Bernadette Balagtas is an actress, known for Red Dawn (2012), As Good as It Gets (1997) and The Debut (2000).
Born: |
Interpreter
Herself – Guest
Bernadette Balagtas is an actress, known for Red Dawn (2012), As Good as It Gets (1997) and The Debut (2000).
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Joy Bisco | |
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Born | Jocelyn Bisco (1975-10-15) October 15, 1975 San Diego, California, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1995–present |
Spouse(s) | Phillip Jeanmarie |
Jocelyn “Joy” Bisco (born October 15, 1975) is a Filipino American actress.
She graduated from University City High School in San Diego, California. Her movie credits include The Debut and Not Another Teen Movie.
Madison Riley | |
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Born | Madison Riley Aplanalp (1990-03-16) March 16, 1990 |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 2006–present |
Madison Riley Aplanalp (born March 16, 1990), better known as Madison Riley, is an American actress.
Year | Title | Role |
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2006 | Smallville | Cousin |
2006 | Bratz: Passion 4 Fashion – Diamondz | Trendy Girl (voice) |
2007 | Bratz | Trendy Girl |
2008 | ‘Til Death | Shoshanna |
Zoey 101 | Gretchen | |
2009 | Without a Paddle: Nature’s Calling | Earthchild/Heather |
Fired Up | Lily | |
Miss March | Socialite | |
Hatching Pete | Cammie Poole | |
The Prankster | Tiffany Fowler | |
Jonas | Anya/Kimi | |
2010 | Grown Ups | Jasmine Hillard |
Pair of Kings | Amazonia | |
2011 | Prom | Kristen |
2012 | Fred 3: Camp Fred | Oksana |
Super Zeroes | Roxanna | |
Besties | Ashley | |
Two and a Half Men | Britte | |
2014 | White Collar | Genevieve |
2015 | Elementary | Courtney Stever |
Kristin Richardson was born on August 4, 1970 in Shawnee Mission, Kansas, USA as Kristin Kay Willits. She is known for her work on Jarhead (2005), Rock Star (2001) and Shut Up and Kiss Me! (2004). She has been married to Kevin Scott Richardson since June 17, 2000. They have two children.
Born: |
Salli Richardson | |
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![]() Richardson in 2012
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Born | Salli Elise Richardson (1967-11-23) November 23, 1967 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Other names | Salli Richardson-Whitfield |
Education | University of Chicago Laboratory Schools |
Occupation | Actress, director |
Years active | 1991–present |
Spouse(s) |
Dondre Whitfield (m. 2002)
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Children | 2 |
Website | Official website |
Salli Elise Richardson (born November 23, 1967) is an American television and film actress and director. Richardson is known for her role as Angela on the 1994 hit comedy/action film A Low Down Dirty Shame and for her role as Dr. Allison Blake on the Syfy comedy-drama series Eureka (2006–2012).
She is also known for her voice acting as Elisa Maza on the Disney animated series Gargoyles (1994–1996),[1] and as Viveca Foster on the CBS series Family Law (1999-2002). Richardson also has appeared in a number of films such as A Low Down Dirty Shame (1994), The Great White Hype (1996), Antwone Fisher (2002), Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid (2004) and I Am Legend (2007). She had leading roles in the independent films Pastor Brown (2009), Black Dynamite (2009) and I Will Follow (2010).
Richardson-Whitfield was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of an African American–Native American mother and a white father, of Italian and English descent.[2][3] She has three brothers: Josh Richardson, Chad Richardson, and Nalin. Richardson played tennis in high school, and launched her acting career in the Kuumba Workshop theater there.[4] She graduated from the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools in 1985.
Richardson began her acting career in the theater before roles in television and film.[4] In film, she played small roles in Prelude to a Kiss, Mo’ Money, Posse, and later had major roles in Sioux City and A Low Down Dirty Shame. From 1994 to 1996 she voiced the character Elisa Maza on the animated series Gargoyles.[1] She had many guest-starring roles in numerous television shows, such as Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, New York Undercover, The Pretender, Stargate SG-1, NYPD Blue, House, Bones, Criminal Minds, NCIS and Castle.
