Emily Swallow
Swallow's career began at Broadway theater, which she starred in a variety of shows. These comprised High Fidelity and King Lear at the Guthrie Theater. Other shows included Much Ado About Nothing for Shakespeare in the Park. The off-Broadway debuts of Romantic Poetry and Measuring for Pleasure. Swallow made her film debut as a playwright for the military in The Lucky Ones. Swallow starred opposite Mark Rylance at the Guthrie Theatre in Louis Jenkins' play Nice Fish,[citation required] as well as in Donald Margulies' play The Country House in Los Angeles' Geffen Playhouse. Also, she starred in Manhattan Theater Club in John Patrick Shanley's musical Romantic Poetry, which was the first time it was performed in the world. The year was 2010, for her portrayal of Kate in The Taming of the Shrew She was awarded the Falstaff Award. 4 In 2012, Swallow as well as fellow comedian Jac Huberman conceived an stage production titled Jac N Swallow, which they performed in New York at the Laurie Beeckman Theater and Joe's Pub. The show focuses on the comic misadventures of the two when they face very diverse situations with different levels of dignity and sanity. The show is planned to develop a show inspired by the characters. Nice Fish was premiered at the Guthrie Theater in 2013. The show was developed together with Mark Rylance. In 2016, she portrayed the character of Ayad Akhtar in the show Disgraced, produced by Center Theatre Group. [6] Swallow's first television part was on Guiding Light, and she later played parts in Southland, Ringer, The Good Wife, NCIS, Flight of the Conchords, Medium, as series regular The Good Wife, Dr. Michelle Robidaux on TNT's medical drama Monday Mornings[2] as well as Rizzoli and Isles. The role she played was FBI Agent Kim Fischer in The Mentalist. 1-7 She was Amara, the Darkness in Supernatural's 11th Season. In 2019, she is her character, the Armorer in the show The Mandalorian in Star Wars in addition to being the head of the Mandalorians of traditional faith. The traditionalists don't remove their armors to let others view. In Season 3, the character is more prominent as the plot focuses on Mandalorians and their customs, instead of only Mandalorians.



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