Emily Swallow
Swallow started her Broadway career in the theatre, appearing in various shows, including High Fidelity at the Guthrie Theater and King Lear for Shakespeare in the Park. Swallow also appeared as a character in Much Ado About Nothing for Shakespeare in the Park and the World Premiere of the Off-Broadway play Romantic Poetry, Measure for Pleasure. Swallow began her career in film as a playwright for the military in The Lucky Ones. Swallow was in the world premieres for Donald Margulies' The Country House as well as Louis Jenkins' Nice Fish both of which were held at Los Angeles' Geffen Playhouse. In 2010, she was awarded the Falstaff Award as the best female performer in the world for her part as the Taming of the Shrew. The Taming of the Shrew. Swallow joined forces with Jac Huberman in the creation of an original stage production, Jac N Swallow. The duo performed in the New York's Laurie Beeckman Theater in 2012 and at Joe's Pub in the year 2012. The show focuses on the comic misadventures of the two who face a variety of issues in their lives with various levels of dignity and sanity. The characters are in the process of being created into a TV series. She worked with Mark Rylance, poet Louis Jenkins as well as Guthrie Theater. Guthrie Theater on the premiere of Nice Fish. She was cast as a part of Ayad Akhtar's Disgraced, produced of Center Theatre Group. Center Theatre Group. Swallow had her first television appearance with Guiding Light. Her other characters comprise Southland. The Good Wife. NCIS. Flight of the Conchords. Medium. As series regular Dr. Michelle Robidaux in TNT's medical drama, Monday Mornings[2[2]. The role she played was FBI agent Kim Fischer in The Mentalist. In 2015, she was cast in the eleventh season Supernatural as the character Amara, "the Darkness". Beginning in 2019, she took on the role in the role of Armorer in the Star Wars series The Mandalorian as the head of the Mandalorians who are traditionalists. The series has shown her face but she hasn't been able to reveal her identity because the people who wear traditional attire will never take off their headgears. As the season 3 plot focuses more on Mandalorian, the character appears increasingly.



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