Richardson starred opposite Dixie Carter and Kathleen Quinlan in the CBS legal drama series, Family Law, from 1999 to 2002. She had recurring roles as Nancy Adams on Rude Awakening, and as Laura on CSI: Miami. She starred opposite Denzel Washington in the 2002 drama film Antwone Fisher. She also appeared in the 2004 horror film Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid and starred opposite Will Smith in 2007’s post-apocalyptic film I Am Legend. She later had a leading role in the independent dramas Pastor Brown (2009) and I Will Follow (2010). She also starred in The Sin Seer with Isaiah Washington, set for 2015 release.[5]
From 2006 to 2012, Richardson starred as Department of Defense agent (and later head of Global Dynamics) Allison Blake in the Syfy comedy-drama series Eureka. Her second pregnancy was written into the storyline of the series.[4] After the series’ cancellation, she was cast as the lead in the Lifetime drama pilot The Secret Lives of Wives.[6] In 2014, Richardson was cast in a recurring role on Lifetime’s The Lottery as the first lady of the United States,[7] but she lost it to Shelley Conn;[8] She also has a role on BET‘s Being Mary Jane as an old friend of the lead character.[9][10] In 2015, Richardson was cast in the ABC Family series, Stitchers.[11] In August–September 2016, she made appearances as one of the co-hosts of the Hollywood Today Live daily show seating next to Ross Mathews.
Richardson has also worked as a director of episodic television. Following her directorial debut on two episodes of Ava DuVernay‘s original drama series for OWN, Queen Sugar (on which her husband Dondre Whitfield appears as a series regular),[12] in 2016, Richardson has also directed an episode of the historical action-drama Underground for WGN America.[13] In 2017, she directed two episodes of BET drama Rebel, and Shonda Rhimes‘ Scandal. In 2018, she also directed the 16th episode of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.‘s season 5 entitled “Inside voices”.[14]
On September 8, 2002, she married long-time boyfriend and fellow actor Dondre Whitfield. She and Whitfield have one daughter, Parker Richardson-Whitfield, and one son, Dondre Terrell Whitfield Jr. (born January 24, 2009).[15] Whitfield has appeared along with her husband Dondre Whitfield in a late night infomercial as part of an advertising campaign to promote the Time Life Zestify Midnight Soul collection.[16]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1991 | Up Against the Wall | Denise | |
1992 | Prelude to a Kiss | Bridesmaid | |
1992 | Mo’ Money | Pretty Customer | |
1992 | How U Like Me Now | Valerie | |
1993 | Posse | Lana | |
1994 | I Spy Returns | Nicole Scott | Television film |
1994 | Sioux City | Jolene Buckley | |
1994 | A Low Down Dirty Shame | Angela | |
1994 | Lily in Winter | Ada Covington | Television film |
1995 | Once Upon a Time…When We Were Colored | Miss Alice | |
1996 | Soul of the Game | Lahoma | |
1996 | The Great White Hype | Bambi | |
1997 | True Women | Martha | Television film |
1998 | Butter | Blusette Ford | |
1999 | Lillie | Lillie | |
2002 | Book of Love: The Definitive Reason Why Men Are Dogs | Karen | |
2002 | Antwone Fisher | Berta Davenport | |
2002 | Baby of the Family | Nelli McPherson | |
2003 | Biker Boyz | Half & Half | |
2004 | Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid | Gail Stern | |
2007 | I Am Legend | Zoe Neville | |
2009 | Black Dynamite | Gloria | |
2009 | Pastor Brown | Jessica “Jesse” Brown | Nominated—Black Reel Award for Best Actress |
2010 | I Will Follow | Maye | |
2012 | We the Party | Principal Reynolds | |
2013 | Teachers | Christine | Television film |
