Elle Taylor is an actress, known for The Walking Dead: The Game - Season 3 (2016), Hoodman (2021) and More Than a Number (2020).
Originating from Birmingham, Alabama where as a child she was affectionately known as "The Human Tape Recorder" she began early in life mentally recording and then repeating family stories full of comedy, love, drama and joy. Whether it was meant for public knowledge...or not. This initiated Elle's passion for storytelling and expanded into her teenage and young adult years of writing poetry and plays. Elle progressed to write a number of original plays, screenplays and on air commercial productions. This includes content for The Tom Joyner Morning Show (events), The Mayor's Office of Orlando, Cox Media Group, The Beta Center, and the Wells Built Museum of African Heritage, just to name a few. She has also served as a writing instructor and mentor for high school students. Sustaining these various roles curated a pathway for a screenwriting and acting career in Los Angeles, California where she currently resides. Elle's acting credits include "Atlantafornication" (Aunt Pearlie) releasing December 2021 plus "Carter High" (Mrs. Campbell) with Vivica Fox and Charles Dutton. She has appeared in over a dozen classic stage plays and debuted in her first music video with Justin Bieber's new hit single "Ghost". Elle can also be seen in various national commercials and print advertisements for Amtrak, Publix Supermarkets, CarMD, and more. Elle's focus and first love is screenwriting and her storytelling has placed in various film festivals and screenwriting competitions including: Academy Nicholl Fellowship (2017, Top 10% of all entries), Hollywood Black Film Festival (Top 10), Orlando Urban Film Festival (Finalist), Columbus Black International Film Festival (Winner), Women in Cinema International Screenplay Competition(Top 10), National Black Film Festival (Finalist) and South Carolina Underground Film Festival (Finalist)
Elle Walker is an actress, known for Kappa Force (2018), 2 in the Bush: A Love Story (2018) and Work in Progress (2019).
Elle Wesley is known for Camp Hideout (2023).
Elle Winter is an actress, known for 3 Generations (2015), Code Red (2016) and The After Party (2018).
Elle Young is an actress, known for Wrong Number, Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul. (2022) and Black-ish (2014).
Elle Yun is a Meisner trained, bilingual Korean-American actor. She has just been selected as an Acting Mentee for Hillman Grad's Mentorship Lab (Founded by Lena Waithe and Rishi Rajani). is a 4th-degree black belt in Taekwondo and has transitioned her skills to stunt fighting for film/TV. You can catch her fighting in Power Ranger Kids Force as the Blue Ranger. She is also known for her co-star role in "Quarter Life Poetry" on FX and her voice-over role in "Forecasting Love and Weather" on Netflix. Elle is passionate about telling stories that advance real discussions where cultural, societal, and generational traumas are addressed, and solutions for healing are illustrated. Elle is fascinated with dialects and her hobbies include ceramics, reading, and photography.
Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers is a writer, director, producer and actor. She is a member of the Kainai First Nation (Blood Tribe, Blackfoot Confederacy) as well as Sámi from Norway. Her short documentary Bihttos was included in the 2015 TIFF Top Ten Shorts and was commissioned for the imagineNATIVE Embargo Collective. Bihttos won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary Short at the Seattle International Film Festival. With The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open, she made her feature co-directorial debut (alongside Kathleen Hepburn), as well as starring-in and co-writing. Taking its title from an essay by Cree poet Billy-Ray Belcourt, The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open, is based on a true-chance encounter between Tailfeathers and another Indigenous woman. Premiering at the Berlinale in 2019, The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open received the Toronto Film Critics Association and Vancouver Film Critics Circle' awards for Best Canadian Feature Film. The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open was also nominated for six Canadian Screen Awards, and Tailfeathers and Hepburn received the CSAs for best direction and best original screenplay. Hailed as one of "... the most important film[s] about addiction to date ..." by the Vancouver International Film Festival, her latest feature documentary Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy is an intimate portrait of survival, love and the collective work of healing in the Kainai First Nation in Southern Alberta, a Blackfoot community facing the impacts of substance use and a drug-poisoning epidemic, where community members active in addiction and recovery, first responders and medical professionals implement harm reduction to save lives. Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy premiered at the 2021 Hot Docs International Documentary Festival and received a Roger's Audience Choice Award as well as the Emerging Canadian Filmmaker Award for Tailfeathers. Since it's premiere, Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy and Tailfeathers have received the Colin Low Award for Best Canadian Director at DOXA 2021, the Audience Choice Award for a Canadian Documentary at the 2021 Calgary International Film Festival, the Co-winner, Inspiring Voices & Perspectives Feature Film Award at Cinéfest Sudbury, and the 2022 Canadian Screen Award for the Ted Rogers Best Canadian Feature Documentary. Her acting credits include roles in; Jeff Barnaby's Blood Quantum, Canadian Screen Award winning performance in Danis Goulet's Night Raiders, Canadian Screen Award nominated performance in The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open, Canadian Screen Award winning performance in Rachel Talalay's Unclaimed, the soon to be released Stellar by Darlene Naponse, and the upcoming Amazon/Left Bank Pictures series Three Pines. In 2018 Elle-Máijá was the Sundance Film Institute's Merata Mita Film Fellow and is an alumnus of the Berlinale Talent Lab and the Hot Docs Accelerator Lab. Elle-Máijá is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, the Director's Guild of Canada, UBCP/ACTRA, and the Documentary Organization of Canada.
Elleanor Perry is an actress, known for A Christmas Carol (2020).
Ellease Aponte is an actress, known for Waves (2020), Graceland (2013) and Christmas Wedding Baby (2014).