Patricia McRae is an actor, who hails from Long Island, New York. Residing so close to New York City, her early performance ambitions leaned toward the theater. Patricia is an avid lover of musical theatre. After college, Patricia became an Educator working specifically with teenage students with disabilities all the while, her love and passion for the Arts intensified. She began her acting career in local theater productions and independent films. In a very short time, Patricia began to pursue television and feature films in earnest. She has been blessed to work with talented writers, actors, directors and crew on popular Episodic shows and TV films. While much of her time is spent training, auditioning, and pursuing her dreams, Patricia makes time to pray/meditate daily, spend time with friends, enjoy vacations with her family and volunteer with various organizations. She supports organizations that specifically provide for the health, education, and welfare of children. Patricia looks forward to new experiences in her acting career, life and world travels.
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Patricia Michaels is known for A Thousand Voices (2014), Project Runway All Stars (2012) and Project Runway (2004).
Patricia Michelle Bushrod is an actress, known for Superfly (2018), Naked Hustle (2018) and Naked Hustle (2020).
About Patricia: Not only is Patricia a seasoned and trained actress. She is also a filmmaker. Patricia wrote, directed, acted and produced her first short film, Blink to help bring awareness to those who are suffering from PTSD and to help support their friends and families who are also being affected by this destructive disorder. Her passion to help others comes from her own experience as a teen having to witness the effects PTSD had on her father and her family. Patricia's father served in the U.S. Army Special Forces and on multiple combat tours in Vietnam and other countries and during his time, there was little support for those who suffered with PTSD. Her brother also served in Iraq and other countries and was diagnosed with PTSD with TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury). Blink helped shed light on this debilitating disorder in 2014 and was officially selected into the Inaugural Indie Capitol Awards in Washington, DC. In October of 2018, Patricia received 1st place for her short film, Fly Right, in the AT&T Create A-Thon. She wanted a challenge and entered into the competition. After building a team, she wrote, directed, and acted in the short which went on to win! Patricia will continue her journey in creating content and storytelling. She has fallen in love with directing so we will see more of her behind the camera as well as in front. To give back, Patricia helped raise awareness in "The Thirst Project", a nonprofit organization to build working wells in third world countries. Patricia received her first professional training at 'The Actors Theatre Workshop Training Institute' in Boston, MA where she completed the Sanford Meisner Program for two years. She also studied with Robert Carnegie at Playhouse West in LA and received a Certificate of Completion at UCLA School of Theatre, Film and Television's (TFT) Professional Program in Acting for the Camera. Through TFT, she has had the privilege of learning from Emily Rose (Haven), Shiri Appleby (Unreal), Wendell Pierce (The Wire), Meredith Scott Lynn (Days of Our Lives), Catherine Dent (The Shield), Nolan North (Uncharted), Sacha Gervasi (The Terminal), " Jennifer Aniston (Friends), Whitney Cummings (creator: 2Broke Girls) and more. Patricia is a member of the Screen Actor Guild (SAG-AFTRA), American Equity Association (AEA) and member of The SkyPilot Theatre Company, a non-profit ensemble of resident playwrights, actors, directors and designers producing provocative, compelling and challenging new works for the Los Angeles theatre-going audience. Patricia is a member of Women In Film, East West Theatre, and the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (CAPE). She also serves as a member of The Television Academy of the Arts and Sciences. For Fun, Patricia loves hanging out with her family, taking her dogs to the dog park and hikes, roller-skating and binge watching some of her favorite shows on Netflix. Her motto: "Live life to the fullest because tomorrow is never promised!" Favorite Quote: "If There Is A Will, There Is A Way"
Patricia Moffatt was born on December 14, 1930 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She was an actress, known for Tommy Boy (1995), Doctor Yes: The Hyannis Affair (1983) and Festival (1960). She died on June 11, 2012 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Patricia Mok was born on 17 October 1971 in Singapore. She is an actress, known for Disclosed (2013), My Sassy Neighbour (2005) and Absolutely Charming (2012).