2015 | Playin’ for Love | Talisa McCoy | |
2015 | The Sin Seer | Nia | Post-production |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1992 | Silk Stalkings | Shelley | Episode: “Wild Card” |
1993 | Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | Fenna / Nidell | Episode: “Second Sight” |
1994 | Roc | Diane Hubbard | Episode: “The Last Temptation of Roc” |
1994 | New York Undercover | Tammy Barrett | Episode: “Eyewitness Blues” |
1994–1996 | Gargoyles | Elisa Maza (voice) | Series regular |
1996 | Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles | Elisa Maza (voice) | Series regular |
1997 | Stargate SG-1 | Drey’auc | Episode: “Bloodlines” |
1997 | Between Brothers | Vanessa | Episode: “The Player” |
1998 | The Pretender | Cynthia Sloan | Episode: “Gigolo Jarod” |
1998–1999 | Mercy Point | Lt. Kim Salisaw | Series regular |
1999 | The Jamie Foxx Show | Camille Turner | Episode: “Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire” |
2000 | Secret Agent Man | Rachel | Episode: “WhupSumAss” |
2000–2001 | Rude Awakening | Nancy Adams | Recurring role, 9 episodes |
1999–2002 | Family Law | Viveca Foster | Series regular |
2003 | CSI: Miami | Laura | Recurring role, 5 episodes |
2004 | Line of Fire | Erica Logan | Episode: “The Senator” |
2004 | Second Time Around | Amanda | Episode: “Coupling Up” |
2004 | NYPD Blue | Bobbi Kingston | Episodes: “My Dinner with Andy” and “I Like Ike” |
2005 | House | Sharon | Episode: “Sports Medicine” |
2005 | 1-800-Missing | Kelly | Episode: “Sisterhood” |
2005 | The War at Home | Vanessa | Episode: “Guess Who’s Coming to the Barbecue” |
2006 | Bones | Assistant U.S. Attorney Kim Kurland | Episode: “Aliens in a Spaceship” |
2009 | Criminal Minds | Tamara Barnes | Episodes: “Hopeless” and “The Eyes Have It” |
2006–2012 | Eureka | Allison Blake | Series regular Nominated—NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series (2011) |
2012 | The Finder | Athena Brookes | Episode: “Life After Death” |
2012 | The Secret Lives of Wives | Reed | TV pilot |
2012–2013 | The Newsroom | Jane Barrow | Recurring role, 3 episodes |
2013 | NCIS | Carrie Clark | Episode: “Alibi“ |
2014 | House of Lies | Sandra Joy | Episode: “Power(less)” |
2014 | Castle | U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Weston | Episode: “The Greater Good” |
2014 | NCIS | Carrie Clark | Episode: “Semper Fortis” |
2015 | Being Mary Jane | Valerie | Recurring role, 5 episodes |
2015–2017 | Stitchers | Maggie | Series regular |
2015 | NCIS | Carrie Clark | Episode: “A Day in Court” |
2016 | Queen Sugar | Directed episodes “So Far” and “All Good” (as Salli Richardson-Whitfield)[12] |
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2017 | Underground | Directed episode: “Nok Aaut” as Salli Richardson-Whitfield[13] |
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2018 | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Directed episode: “Inside Voices” (as Salli Richardson-Whitfield)[14] |
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2018 | Luke Cage | Directed episode: “Get Physical” (as Salli Richardson-Whitfield)[citation needed] |
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2018 | Black Lightning | District Attorney Montez | Episode: “The Book of Consequences: Chapter Four: Translucent Freak” (also directed) |
Rose Riley is an actress, known for Truth (2015), The Death and Life of Otto Bloom (2016) and Secret City (2016).
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Kara Lindsay was born on February 16, 1985 in Rochester, New York, USA. She is an actress, known for Disney’s Newsies the Broadway Musical (2017), Murphy Brown (1988) and Submissions Only (2010).
