Susan Brown was born on May 6, 1946 in Bristol, England. She is an actress, known for Game of Thrones (2011), The Iron Lady (2011) and Torchwood (2006).
Susan Brown is an actress, known for Doll Cemetery (2019).
Susan Brown is known for The Unsolved Murder of Beverly Lynn Smith (2022).
Susan Brown is an actress, known for Horse Crazy 2: The Legend of Grizzly Mountain (2010).
Susan Brownfield is an actress, known for Supercollider (2013).
Susan Brownmiller was born on February 15, 1935 in New York City, New York, USA.
Susan Buckwell is an actress, known for American Wisper (2020).
Susan Burke is an actress and writer, known for Margot Rourke and the Boys Club (2013), Vamp'd (2007) and Southbound (2015).
It took almost 40 years but Susan Bush is finally answering her call to be an actor. She got a little sidetracked twenty years ago when she completed her university Film and Media degree then landed a job as the first technical operator on Fox Sports Australia. Her behind-the-scenes television career took her to London where she worked for enviable companies such as Sky, Channel Five, Discovery, The Disney Channel, CNBC Europe, Universal, The Cartoon Network and the Sci-Fi Channel, then finally back to Brisbane working with Austereo and Channel Seven. Susan moved to Spain in 2006 and swapped career for family. She later combined her love of travel and writing in 2009 by moving to Doha and co-writing the Complete Residents' Guide to Qatar for Dubai-based Explorer Publishing. She finally returned to Brisbane in 2010 to pursue a Masters degree in Writing, Editing, and Publishing (UQ). Along the way she welcomed three children in three different countries, which demonstrates her flair for consistency. Realising that she was about to turn 40, Susan decided to give this acting thing a go and so far nobody has tapped her on the shoulder and shown her the door. So either she has got 'em fooled or she is actually an actor. Since turning to the craft in January 2014, Susan has appeared in feature films, short films, TV commercials, corporate videos, short films, web series', and theatre productions. She is also an established writer, voice-over artist, film critic, judge and classification expert. She is having the best time of her life and is feeling somewhat unstoppable. For Susan, life is good.
Susan Cabot was born in Boston and raised in a series of eight foster homes. She attended high school in Manhattan, where she took an interest in dramatics and joined the school dramatic club. Later, while trying to decide between a career in music or art, she illustrated children's books during the day and sang at Manhattan's Village Barn at night. It was at this same time that she made her film debut as an extra in Fox's New York-made Kiss of Death (1947) and worked in New York-based television. Maxwell Arnow, a casting director for Columbia Pictures, spotted Cabot at the Village Barn, and a co-starring role in that studio's B-grade South Seas drama On the Isle of Samoa (1950) resulted. While in Hollywood Cabot was also signed for the role of an Indian maiden in Universal's Tomahawk (1951) with Van Heflin. Subsequently signed to an exclusive contract by Universal, Cabot co-starred in a long string of films opposite leading men like John Lund, Tony Curtis and Audie Murphy. Inevitably, she became fed up with the succession of western and Arabian Nights roles, asked for a release from her Universal pact and accepted an offer from Harold Robbins to star in his play "A Stone for Danny Fisher" in New York. Roger Corman lured her back to Hollywood to play the lead in the melodramatic rock-'n-'roller Carnival Rock (1957) and she stayed on to star in five more films for the enterprising young producer-director. After a highly publicized 1959 fling with Jordan's King Hussein, Cabot divided her time between TV work and roles in stage plays and musicals.