Miscellaneous past work includes: As a vocalist, she was approached by Music Junkies to participate in the Insidious Chapter 2 and 3 trailer music with songs as "Llorona Insidiosa," as VO artist for Epson Latin America, and Douglas Buck's film trailer "Broken Imago." She also did background acting on "Sweets,' a short included in "The Theatre Bizarre," a compendium of Grand Guignol-inspired shorts (among Tom Savini, Douglas Buck, and Karim Hussain). As musician for hire, she produced/composed with Rusty Eye the "Nextrip" theme song for Metro Los angeles and "Hey Santa" for The Slay Belles, a film by SpookyDan Walker. In the music department, she worked as an ADR sound engineer for "The River Bride," an award-winning short comedy released in 2015.
Julieta has penned several shorts, a pilot, and her first long feature, for which she is starting to look for funding and support. New exciting creative projects and film music creations are in the works, including her role as producer/scoring musician on "The Deb": an intense psychological horror short film by Iranian auteur Soheil Afifeh influenced by the Italian greats Fulci, D'Amato, Bava, and Argento.