Born: |
Kendra Baskett | |
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![]() Baskett in October 2011
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Born | Kendra Leigh Wilkinson (1985-06-12) June 12, 1985 San Diego, California, U.S. |
Residence | Calabasas, California |
Occupation | Television personality, businesswoman, glamour model, author |
Years active | 2004–present |
Spouse(s) | |
Partner(s) | Hugh Hefner (2004–2008) |
Children | 2 |
Kendra Leigh Baskett[1] (née Wilkinson; born June 12, 1985)[2] is an American television personality, businesswoman, glamour model, and author. She is known for being one of Hugh Hefner‘s three girlfriends and for her role on the E! reality television series The Girls Next Door, on which her life in the Playboy Mansion was documented. Although not a Playboy Playmate, she has appeared in three nude pictorials with her Girls Next Door co-stars and fellow Hefner girlfriends Holly Madison and Bridget Marquardt. Her first reality series, Kendra, debuted in June 2009.
Born in San Diego, California,[2] Baskett is of English, Irish, and Ukrainian descent.[3][4] She has a younger brother named Colin. Her mother, Patti, was originally from Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and had been a cheerleader for the Philadelphia Eagles. Her father, Eric, was raised in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania and Ocean City, New Jersey, before moving to San Diego, California at age 15. He received a degree in biochemistry from the University of California, San Diego, and went on to found several biotechnology companies before retiring at the age of 48. Patti and Eric married on November 5, 1983. They divorced on March 25, 1994, when Kendra was eight years old. Her grandmother, Gloria Wilkinson, died in December 2004.[4]
Baskett was and raised in San Diego’s Clairemont neighborhood, and played softball for six years with the Clairemont Bobby Sox.[5] When she left high school, she began working as a glamour model, and also briefly worked as an administrative assistant in a dentist’s office.[6]
Baskett met Hugh Hefner at his 78th birthday party in April 2004, where she was hired to be one of the “painted girls”[7] (women who are nude except for painted-on accessories). Hefner had seen a photo of her shot by Kim Riley, on a fax machine at the Playboy Mansion and wanted to know who she was. Shortly after they met, Hefner asked Wilkinson to be one of his girlfriends, and he moved her into the Playboy Mansion[8] In a 2014 interview, Wilkinson explained, “I was like, ‘Hell yeah, I’m here!’ I was living in this small-ass apartment with this ugly-ass bitch. I was praying for anything to get me out of there. I moved in and weeks went by and I didn’t know that sex was involved. I knew nothing about Playboy, I’d just graduated high school.”[9]
She was featured on the E! reality television series The Girls Next Door, which followed the lives of Hefner’s then-girlfriends: Wilkinson, Holly Madison, and Bridget Marquardt. She moved out of the Playboy Mansion in 2009 after meeting her future husband, Hank Baskett,[10] and filmed her own spin-off reality show for E! called Kendra. The first season was about her living on her own and planning her wedding.[11]
Baskett has made several cameos on different programs such as Las Vegas and Entourage. She also appeared in Akon‘s music video “Smack That“. While on the set of the video, Eminem poured a bottle of water on her head, though the two later reconciled.[12] In 2006, she appeared in the Playboy Special Editions Sexy 100. In 2007, she appeared in Nickelback‘s music video of “Rockstar“, along with Madison and Marquardt. They also had a cameo role in the 2006 film Scary Movie 4.[13] Wilkinson also showed her creative side as a rapper on MTV’s Celebrity Rap Superstar which debuted on August 30, 2007. She rapped to Ludacris’ “Fantasy”, in response to the question asked by the show’s host, “Can Kendra move her mouth as fast as she moves her booty?”[14] She went on to take second place, losing to Shar Jackson.
