Susanna Wagner is an actress and assistant director, known for Nash Bridges (2021), Jexi (2019) and Infernum (2019).
Susanna White is a BAFTA winning British film and television director. She attended Bromley High School and Oxford University before being awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study on the MFA Program at UCLA. Her work ranges from the hard-hitting HBO mini-series Generation Kill about the US invasion of Iraq and the John Le Carre thriller Our Kind of Traitor, to the CGI world of family film Nanny McPhee Returns with Emma Thompson, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dame Maggie Smith. She collaborated with Tom Stoppard on the mini-series Parades End (with Benedict Cumberbatch, Rebecca Hall and Adelaide Clemens) and brought Ruth Wilson to the screen in another Emmy nominated mini-series Jane Eyre. Her early work includes the award-winning documentaries Volvo City (about the Hasidic Jewish community of London's Stamford Hill) and Tell Me The Truth About Love about the poet WH Auden. Her first screen drama was about another poet, Philip Larkin, Love Again, starring Hugh Bonneville, Tara Fitzgerald and Eileen Atkins and was made for only £200,000. The film appears to be much bigger budget than it was thanks to heavy snow in London during shooting which masked non-period detail on the streets.
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Susannah Allman is an actress, known for Survivor (2015), Lucky Man (2016) and Tango One (2018).
Susannah De Wrixon is known for Hysteria (2012), Innocent (2018) and Une épopée (2008).
Susannah Devereux was born in Alicante, Spain to an English mother and a father from New Zealand. Susannah's first intention was to be a dancer but that changed after an accident. With her dance background, Susannah became a successful model and did so for many years predominantly runway travelling the world. Susannah quit the fashion business to pursue her true calling/passion - Acting and went to study with Bryon Siron (had trained with Stella Adler in NYC) at the City Acting Studio in Sydney, Australia. Susannah returned to NZ to join the cast of "Shortland Street" in the recurring role of Diane Neilson. During her time back in NZ she was invited to join a workshop set up by the NZ Film Commission with acting coach Jeremiah Comey from Los Angeles - a workshop for actors, writers and directors. There she met writer/director Jonathon Brough who then wrote the film "The Model" for her that went on to be selected at the Cannes Film Festival. Susannah arrived in the US in 1996 originally for a 3-week vacation but instantly fell in love with all that is America. She was granted a Green card as an Artist of Extraordinary Ability. Since her arrival in the US, she has appeared in numerous Independent Films working alongside the likes of Tim Meadows, Danny Trejo, John James, Robin Lively, W Earl Brown, Richard Hatch, Robert Gossett and Jean Michael Vincent and some television including "The Wild Thornberrys" and most recently "Creepshow" alongside Academy nominee Bruce Davison. She has also started producing film and web series in recent years. Always actively looking for interesting female driven stories.
Susannah Donnellan is known for The Haunting at Saint Joseph's (2023), Children's Home (2022) and If you go into the woods (2022).
Susannah Doyle (born 5 July 1966) is an English actress, playwright and film director, best known for her roles as Joy Merryweather in Drop The Dead Donkey and as Avril Burke in Ballykissangel. The daughter of the Irish actor Tony Doyle, she realized that she wished to follow in his footsteps when, aged about five or six, she was taken to see him work, often in tiny theaters with audience and actors close together. She trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. Her big TV break came in 1991 with the role of Joy, the intelligent, acid-tongued secretary and foil to her corporate-speak boss, in the Channel 4 comedy Drop The Dead Donkey. Other TV roles followed, including two episodes of Soldier, Soldier in 1996 and A Touch of Frost in 1997. When her father died in 2000, the producers of Ballykissangel asked whether she would join the cast. She had reservations over her ability to cope emotionally but took on the part of Avril Burke. In 2001, she also appeared in an episode of Cold Feet and one of Pie in the Sky. In 2012 she appeared in an episode of Lewis. In 2012 she appeared in an episode of police comedy Vexed. Since 2001, she has been pursuing parallel careers of script-writing and acting. In 2016, she appeared in "Shut Up and Dance", an episode of the anthology series Black Mirror.
Susannah Fielding is an English actress. She grew up in Havant, Hampshire in a single parent family. She completed her A levels at Christ's Hospital school, a charity school in West Sussex where she found her love of acting. She went on to train at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama where she graduated early to star in Tennesee Williams' 'The Rose Tattoo' alongside Zoe Wannamaker on the Oliver stage at the National Theatre, London. She was then cast as Hero in 'Much Ado About Nothing' alongside Simon Russell-Beale, and 'Philistines' with Ruth Wilson and Phil Davies which kick-started her highly acclaimed theatre career. She went on to star in 'Wallander' alongside Kenneth Branagh, followed by roles in numerous hit UK comedy series. She played Rafe Spall's long-suffering girlfriend Chloe in 'Pete Versus Life', and had roles in 'Catastrophe', 'Lovesick', and 'Black Mirror'. She then played series regular Brooke, love interest to Joel McHale in 'The Great Indoors' for CBS in the US where she also starred alongside Stephen Fry. She returned to the UK to play Jennie Gresham in the highly acclaimed comedy series 'This Time with Alan Partridge' where she shone as Steve Coogan's co star in mock magazine show 'This Time'. She also played leading roles in TV dramas 'Sticks and Stones' and 'Life', both written by award-winning writer Mike Bartlett.
Susannah Flood is an actress, known for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999), Chicago Fire (2012) and Life & Beth (2022).