Stephanie Moran is a Canadian actress born and raised in Ottawa, Ontario. Stephanie began dancing at a young age, and continued to study ballet for many years. In 2012, she began acting in local short films, which ignited her passion for acting. Since then, she has appeared in both television and film, including Hurt (2018), The Hardy Boys (2022), and Workin' Moms (2022). Stephanie currently resides in Toronto, Ontario.
BIOGRAPHY Stephanie Morgenstern's award-winning career spans many disciplines: beginning as an actor, she branched out into filmmaking, screenwriting, directing and showrunning. She was designated National Indie Treasure by Toronto's Eye Magazine, profiled in Montreal's Voir Magazine as a New Face to Watch, and selected as one of three 'Great Expectations' filmmakers at the Telluride International Film Festival in Colorado. TELEVISION. Most recently, Morgenstern was Executive Producer on Season 2 of NBC/CTV's medical drama 'Transplant,' developing the season and character arcs with the writing room and writing the Season 2 Premiere episode with Mark Ellis. She has been working as a freelance television director for the last few years on hour-long drama such as 'Nurses,' (NBC/Global), 'Burden of Truth,' (CBC/CW), 'Killjoys' (Space Channel/Syfy), and 'Hudson & Rex' (CityTV). Morgenstern was Co-Creator, Writer, Executive Producer and Showrunner, alongside Mark Ellis, of CBC's WWII espionage drama 'X Company.' It received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Television Drama in its premiere year and, in the fall of 2017, wrapped its third and final season in Budapest. Morgenstern directed the two-part series finale. Prior to that, Ellis & Morgenstern were Co-creators, Writers, and Executive Producers on 'Flashpoint' (CBS/CTV/Ion), for which they were designated Showrunners of the Year by the Writers' Guild of Canada. They co-wrote twenty of the show's 75 episodes, earning both a Gemini and WGC Award for Best Writing in a Television Drama. The show received the Academy Board of Directors Tribute for Outstanding and Enduring Contribution to Canadian Television in 2013, the 2009 Gemini and 2013 Canadian Screen Awards for Best Dramatic Series, and the Innovative Producers Award at the Banff World Media Festival. The Academy also designated Flashpoint #2 out of the Top 25 Canadian television shows of all time, second only to Degrassi. FILMMAKING. Morgenstern directed the critically acclaimed 'Remembrance,' a short WW2 drama which she co-wrote and co-starred in with Mark Ellis. It earned a Genie Award nomination for Best Short Live Action Film, won Best Canadian Short at the Worldwide Short Film Festival, and the Jutra Award for Best Short. It was also a Jury Award winner and quintuple nominee (including Best Direction and Best Drama) at Yorktown's Golden Sheaf Awards. 'Remembrance' premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, won Certificates of Merit from both the San Francisco and Chicago International Film Festivals, and screened in the prestigious Filmmakers of Tomorrow section at Telluride. She and Ellis won TIFF's national Pitch This! Competition in 2005: the cash prize funded the development of 'Remembrance into longer dramatic form, which later became 'X Company.' Morgenstern's first short was the bilingual Curtains/Rideau, co-directed with her brother Mark Morgenstern. Like 'Remembrance,' it was a Genie nominee for Best Short as well as a quintuple Golden Sheaf nominee. It earned her the award for Best Script at Yorkton, where she and her brother Mark also jointly won for Best Direction. Curtains/Rideau toured English and French language festivals extensively, and won the Palme D'Or at the Festival mondial du cinema de court metrage in Huy, Belgium. ACTING. Fluent in English and French, Morgenstern was an actor for over 20 years. Her work spanned film ('Maelstrom,' Denis Villeneuve; 'The Sweet Hereafter,' Atom Egoyan; 'Revoir Julie,' Jeanne Crepeau), TV ('This is Wonderland,' 'At the Hotel,' CBC), and theatre across Canada ('A Midsummer Night's Dream,' Stratford Festival; 'Romeo and Juliet,' Globe Theatre; 'Goodnight Desdemona, Good Morning Juliet,' Grand Theatre). She also provided the original English dub voice for Sailor Venus in the cult anime series 'Sailor Moon.' EDUCATION. Stephanie was raised in Montreal where she began her career as a professional actor at the age of 15. She got her BA in English from McGill University, and studied drama at the Banff Centre School of Fine Arts. She then moved to Toronto to pursue her MA at York University's Graduate Programme in Social and Political Thought. Stephanie is also an alumna of the Women in the Director's Chair Master Class, and a graduate of the Berlinale Talent Campus.
A the age of 7, Stephanie Moroz chose her career in acting. All it took was a glare from her teacher and a whisper to her mom, "she has a lot of energy..." Studying first at the University of Manitoba, Stephanie completed her training at the prestigious Studio 58 in Vancouver, BC. Acting on stages across Canada, from roles to Cecily in The Importance of Being Earnest, to Portia in Julius Caesar, she loves roles with versatility and heart. Most recently, Stephanie landed a lead role of the quirky personal assistant, Paula, in Hallmark Channel's "A Dream of Christmas." She was also featured in the series The Pinkertons, which was shot in her hometown of Winnipeg. Next up Stephanie will appear in the upcoming feature film, "Break My Heart 1,000 Times."
Stephanie Muchiri is known for Chaguo (2022), Second Family (2023) and N*Gen (2020).
Stephanie Murone is known for If She Screams (2021) and Taylor'd Problems (2014).
Stephanie Nadolny was born on May 19, 1971 in Memphis, Tennessee, USA. She is known for Dragon Ball Z: Chikyû Marugoto Chôkessen (1990), Dragon Ball Z: Moetsukiro!! Nessen Ressen Chô-Gekisen (1993) and Dragon Ball Z: Doragon bôru zetto (1989).
Stephanie Nan is an actress, known for You Can Choose Your Family (2018).
Stephanie Napier is an actress and producer, known for Viking Siege (2017), I'm Not Harry Jenson. (2009) and A Fistful of Lead (2018).
Born & raised in Ohio, then on to Duke University & Yale School of Drama, Stephanie juggled, did things on a trapeze, and played musical instruments in the 1st National Broadway Tour of Barnum. Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, and Utah Shakespearean Festival are part of her extensive theatre credits - in addition to Off-Broadway and some NYC comedy clubs. LA theatre audiences have seen her play several leading roles at the Odyssey Theatre, and her one-woman (comedic) show based on the true story of her Native American vision quest (where she spent 4 days with no food or water alone on a mountain) played to sold-out audiences. Her scene with Jim Carrey was cut from Bruce Almighty, her first role in a pilot was changed to a man, and in the pilot she just shot she had to kill a newborn baby. She meditates. Stephanie is, in fact, a Mindfulness Meditation Coach, and was a guest expert on a Deepak Chopra show where she taught her special "Laughing Meditation."
Stephanie Ng Wan is known for Mother! (2017), Zoe (2018) and X-Men: Apocalypse (2016).