Baskett’s stated career goal is to become a massage therapist or sports announcer.[15] In December 2005, she became a regular blogger columnist at the website of the Philadelphia Eagles,[16] a team for which her mother had been a professional cheerleader,[17] and for which her husband played professionally.[18]
On August 13, 2008, the Wall Street Journal reported that Baskett was Olive Garden‘s “Biggest Celebrity Fan”. Wilkinson has described Olive Garden’s cuisine as “my soul food.” The newspaper emphasized that her repeated enthusiastic public endorsements of the family restaurant were genuine, personal and were not tied to any payment from Olive Garden. In fact, the company was reported as viewing Baskett’s endorsements with “mixed feelings,” and something on which it was reluctant to comment since the restaurant emphasizes its family-friendly nature.[19]
On September 22, 2008, the International Business Times reported that Wilkinson was engaged to Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver Hank Baskett.[20] Wilkinson initially denied this, but she later admitted she was in a relationship with Baskett on October 7, 2008 in an interview with Chelsea Handler on Chelsea Lately.[21][22] On November 6, 2008, E! Online announced Wilkinson and Baskett were engaged, after he proposed the previous Saturday at the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington.[23][24]
Wilkinson married Baskett on June 27, 2009, at the Playboy Mansion.[25] Although it was initially announced that Hugh Hefner would give the bride away, Kendra’s brother Colin walked her down the aisle. Wilkinson’s family was in attendance, as well as former Girls Next Door stars Holly Madison and Bridget Marquardt.[26][27][28] On the wedding episode of Kendra, she said that she would be taking Baskett’s last name. They lived in Calabasas, California.[29]
On June 11, 2009, Wilkinson announced that she and Baskett were expecting their first baby together.[30] The baby, a boy named Hank Baskett IV, was born December 11, 2009.[31][32] Wilkinson’s friends hosted a baby shower on September 9, 2009. She told E! News that Hefner will be the child’s godfather.[33][better source needed] but later denied this in an interview in OK magazine.[citation needed]
In an interview after the birth of Hank IV, Baskett revealed she had suffered post-partum depression. “After giving birth, I never brushed my hair, my teeth, or took a shower,” said Baskett. “I looked in the mirror one day and was really depressed.” After the birth she weighed 140 pounds, according to a E! interview. She attributed her depression to moving to Indianapolis where her husband played so soon after Hank IV’s birth and feeling isolated.[34]
Baskett starred in a spinoff of Girls Next Door, titled Kendra, which focused on her life after leaving the Playboy Mansion and getting engaged to then Philadelphia Eagles receiver Hank Baskett. The Girls Next Door executive producer Kevin Burns serves in the same capacity on the series. Kendra is produced by Prometheus Entertainment, Fox TV Studios, and Alta Loma Entertainment.[35] Kendra premiered on June 7, 2009, and had record breaking numbers for E! with 2.6 million viewers, and was the highest-rated reality debut for the network since 2002’s premiere of The Anna Nicole Show.[citation needed] The show’s third-season finale, and 33rd episode, on E! debuted on January 9, 2011. The show was not renewed for a fourth season.
In 2007, Baskett appeared on an episode of WWE Raw with Bridget Marquardt.
In 2010 she published a memoir, Sliding Into Home.[36]
Baskett was a contestant in the twelfth season of Dancing with the Stars, partnered with Louis Van Amstel. She was eliminated in the seventh week, on May 3, 2011. Kendra launched her personal website KendraWilkinson.com in November 2011. The digital community offers space for Kendra to answer all her fans questions, and connect with each other while talking about family, friends and laughter.[37]
On March 17, 2010, Baskett’s E! True Hollywood Story premiered on E! Entertainment Television. During the hour-long episode, she discussed her rocky road to stardom. In May 2010, a video recording of Wilkinson having sex with a then-unidentified man surfaced. The recording was acquired by Vivid Entertainment, who planned to distribute the tape as Kendra Exposed. Wilkinson contested the release and threatened to sue should it be released.[38][39] RadarOnline reported that in 2008, Wilkinson herself set up a company Home Run Productions LLC, through which she made several attempts to sell sex tapes.[40][41] Sources have reported that Wilkinson was paid $680,000 for the film that was made by her high school boyfriend Justin Frye when she was 18.[42][43]
After parting ways with E! in 2011, Baskett and her family started a new reality show on WE tv, Kendra on Top. It premiered June 5, 2012.[44] The show continues to be aired in 2017.[45]
On February 26, 2013, Baskett appeared on an episode of Celebrity Wife Swap with Kate Gosselin. On April 20, 2013, she was involved with another vehicle in an automobile accident on a California freeway. Her injuries included having a minor hemorrhagic stroke.[46] On October 31, 2013, Baskett announced that she was pregnant with her second child via a Twitter photo.[47]
The couple’s second child, Alijah Mary Baskett, was born May 16, 2014.[48]
In November 2014, Baskett was a contestant on the 14th series of the UK reality TV series hit I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!, finishing in sixth place.[49]
On April 28, 2017, Baskett and her mother were one of the families featured on the WE reality show Marriage Bootcamp: Family Edition.
