To Do: t e a m
 

Michelle Wolff m i c h e l l e  w o l f f
samantha
Michelle holds a BA in theater arts with an acting emphasis from UC Santa Cruz. Her theater experience is extensive; from the classics to the modern and most everything in between. Her love for theater is still strong and she goes back to it whenever time permits.

Her film work includes roles in "Mango Kiss," "Evolution" with Julianne Moore, "Unspeakable" with Dennis Hopper, and "Sol Goode" with Robert Wagner and "The Ten Rules." She also worked on countless shorts and experimental indies. Michelle's television experience is extensive, including roles in "ER," "Without A Trace," "Close to Home," "Sleeper Cell," "LA Dragnet," 3 seasons on CBS's "Chicago Hope" in a reoccurring role as well as 2 seasons appearing on NBC's "Providence" and 2 seasons on FOX's "Boston Public." She also guest starred on NBC's "Nash Bridges." For a full list check out her credits page.

Michelle's commercial and print work focuses quite a bit on her passion for fitness. She has done numerous infomercials for new fitness products as well as modeled for and endorsed sporting equipment, athletic apparel, and fitness programs. She loves everything about sports. Whether she is participating or watching, it is something you will find Michelle doing in her off time. She holds a 2nd degree black belt and a teaching certificate in ATA Taekwondo. She hopes to be able to use this skill in many films to come. She plays many sports and can fumble her way through any sport she doesn't actively participate in. Scuba Diving is another love she doesn't get to participate in often enough. She competed for many years in swimming but now just loves to be in the water for pleasure.

Michelle resides in Los Angeles now but still misses San Francisco, where she lived for 6 years and which will always be "home."

Jennifer J. Katz j e n n i f e r  j.  k a t z
melissa
Jennifer J. Katz was born in a little town called "The Bronx" and raised in Southwest Florida. She holds a BA in Theatre and a minor in vocal performance from Carson-Newman College in Jefferson City, TN. For 2½ years, she was a resident actor with the Barter Theatre, the State Theatre of Virginia. In that short time, she performed in over 30 plays including Wit, The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, The Grapes of Wrath, Godspell, You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown, in many original plays, and as Tybalt and Nurse in a 5-person cast of Romeo and Juliet. Since coming back home to New York, she has appeared in independent films such as "Crutch" and "The D Word," and has worked extensively with manhattantheatresource, Smatter Theatre Ensemble, The American Theatre of Actors, and Chelsea's NativeAliens Theatre Collective. As a writer, her play "Love, Joel" received first place at Core 24, a 24-hour play festival sponsored by the Core Theatre Company. It was then produced and published by manhattantheatresource as part of the 2005 Estrogenius Festival, a celebration of womens voices. Another of Jennifer's plays, "Fever" was produced along with "Love, Joel" at the 13th Street Repertory Theatre. In November, 2005, she teamed up with the very funny Jamie Lorello to write a one-act sketch comedy play called "Cubicle 51" which opened at the Actors Playpen in Los Angeles and sold to packed out houses. When she's not acting, writing, or directing, she enjoys watching re-runs of Six Feet Under, travelling, or simply exploring her city.

Dasha Snyder d a s h a  s n y d e r
writer
A Charm City native, Dasha Snyder started her dramatic career on the stage of Baltimore Friends School. She trained as a playwright at Drew University, then furthered her studies at Playwrights Horizons Theatre School. Several of her plays were produced off-Broadway. Her full-length play Beached Whales won the Robert Fischer Oxnam Award for Playwriting, and her one-act play My Name Is... won a full production in the Out On The Edge Festival. Her screenplay Transit Karma was a finalist at the Sundance Screenwriter's Lab, a semi-finalist in the 2005 Nolita Film Festival and a quarter-finalist in the 9th Annual American Screenwriters Association International Screenplay Competition. Her latest screenplay, the dramedy To Do: was a finalist at AFI's Directing Workshop for Women 2006 and won her a fellowship at the 2006 OutFest Screenwriters Lab. She created, wrote and executive produced The D Word, a New York City parody of Showtime's Sapphic TV series The L Word. The D Word has played LGBT film festivals worldwide and won the Jury Prize for Best Feature at the Fire Island Film & Video Festival. She wrote on The Land, a short film series for Power Up! in production 2008. Her most recent script, Speed Grieving, directed by Jessica Daniels, wrapped principal photography in Winter 2007. Snyder is a contributor to AfterEllen.com, Velvetpark Magazine and GO Magazine, and authored the popular column "Girl's Night Out" on the website Total New York. She served as Coordinator of the Filmmakers Forum and Programming Assistant at NewFest: The New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Film Festival for three years, as assistant programmer at Outfest: The Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, and was a producer with Dyke TV. Snyder line produced the documentary Two Hands directed by Nathaniel Kahn, which was nominated for Best Documentary Short at the 79th Annual Academy Awards. She is currently writing feature scripts for the screen, both silver & small.


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