Woefully misused while in her prime screen years at Paramount during the late '30s and '40s, Patricia Morison, lovely and exotic with Rapunzel-like long, dark hair, nevertheless became a star in her own right -- as a supremely talented diva on the singing stage. Born on March 19, 1915, in New York City, her father, William Morison, was a playwright and occasional actor who billed himself under the name Norman Rainey. Patricia's mother worked for British Intelligence during WWI. Graduating from Washington Irving High School in New York, Patricia studied at the Art Students League and proceeded to take acting classes at the Neighborhood Playhouse while also studying dance with the renowned Martha Graham. She earned a steady check at the time as a dress shop designer. At age 19 Patricia made her Broadway debut in the short-lived play "Growing Pains" and proceeded to understudy the legendary Helen Hayes in her classic role of "Victoria Regina". She never went on. In 1938, shortly after opening in the musical "The Two Bouquets" opposite musical star Alfred Drake, Paramount talent scouts, looking for exotic, dark-haired glamour types then to rein in their star commodity, Dorothy Lamour, scoped Patricia out and tested her. The blue-eyed beauty who indeed resembled Lamour was signed and made her film debut the following year, showing bright promise in the "B" film Persons in Hiding (1939). Patricia's stock did not improve, however, despite such promise, and she was relegated to such second-string westerns as I'm from Missouri (1939), Rangers of Fortune (1940), Romance of the Rio Grande (1940), and The Round Up (1941). When things didn't improve with such stilted fare as Night in New Orleans (1942), Beyond the Blue Horizon (1942), and Are Husbands Necessary? (1942), she left Paramount. She freelanced in 'other woman' roles which included the Tracy/Hepburn vehicle Without Love (1945) and The Fallen Sparrow (1943), and played Empress Eugenie in The Song of Bernadette (1943), but the focus was seldom on her. Overlooked when cast in top leads at 'poverty row' programmers, her best chance at film stardom came as Victor Mature's despairing wife who takes her own life (which was to have been shown on screen) in Kiss of Death (1947), but her juicy role was excised from the film by producers (or, more likely, the Breen Commission) who felt audiences weren't ready for such shocking displays. During the war years, Patricia had trained her voice and performed in USO tours. Cole Porter heard her sing in Hollywood one evening and decided she had the right tenacity, feistiness and vocal expertise to play the female lead in his new show. In 1948, over the objections of both the producer and director, stardom was clenched in the form of Porter's classic musical-within-a-musical "Kiss Me Kate." As the sweeping, vixenish Lilli Vanessi, a severe-looking stage diva whose own volatile personality coincided with that of her onstage role (Kate from "The Taming of the Shrew"), Patricia found THE role of her career, giving over 1,000 performances in all. Playing again alongside her former Broadway co-star Alfred Drake, Patricia basked in the multitude of glowing reviews, and such songs as "I Hate Men," "Wonderbar" and "So In Love" rightfully became signature songs. Following this triumph, film work never became a top priority again. Patricia continued on successfully in the London version of "Kate" and went on to conquer other classic leads in the musicals "The King and I," "Kismet," "The Merry Widow," "Song of Norway" and Pal Joey," among others. Her last movie role was a cameo part as writer George Sand in the mildly received biopic Song Without End (1960) starring Dirk Bogarde as composer Franz Liszt. On TV Patricia recreated her Kate role with Mr. Drake and made a few scattered but lively appearances over the years. One of her later guest shots was on a 1989 episode of "Cheers" and a 1991 episode of "Gabriel's Fire." In later years the never-married actress devoted herself to painting (an early passion) and enjoyed many showings in the Los Angeles area. The lovely lady with the trademark long hair died in L.A. at the age of 103, on May 20, 2018.
Patricia Murray is known for Orchard Revolution (2014) and El caso Alcàsser (2019).