Stacy Casaluci is an actress, known for Gremlin (2017), The Diary (2021) and Braking for Whales (2019).
Stacy Chbosky was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1972. She is the daughter of Fred and Lea Chbosky and the sister of filmmaker and novelist Stephen Chbosky. At the age of 14, Stacy wrote and illustrated the children's book, "Who Owns the Sun?". It went on to win many awards. The book was adapted into a short film by Disney in 1990 and a ballet, by the Pittsburgh Youth Ballet, narrated by James Earl Jones. In 1991, Stacy was named one of the 20 "Best and Brightest High School Seniors" in the country by USA Today. After graduating Valedictorian from Upper St. Clair High School, Stacy studied theater at Carnegie Mellon University. She received her BFA in 1995. Since then, Stacy has toured the nation with Jerry Lewis in "Damn Yankees!", toured Europe with "The Rocky Horror Show", and played Woodstock '99 with the rock band "Young and Fabulous!". Stacy played the Slamdance Film Festival's 2004 opening night party with her punk band, "Skum". "Skum" was recently featured on the CD compilation "NYC Rock and Roll". She co-founded sketch comedy group "Shirley Chickenpants", appearing at Joe's Pub and the HBO Workspace and eventually signing with The William Morris Agency. Stacy now lives in Los Angeles with her husband, filmmaker John Erick Dowdle, and their cat, Schlitz. She is represented by Omnipop Talent Group.
Stacy Clausen (born 25 April 2005) is an Australian actor. Stacy's screen debut was a small part in the fourth season of American supernatural adventure series, Preacher (2019). Stacy has gone onto appear in ABC drama miniseries, Fires (2021) and is set to appear in Netflix family adventure film, True Spirit (2023) and ABC's new horror comedy television series, Crazy Fun Park (2023).
Stacy Cochran is a director, producer and screenwriter, born in Passaic New Jersey and based in New York City. She made her feature debut with Columbia TriStar title "My New Gun" starring Diane Lane and James LeGros. It premiered in Director's Fortnight at Cannes and earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best First Feature. Subsequent projects as writer/director include Touchstone/Interscope title "Boys" starring Winona Ryder and Lukas Haas, the half-hour doc "Richard Lester!" about the director, which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival, and "Drop Back Ten," which premiered in Dramatic Competition at Sundance. While an MFA student at Columbia University, her short film "Another Damaging Day" premiered at the New York Film Festival. After disruptions in her work following September 11 2001, she received an Arthur Levitt Artist-in-Residence at Williams College. During that time, she also served as head of the program advisory committee at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (MASS MoCA) in North Adams. In 2018, after this unscheduled directing hiatus, she completed a new feature film, "Write When You Get Work," starring Emily Mortimer, Finn Wittrock, Rachel Keller, Scott Cohen and Jessica Hecht. Shot on Super16mm film by Oscar-winning cinematographer Robert Elswit, the movie premiered in Narrative Competition at SXSW in March 2018. It was distributed by Abramorama and will premiere on global online platforms in February 2019.
Stacy Cruz was born on 24 March 1999 in the Czech Republic. She is an actress.
Born in Knoxville, Tennessee and raised in Texas, Stacy Cunningham's dreams of being an actress surfaced early in her childhood. Her family always performed. Her sister sang, her dad played the guitar, her little brother rapped and Stacy performed monologues. Although her dad practices as a cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon, "he also happens to be one of the best bluegrass flat-pickers in the nation, even though his concerts have been limited to the immediate family in the small studio above his garage." She believes that her mom is the ultimate homemaker - a chef and a registered nurse - who rarely worked outside the home, choosing instead to be a housewife and full-time mother. While growing up, Stacy performed in many theater classics - "Annie," "Wizard of Oz," "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" - and the Backdoor Theater became her "second home" in Texas. Always extremely active, she had dance classes, played piano and drums and participated in soccer and swimming. She even held the Texas state-title for backstroke. "Yet, not once did she ever imagine life without being an actress. Stacy's family moved to Los Angeles while she was still in high school; and, shortly thereafter, she discovered Cal Arts. She loved the concept of a concentrated world of making art - without sororities, football or jocks - and found a kind of purity in it all. When her family moved to Georgia right after her graduation from high school, she stayed here for a year. She bussed tables, did lots of theater and "caused a hell of a lot of trouble." Shortly thereafter, she auditioned for Cal Arts and was accepted. She found her time there to be extraordinary. Only 6 out of 27 acting students graduated with their degrees, and Stacy was one of them. Immediately after graduation, Stacy started performing in more theater productions. In fact, it was while she was in the middle of tech week in the theater that she was hired for her first feature film, Ghost of Spoon River (2000). which shot in Peoria, Illinois. She followed it with The Reckoning (2002), her first lead in a film. She has many motion pictures under her belt, including: Paramount Pictures' "Carrots for Hare" and independents _Ripple Effect (2006)_, Before Turning the Gun (2006), The Reckoning (2002), The Custodian (1993) and, most recently, "A New Finish," among others. Stacy's television credits include a series regular role on the comedy As Seen on TV (2005) with George Wendt and Jonelle Allen, and the comedy Video Master Dating (2006). Her eclectic stage work includes such classics as "The Tempest," "Salome" and "Uncle Vanya," along with "Hurly Burly" and "Cabaret," among many others. In her spare time, Stacy continues doing theater and studying with extraordinary teachers such as, Alan Vint - one of her greatest influences.
Edwards was born in Glasgow, Montana, the daughter of an Air Force officer, and grew up all over the world, from Guam to Alabama. At 18, she received a scholarship to the Lou Conte Dance Studio in Chicago and began her performance career as a dancer and actress.
Stacy Egerton is known for The Tales of Strango the Clown: The Chronicles of Gillygutz (2020) and The 12 Day Smile (2011).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Stacy Evans yet.
Stacy Fair is known for Sister Blue (2003), Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Mork & Mindy (2005) and The Sentinel (1996).