On April 3, 2018, she filed for divorce from Hank Baskett.[50]
Asher Keddie | |
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![]() Keddie in May 2012
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Born | (1974-07-31) 31 July 1974 Melbourne, Victoria |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse(s) |
Jay Bowen (m. 2007–2012)
Vincent Fantauzzo (m. 2014)
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Children | 1 |
Asher Keddie (born 31 July 1974) is an Australian actress. Beginning her career in the television series Five Mile Creek in the mid 1980s, Keddie received wide recognition for her role in the critically acclaimed series Offspring. Her significant repertoire in television has led to her being dubbed as the ‘Golden Girl of Australian Television’.[1] Keddie also had a small role in the film X-Men Origins: Wolverine, as Dr. Carol Frost. Aside from television and film work, she has several theatre credits, most notably in the Melbourne Theatre Company production of Les Liaisons dangereuses as Madame de Tourvel.
As of 2015, she has taken out the ‘Silver Logie Award for Most Popular Actress’ five times in a row. Keddie won the 2013 Gold Logie award for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television, for her role as Dr Nina Proudman in the Network Ten drama Offspring. She was considered “third time lucky” after previously being nominated twice for the Gold Logie. Keddie has a total of 7 Logie Awards as of May 2015.
Keddie was born to Robi and James Keddie, both school teachers.[2] As a child, she took dancing lessons for nine years and at age fourteen, she dislocated her knee prior to an audition at the Australian Ballet School. Despite her initial misfortune, she landed an acting gig in a dance wear ad while at ballet school and subsequently landed an agent.[3] Keddie completed her secondary education at St Michael’s Grammar School, St Kilda.
Keddie had guest roles early in her career in various television dramas, including her first roles in Five Mile Creek (1985), Fortress (1986) and Janus (1994). She played the role of Marriane Sheridan in Blue Heelers (season 3, episode 21) airing on 18 June 1996 and Good Guys, Bad Guys (1997). From 1997 to 1998, she came to the attention of senior network television producers, appearing in State Coroner. Following this, she had a recurring role in Stingers from 2000 to 2004.
Keddie’s big break came in 2004, where she had a leading role in Love My Way, a drama series airing on Foxtel. The series ended in late 2007. This role led to Keddie being nominated for various awards for playing the part of Julia Jackson, a woman who struggles to cope with her own identity in the midst of family tragedy. Keddie’s award win came at the end of Love My Way‘s third series in 2006.
In 2009, Keddie appeared in three different roles. She portrayed police officer Liz Cruickshank in the television drama Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities and journalist Jacinta Burns, in the TV series Rush, as well as Dr Carol Frost in X-Men Origins: Wolverine.
In 2010, Keddie depicted author Blanche d’Alpuget in Hawke, a telemovie about the premiership of Bob Hawke (the Prime Minister of Australia, 1983–91). She also became the star of the drama series Offspring, which began airing in August 2010. In April 2011, she had the leading role of Ita Buttrose in ABC1‘s telemovie Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo, the story of Buttrose’s rise to success as the editor of Cleo magazine.
In 2014, Keddie starred in Party Tricks as Premier Kate Ballard. Ballard faces an election campaign alongside newly announced Opposition candidate David McLeod (Rodger Corser), with whom she once had a tumultuous affair.
