Ellen Fosti is known for Beck (1997), Modus (2015) and Conspiracy of Silence (2018).
Ellen Francis is known for Chemistry of Death (2023), Jack Ryan (2018) and Sister Boniface Mysteries (2022).
Ellen Friedman is known for Circus of Books (2019).
Ellen Gaines is known for Hot Spur (1968).
Ellen Garland is known for Fathom (2021).
Ellen Geer, the daughter of actors Will Geer and Herta Ware, has worked continuously for 40 years in television and motion pictures since making her debut in Richard Lester's "Petulia (1968)" (1968) in support of Julie Christie and George C. Scott. Probably best remembered for her turn as the committed actress who is lined up as the third (and last) date for "Harold" by his mother in the cult classic Harold and Maude (1971) (1971) (and who confounds "Harold" by recognizing his "suicide" by hari-kari as an act and eagerly joins in, playing "Juliet" to his "Romeo"), Geer has played character and supporting parts in scores of movies and television shows. Upon the death of her father in 1978, Ellen took over as artistic director of Theatrical Botanicum, an outdoor amphitheater in Topanga Canyon, California, where she has both acted and directed in 50 productions, including "A Streetcar Named Desire", "Medea" and "The Madwoman of Chaillot". Under Geer's direction over the past 28 years, the "Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum" has developed from essentially a workshop to a respected theatrical company with an Equity contract. In the year 2000, the Theatricum Botanicum put on a dramatization of "Harold and Maude" in which Ellen played the free-spirited "Maude", the senior citizen who befriends, comforts and ultimately romances the 20-year-old "Harold", who is obsessed with death and suicide. The Theatricum Botanicum has also put on works written by Ellen Geer. Ellen Geer is a visiting associate professor of acting at the University of California, Los Angeles' School of Theater, Film, and Television, working both with undergraduate and Master of Fine Arts student, concentrating on acting in Shakespeare and other classics. She is a major force in the Los Angeles area in providing theater education to public school children through several Theatricum Botanicum-sponsored programs. Despite this commitment to theatrical education, she continues with her own busy acting career, appearing in films and on TV while acting at major regional theaters, including the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre, the American Conservatory Theatre of San Francisco and the Globe Shakespeare Festival of San Diego.
Ellen Gerstein is an actress/writer/producer/director. Ellen has been an actress for many years, she was honored with the Robert Prosky Character Actor Award. She was recently seen in the feature Venom and soon to be seen in the upcoming feature Dead of Night. You may have seen her in Treasure of The Black Jaguar and Swelter. In such television shows as Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Brothers, Fresh Off the Boat, and recurring on Shameless, as well Southland, Friends, and Seinfeld to name a few. Winning awards for best actress in the short films Passage and Firm with Purpose both on the festival circuit and she appears as a lead in the feature The Golden Age. She's done numerous films and has worked with incredible people like Danny DeVito, Lainie Kazan, Robert DeNiro, Kathy Bates, Cuba Gooding, Jason Bateman, Ted Danson, Martin Scorcese, Paul Schraeder, Rob Marshall, and Mimi Leder to name a few. Ellen directed and acted in her international award winning short film, Come Away with Me, winning over 30 festival awards worldwide. She also wrote and produced the original song "Come Away with Me Tonight" for the film. Ellen wrote, produced, and directed the international award winning short film Waiting for Ronald. A 34-year-old mentally challenged man leaves the institution where he has spent most of his years to start a new life. She cast actors with disabilities along with non-challenged actors and had incredible success. It is being developed into a TV series, Just South of Normal. She created and stars in the popular and hysterical web series Sylvia's Just Sayin'. Ellen has acted in, as well as produced and directed theater in LA. She co-wrote and co-produced Club Disco and created the character, Angie, an interactive play at the Llillian theater. Ellen has worked with incredible people like Danny Divito, Lainie Kazan, Robert DeNiro, Kathy Bates, Jason Bateman,Ted Danson, Martin Scorcese, Paul Schraeder, Rob Marshall, and Mimi Leder to name a few. Ellen has acted in, as well as produced and directed theater in LA. Including her award winning one-woman show, My Psychotherapy Comeback Tour, a semi-finalist in the Samuel French Short Play Festival. Performed in LA and New York. She originated characters including: Ruthie in Potroast at the Actors Gang; Shirley in Sit and Shiver, a play by Steven Berkoff, at the Odyssey; Rosalie in the play Angel Share at the Tiffany, with Paula Prentiss. She co-wrote, co-produced and originated the character Angie in the long running interactive play Club Disco. Ellen is a member of Women in Film, The Alliance of Women Directors. As well as a life member and on the audition committee of the Actors Studio and an audition judge. Somewhere along the line Ellen received a Graduate Degree in Psychology, so she does not have to pay for therapy, she can just talk to herself.
Ellen Gerstell is an actress, known for Tenchi Muyô! (1992), Tenchi Muyô! In Love (1996) and Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light (1987). She was previously married to Gordon Bressack.
Ellen Gowland is known for Blue Jean (2022).
Ellen Greene was performing as a nightclub singer in several New York City clubs and treading the boards in New York City theater before her friend and mentor, filmmaker Paul Mazursky cast her in her first motion picture, Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976), she was awarded the part of Sarah, opposite Lenny Baker. Four years after she originated the role of Audrey, the lovably ditzy, golden-hearted, sweetest masochist in musical-comedy history in Howard Ashman's 1982 Off-Broadway play, The Little Shop of Horrors, the actress reprised the role in Frank Oz's film adaptation, Little Shop of Horrors (1986) (in which she starred opposite Rick Moranis and Steve Martin). Up to the present time, this is the actress's most talked-about and celebrated role. A few years later, Greene starred in the American drama film Talk Radio (1988), she played the part of Ellen, opposite Eric Bogosian and Alec Baldwin. Aside from the actress's work in these two motion pictures, and ABC's fantasy mystery comedy-drama television series, Pushing Daisies (2007), in which she and Swoosie Kurtz play Lily and Vivian Charles, the agoraphobic sisters. Greene has also provided her talent to Law & Order (1990), The X Files (1993), Heroes (2006), and The Young and the Restless (1973). In July 2015, Greene brought back Audrey for a two-night revival of Little Shop of Horrors at New York City Center. She starred opposite Jake Gyllenhaal (who replaced Moranis). The revival received rave reviews, and according to The New York Times, when Greene made her entrance on stage, she received the kind of entrance applause you might imagine greeting the resurrection of Maria Callas at the Metropolitan Opera for a beyond-the-grave performance of "Norma."