Catherine Cohen is an actress and producer, known for The Lovebirds (2020), Slow Machine (2020) and Search Party (2016).
Catherine Colney is an actress, known for Choices (1986).
Catherine Colvey was born in 1951 in Canada. She was an actress, known for I'm Not There (2007), Deadfall (2012) and One Eyed King (2001). She died on June 8, 2011 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Catherine Combs is an American stage and screen actress based in New York City. She is known for her work on HBO's "The Deuce", "Fosse/Verdon", "New Amsterdam" and "The Blind Side". Catherine has performed in numerous stage plays In New York City and across the United States including "A View From The Bridge" directed by Ivo Van Hove.
Catherine Corcoran is best known for her starring roles in Troma Entertainments, 'Return to Nuke 'Em High' franchise and Epic Pictures feature, 'Terrifier.' Her career also includes a supporting role in the recent IFC Films feature, 'Chuck' alongside Liev Schreiber, and Naomi Watts; and a staring role in upcoming feature, 'Long Lost' by Emmy Award-winning director, Erik Bloomquist. She has co-starred on television series 'Gossip Girl,' 'The Good Wife,' 'MTV Pranks,' and worked under the mentorship of Academy Award recognized directors Peter Jackson ("The Lovely Bones") and Josh Fox ("Gasland"). She has been featured in various publications including The New York Times, Interview Magazine, TIME Magazine, PAPER Magazine, MAXIM Magazine, and Le Figaro. Much in the vein of her mentors, Catherine is also known for her advocacy of independent art, and has spoken at The Museum of Modern Art, The Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Museum of the Moving Image. Originally from Philadelphia, she now splits her time between New York and Los Angeles.
Catherine Corsini was born on May 18, 1956 in Dreux, Eure-et-Loir, France. She is a director and writer, known for La fracture (2021), La belle saison (2015) and Trois mondes (2012).
Catherine Cove is known for Crikey! It's the Irwins (2018).
There was a time when Catherine Craig was known in Hollywood as a promising and talented "B"-level actress as opposed to being simply Mrs. Robert Preston. All in all, she handled it with grace, poise and wifely dedication. Born Catherine Jewel Feltus on January 18, 1915, in Bloomington, Indiana, she was the daughter of a circus proprietor and cinema owner who piqued her initial interest in the arts. Although she attended school in the States (in her native Bloomington), she spoke Spanish fluently as a result of her childhood trips with her family to South America (including Santiago, Chile). Graduating from the University of Indiana in 1936, she was a speech instructor's assistant for a time while appearing on the local stage in Indiana. Eventually relocating to Los Angeles in search of a professional career, her well-modulated voice and crisp diction came in handy when radio work came her way. She met actor Preston while both were fellow students at the Pasadena Playhouse. The lovely blue-eyed, chestnut-haired Catherine initially earned studio interest interest after being spotted by a 20th Century Fox talent agent. She promptly apprenticed with the films Doomed to Die (1940), Murder Over New York (1940) and Manhattan Heartbeat (1940). Catherine, however, earned a contract at her husband's studio, Paramount, but remained relatively obscure with a trail of decorative bit roles in such dubiously-titled "B" hokum as Las Vegas Nights (1941), West Point Widow (1941), Parachute Nurse (1942), Showboat Serenade (1944) and The Bride Wore Boots (1946). In the post-war years the blue-eyed, chestnut-haired beauty finally began to earn more noticeable assignments such as her lifeboat survivor in Seven Were Saved (1947), her wealthy fiancé menaced by a conniving Albert Dekker in the superb "B" crime thriller The Pretender (1947), and her innocent-eyed prairie flower opposite Randolph Scott in Albuquerque (1948). Following a few stage endeavors (she appeared with Preston in the plays "Girl of the Golden West" and "The Play's The Thing" in the late 1940s), she appeared in a few more films, the best being The Pretender (1947). By 1950 Catherine had drifted back to minor status and retired from films after a nothing part in No Man of Her Own (1950). From then on she completely avoided the limelight in support of her husband's career. Preston himself became disillusioned with films and the couple moved to New York wherein he became a Tony-winning Broadway performer of musicals and legit plays. Catherine appeared in an occasional play such as "Bell, Book and Candle" and "Inherit the Wind". After living in Greenwich, Connecticut, then Montecito, California, Preston's film career was rejuvenated when he transferred his Harold Hill success to the big screen in The Music Man (1962). He won an Oscar nomination decades later with Victor/Victoria (1982). Following Preston's death from lung cancer in 1987, Catherine, along with former theater co-stars Mary Martin and Bernadette Peters, paid tribute to him at the Tony Awards presentation that year. Catherine settled in Santa Barbara and passed away at age 88 in 2004.
Catherine Curtin was born in New York City, New York, USA. She is an actress, known for Stranger Things (2016), Insecure (2016) and Orange Is the New Black (2013).
Born in Brooklyn, Catherine Cyran graduated from Harvard and promptly moved to London to work as a management consultant for the Royal Shakespeare Company. Upon returning to the States, she acted as the political issues advisor for several state and congressional campaigns in Massachusetts. Following a stint at Stanford Business School, she decided to give up all hope of a normal life and moved to Los Angeles to begin a career in filmmaking. She started by writing and producing low-budget movies for Roger Corman. Next, she wrote and directed her first feature, "White Wolves," an outdoor family adventure for Disney Channel, which won her a Daytime Emmy nomination. She went on to write and/or direct more than twenty other films, including "Dangerous Waters," a river-rafting movie for The Family Channel; "Sawbones," a horror movie for Showtime, starring Adam Baldwin; "True Heart," an action-drama shot in British Columbia, starring Kirsten Dunst; and "Christmas Do-Over," a romantic comedy for ABC Family, starring Jay Mohr. Most recently, she wrote "Honey 3: Dare to Dance," a hip-hop dance movie, and co-wrote "Werewolf: The Beast Among Us," a horror movie, both for Universal Studios. She also directed three installments of the "Prince & Me" film franchise, starring Chris Geere and Luke Mably, shooting the films in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, and Thailand. In between films, she amused herself by writing a young adult novel, Island of the Last Great Auk, adapted from her screenplay, "The Last Story," set in Newfoundland, which won the 2014 Canadian International Film Festival award for excellence in writing. Catherine continues to split her time between writing and directing, and is thrilled to announce that she has recently become a Permanent Resident of Canada. She now satisfies all Canadian content requirements and plans on residing in both Santa Monica and Vancouver in the future."