Born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Kathy's father was a Lutheran pastor whose job moved the family across the United States and Canada the majority of her young life. Upon graduating from Rogers State University in Claremore, Oklahoma with a degree in Theater and Speech, Kathy settled in Canada in 1979. While there, she kept active in community theater; directing and producing, in particular. Upon moving to Calgary, Alberta, she seriously began to pursue additional training and attended The Company of Rogues Actors Studio. After thirty years in Canada, Kathy re-located to Allentown, Pennsylvania. Due to its close proximity to New York City and Philadelphia, this allowed her to seriously pursue acting at the ripe "old" age of 50. She attended various workshops and studied at Stella Adler Studio of Acting in Manhattan. She enjoys meeting new people in the industry, auditioning and just enjoying each step of the actors journey. Kathy opened up a professional Actors Studio (AfterWords Actors Studio) in Allentown in October 2017. She is thrilled to be able to help actors train in their craft, as well as assist with video auditions, slates and one-on-one coaching. Dividing her time between the US and Canada, Kathy is a mother to five children and nine grandchildren and is married to David (2005 to present).
Kathy Paulo is known for Hawaii Five-O (1968), Fantasy Island (1977) and Magnum, P.I. (1980).
Kathy Preston is known for Monsters Inside: The 24 Faces of Billy Milligan (2021).
Kathy Randall is an actress, known for Longmire (2012), Toy Soldiers (2012) and Life.Love.Death. (2014).
Kathy Reynolds is known for Mysteries at the Museum (2010).
Kathy Rice is known for Dickshark (2016), Rap Sucks (2011) and Night of the Pumpkin (2010).
Kathy Richter is known for Life on Pause (2020), It's a Wondrous Life (2018) and Dragon Eats Eagle (2022).
Kathy Ritter was born on August 1, 1948 in New York City, New York, USA. She is an actress, known for Kurasshâ Jô (1983), Which Witch Is Which (1984) and The Christmas Tree Train (1983).
Kathy Rose Center didn't plan to become an actor. Fueled by a steady diet of sci-fi novels in her youth, she harbored dreams of becoming an astronaut. In 1968, a regional science fair competition won her a seat at the premier screening of "2001: A Space Odyssey" at the Cinerama Theater in Houston, a tour of NASA, and lunch with astronaut Vance Brand. In 1972, she earned her degree in Aerospace Engineering & Engineering Mechanics from the University of Texas at Austin. Then life intervened. She was the first woman engineer to be hired into the new product development lab at IBM in Austin, and continued to break new ground over the next 30 years in a variety of technical and project management roles. In 1993, for example, she published a series of papers on business process reengineering, represented IBM at several workflow technology conferences, and was cited in The Economist. In 2002, she took an early retirement to pursue new interests, to travel and take a myriad of classes: horseback riding, ballroom dancing, tai chi chuan, pottery, creative writing and so forth. Much to her surprise, starting with a class on "Playing Shakespeare," she discovered acting on stage and film to be a perfect outlet for her creative talents and energy. She has since studied acting, voice work and improvisation with such notable teachers as Alan Arkin, Gabriel Folse, Babs George, Michael Costello, Pato Hoffmann, Ben Taylor and Lainie Frasier. She has also studied film-making with Steve Mims at Austin Filmworks, and screenwriting with Jill Chamberlain, Michael Hauge of Story Mastery, and others. Kathy Rose is an active member of the Austin Writers Workshop, a organization that meets weekly to provide cold table readings and critiques for local screenwriters.
Kathy Rose O'Brien is an actress, known for The Legend of Longwood (2014), Chasing Shadows (2014) and Deadly Cuts (2021).