Emily Swallow
Swallow started her Broadway career in the theatre, appearing in several productions, like High Fidelity at the Guthrie Theater as well as King Lear for Shakespeare in the Park. Additionally, she performed on stage in Much Ado About Nothing for Shakespeare in the Park and the World Premiere of the Off-Broadway plays Romantic Poetry, Measure for Pleasure. Swallow started her career as a film actress with the 2008 military thriller The Lucky Ones. Swallow was a co-star with Mark Rylance at the Guthrie Theatre in Louis Jenkins' play Nice Fish. [citation needed] for Donald Margulies' play The Country House, at Los Angeles' Geffen Playhouse. Also, she starred in Manhattan Theater Club in John Patrick Shanley's musical Romantic Poetry, which was a world premiere. She was honored in 2010 with the Falstaff Award, which is awarded to the actress who's performance is the best in a play. Her performance in The Taming of the Shrew as Kate was the reason she received the award. Swallow joined forces with Jac Huberman in the creation of a new stage show, Jac N Swallow. The show was performed by the two at New York's Laurie Beeckman Theater in 2012 and at Joe's Pub in the year 2012. The show focuses on the comic misadventures of the duo who face a variety of issues in their lives with various degree of decency and mental sanity. It is planned to create a show based around the characters. In 2013, she collaborated together with Mark Rylance and poet Louis Jenkins in the world premiere of Nice Fish at the Guthrie Theater. The following year, she was chosen to be a part of the Center Theatre Group's production of Ayad Akhtar's The Disgraced. The first time she appeared on television, her performance was Guiding Light, and she was later cast on Southland, Ringer, The Good Wife, NCIS, Flight of the Conchords, Medium in the role of series regular The Good Wife, Dr. Michelle Robidaux on TNT's medical drama Monday Mornings[2] as well as Rizzoli & Isles. 1] She played a starring role in The Mentalist as FBI agent Kim Fischer. She was cast as Amara "the Darkness" in the 11th Supernatural season. As of 2019, she is the Armorer of The Mandalorian in Star Wars, as well as the head of Mandalorians who are traditional. Because the traditionalists never remove their helmets, her face is never visible. In Season 3 The character becomes more prominent as the plot focuses on Mandalorians and their traditions, not only Mandalorians.
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