Emily Swallow
Swallow started her Broadway career by performing in various shows, including High Fidelity at the Guthrie Theater and King Lear for Shakespeare in the Park. Swallow also performed in Much Ado About Nothing for Shakespeare in the Park and the World Premiere of the Off-Broadway play Romantic Poetry, Measure for Pleasure. In 2008, Swallow made her debut in film in the military drama The Lucky Ones. Swallow was a co-star with Mark Rylance at the Guthrie Theatre in Louis Jenkins' play Nice Fish. [citation needed] as in Donald Margulies' play The Country House in Los Angeles' Geffen Playhouse. Swallow also appeared at Manhattan Theater Club in John Patrick Shanley's musical Romantic Poetry, which was the first time it was performed in the world. She was honored in 2010 with the Falstaff Award as the best female performer in the world for her part as the Taming of the Shrew. The Taming of the Shrew. Swallow produced a show along alongside fellow comedian Jac Huberman in 2012 called Jac N Swallow. They performed it at the city's Laurie Beeckman Theater as well as at Joe's Pub. The humorous adventures of the duo are the focus on the stage show. They face a variety of daily challenges with dignity. It is planned to create a show based around the characters. It's important to remember that she collaborated with Mark Rylance on a world premiere production of Nice Fish, at the Guthrie Theater. In the year 2016, Center Theatre Group cast the actress as Ayad Akhtar and Disgraced. Her first TV role was in Guiding Light, and she also appeared of Southland, Ringer, The Good Wife, NCIS, Flight of the Conchords, Medium and as the series' regular The Good Wife, Dr. Michelle Robidaux on TNT's medical drama Monday Mornings[2] as well as Rizzoli & Isles. One of her roles was part in the main role of The Mentalist as FBI agent Kim Fischer. In 2015, she was cast on the 11th season of Supernatural as the character Amara, "the Darkness". In 2019, she will play the role of Armorer, the Mandalorians' traditional leader in Star Wars' The Mandalorian. In the series, she's been unable to show her face because the people who wear traditional attire will never wear their headgears. As the season 3 story focuses more and more on Mandalorian, the character appears increasingly.



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