Lauren and Markie
Lauren Ash Morgan is co-founder and artistic director of Speech of Fire, a brand new company in the field of theatre. Between 2014 and the year 2019, she was the artistic director for Seoul Shakespeare Company. In her role as the Artistic Director of SSC She was also SSC's music supervisor, composer and text teacher. While she was usually the leader of the group of actors, in her last year she was the first director (and lighting designer) for the company's King Lear. The Show Must Go Online's Richard II Prague Shakespeare Company's The Two Gentlemen of Verona and directed by Ben Crystal (Silvia/Ensemble), The Winter's Tale's Paulina/Time (The Merchant of Venice's Portia) Garage's Susan (The The Winter's tale's Paulina/Time) Much Awful about Nothing's Beatrice (Tamora), Titus Andronicus's Tamora (A Midsummer Night's Affair (Time) (Time) (Titus) (Ta (Time) (Ta (T) (Ta (time) (Ta (Time/Time/Ta (Time/Time/Time (Time/Time (The Time) (Time/Time/D) The Eurasia Theatre Company's Richard III at the National Theater of Korea (Queen Elizabeth) and the independent film Amiss. Markie Post......................Markie Post is a noted American actress known for her roles as the public defender Christine Sullivan in NBC's sitcom Night Court the bail bondswoman Terri Michaels in ABC's drama series The Fall Guy and Georgie Anne Lahti Hartman in CBS's sitcom Hearts Afire. Alongside acting, she's been involved in a variety of game-based series. She is the daughter of scientist Richard F. Post and his wife, poet Marylee Post was raised in Walnut Creek and Stanford alongside her siblings. She was a student at Las Lomas High School where she played cheerleading. Post briefly attended Pomona College and graduated from Lewis & Clark College in Oregon. Post had previously been married she got married to Stephen Knox. They have two daughters together with writer/actress Michael A. Ross, whom she was married to in 1982. Post's performance as an mother, wife and actress is a wonderful example for Hollywood.
Comments
Post a Comment