Amanda Carlin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Amanda Carlin (* before 1980 in Queens , New York City ) is an American actress and audio book speaker .

Life

Carlin is the daughter of the actors Frances Sternhagen and Thomas A. Carlin . Her appearances on Broadway include two productions directed by Stephen Porter in 1980 at the Circle in the Square Theater. There she played Jenny Hill in George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara and June Stanley in The Man Who Came to Dinner . From 1986 to 1987 she was at the Vivian Beaumont Theater , directed by Jerry Zaks, in Ben Hecht's and Charles MacArthur's The Front Page . Off Broadway, she played Estelle in 1985 in Richard Russell Ramos's The Waltz of the Toreadors by Jean Anouilh at the Union Square Theater and in 1987 as Charlotte Ebbinger in Richard Greenberg's The Maderati at Playwrights Horizons , directed by Michael Engler.

As a television actress, she appeared in numerous series, for example in 1994 as Maquis resistance fighter Kobb in the double episode The Maquis of the science fiction series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and from 2001 to 2002 as Dr. Long on the sitcom Friends . The movies she starred in include Lianna (1983), Passion Fish (1992), Sinner (2007), Rushlights (2013) and A Kind of Magic (2015).

She also works as an audio book speaker.

Filmography

Movies

  • 1983: Lianna
  • 1991: Lucy & Desi - Behind the Scenes ( Lucy & Desi: Before the Laughter , Movie made for TV)
  • 1992: Passion Fish
  • 1996: Innocent Victims (TV movie)
  • 1996: The Adonis Trap ( If Looks Could Kill , Movie made for TV)
  • 1996: The Devilish Lover ( Her Costly Affair , TV movie)
  • 1997: Liar Liar (Liar Liar)
  • 1999: Dr. Mumford (Mumford)
  • 2001: Childhood Robbed ( Just Ask My Children , Movie made for TV)
  • 2002: Blood Work
  • 2006: Special
  • 2007: Sinner
  • 2007: A Stranger's Heart (TV movie)
  • 2008: Superhero Movie
  • 2008: Seven Lives (Seven Pounds)
  • 2011: Like Crazy
  • 2013: Rushlights
  • 2015: A Kind of Magic

TV Shows

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Amanda Carlin at myheritage.de. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  2. Frances Sternhagen Biography (1930-) at filmreference.com. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  3. Amanda Carlin at linkedin.com. Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  4. Books by Amanda Carlin at goodreads.com. Retrieved June 14, 2019.