Making her theatre debut for the Melbourne Theatre Company in 1998 in Patrick Marber‘s Closer, Keddie went on to appear in Cyrano de Bergerac, Les Liaisons dangereuses, Birthrights, Great Expectations, The Seagull and Hannie Rayson‘s Life After George. Her performances in the 2005 Melbourne Theatre Company production of Les Liaisons dangereuses, and the Playbox’s The Ishmael Club, both earned her Green Room Award nominations.[4]
In 2007 Keddie starred alongside Jay Bowen in the Melbourne Theatre Company’s play The Glass Soldier written by Hannie Rayson.[5]
She married actor and musician Jay Bowen in January 2007.[6] The pair separated in December 2011.[6] In April 2014, she married artist Vincent Fantauzzo.[7] On 19 November 2014 she announced at the GQ Men’s Award that she was pregnant. On 1 March 2015, the couple welcomed their first child, a boy named Valentino Fantauzzo.[8][9]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1985 | Five Mile Creek (TV Series) | Emma | Season 3, Episode 4 Possum (1985) |
Glass Babies (TV Mini-series) | Anna Simpson | ||
Palace of Dreams (TV Series) | Young Girl (uncredited) | ||
Fortress (TV Movie) | Sue | Based on a novel by Gabrielle Lord | |
1986 | The Last Frontier (TV Mini-series) | Emma Hannon | |
1988 | Dusty (TV Mini-series) | ||
Two Brothers Running | Ruthie Bornstein | ||
1993 | Snowy | Young Girl | Season 1, Episode 1 Dams, Schemes & Damn Schemes (1993) |
The Feds: Deadfall | Susan Lehman | ||
1994 | Janus (TV Series) | Lisa | Season 1, Episode 10 Without Prejudice Season 1, Episode 11 Burden of Proof Season 1, Episode 12 Improper Influences |
1996 | Law of the Land (TV Series) | Shannon Rayner | Season 4, Episode 2 Leader of the Pack (1996) |
2009 | X-Men Origins: Wolverine | Dr. Carol Frost | |
2009 | Rush | Jacinta Burns | |
2009 | Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities | Detective Liz Cruickshank | |
2011–Present | Offspring | Nina Proudman | |
2014 | Party Tricks | Kate Ballard | |
2017 | Flammable Children | Gale Marsh |
Year | Award | Category | Result | Work |
---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress[10] | Nominated | Love My Way |
ASTRA Award | Most Outstanding Performance by an Actor – Female | Nominated | ||
2006 | Australian Film Institute Awards | Best Lead Actress in Television Drama[10] | Nominated | |
Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress[10] | Nominated | ||
ASTRA Award | Most Outstanding Performance by an Actor – Female | Nominated | ||
2007 | ASTRA Award | Most Outstanding Performance by an Actor – Female | Won | |
Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Nominated | ||
2008 | Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Nominated | |
ASTRA Award | Most Outstanding Performance by an Actor – Female | Nominated | ||
2009 | Australian Film Institute Awards | Best Lead Actress in Television Drama | Nominated | Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities |
2010 | Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Nominated | |
Australian Film Institute Awards | Best Supporting Actress in Television Drama | Nominated | Hawke | |
2011 | Gold Logie | Nominated | Offspring and Hawke | |
Logie Award | Most Popular Actress | Won | Offspring | |
Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Nominated | ||
Equity Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (Shared with castmates) | Nominated | ||
2012 | Equity Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (Shared with castmates) | Nominated | |
Equity Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Mini Series or Telemovie (Shared with castmates) | Nominated | Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo | |
AACTA Awards | Audience Award for Best Performance | Won | ||
AACTA Awards | Best Lead Actress in Television Drama | Nominated | ||
Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Nominated | ||
Gold Logie | Most Popular Personality on Australian Television | Nominated | Offspring and Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo | |
Logie Award | Most Popular Actress | Won | ||
2013 | Gold Logie | Won | Offspring | |
Logie Award | Most Popular Actress | Won | ||
Equity Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (Shared with castmates) | Nominated | ||
2014 | Logie Award | Most Popular Actress | Won | Offspring |
Logie Award | Most Outstanding Actress | Won | ||
2015 | Gold Logie | Most Popular Personality on Australian TV | Nominated | Offspring and Party Tricks |
Logie Award | Most Popular Actress | Won |