Emily Swallow

Swallow started her career with Broadway theatre, performing in numerous productions, including High Fidelity, King Lear, The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at the Guthrie Theater, Much Ado About Nothing for Shakespeare in the Park, and the world-premiere of off-Broadway productions Romantic Poetry and Measure for Pleasure. Swallow was the first actress to play a film role in The Lucky Ones, a 2007 military thriller. She starred alongside Mark Rylance at the Guthrie Theatre in Louis Jenkins' play Nice Fish,[citation required] as well as in Donald Margulies' play The Country House in Los Angeles' Geffen Playhouse. Also, she starred in Manhattan Theater Club in John Patrick Shanley's production of the musical Romantic Poetry, which was the first time it was performed in the world. [citation needed] She received the Falstaff Award for best Female Actress in the year 2010, for her performance as Kate as Kate in The Taming of the Shrew. The year 2012 was the year that Swallow and fellow singer/comedian Jac Huberman co-created a stage show called Jac N Swallow, which was performed at New York at the Laurie Beeckman Theater and Joe's Pub. [5] This show is built around the humor of mistakes as the pair navigate different life situations with varying degrees of normalcy. The show is in the process of developing a new series based on the characters. In 2013, she collaborated with Mark Rylance, poet Louis Jenkins as well as the Guthrie Theater on the premiere of Nice Fish. In the year 2016, Center Theatre Group cast her in Ayad Akhtar Disgraced. Swallow was first seen on television with Guiding Light. Her other roles are Southland. The Good Wife. NCIS. Flight of the Conchords. Medium. as a regular on the series The Doctor. Michelle Robidaux in TNT's medical drama, Monday Mornings[2[2]. She was a star in The Mentalist, playing FBI agent Kim Fischer. She was cast in the role of Amara "the Darkness" in 2015's eleventh Supernatural season. In 2019, she'll assume the role of Armorer, the leader of traditionalist Mandalorians as seen in Star Wars' The Mandalorian. The character's face is not featured in the show as the Mandalorians who are traditionalists do not take off their helmets in the view of other people. The face is more prominent in Season 3 because the emphasis upon the Mandalorian and its people is increasing. Emily Emily Emily

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