Susan Fowler is an actor and producer, known for Solar Eclipse (2018), Cornbread Cosa Nostra (2018) and Queen Dracula (2017).
Susan is from the Confederated Salish/Kootenai tribes, Flathead Reservation. She has worked in film for over 15 years. Her projects have included: Men of Honor, The Postman, Bandits, and Under Suspicion. She's produced/assistant directed multiple Award-Winning short films and features. In addition, her casting skills have secured extras in, The Kill Hole, All the Wilderness and Significant Mother. Susan has been Line Producer and Production Manager on features, Something Like Summer, Deet n' Bax Save the World, and The Dark Place, among others.
Susan Galaviz is an actress, known for Elizabeth Blue (2017), The Gliksmans (2017) and The Matter of Life (2018).
Susan Gallagher is an American actress and producer who is known for her extensive work in film and television. Born the youngest of four children in Charlotte, NC, to father Buddy Gallagher and mother Jazz Musician June Craton. Her father, Buddy, always dreamed of being an actor. Buddy helped to grow the family business, Good Will Publishers, in Gastonia, NC, where Susan grew up. She began her studies at the Acting Studio as well as with numerous well-known teachers. After raising her family, she now spends a lot of her time in NYC studying with renowned acting teacher Zina Jasper. Susan's work takes her all over the US, most notably NYC for her series regular role of Val, a bisexual Mom coming out to her lesbian daughter in Queering (2018). Other recurring roles include shows Safe Harbor (1999), Treme (2010), and The Inbetweeners (2012), and she is perhaps best known for playing Lynn, the homeless woman, in The Karate Kid's hit series Cobra Kai (2018). Some other notable credits include Marvel's Loki (2021) opposite Tom Hiddleston, Strange Weather (2016) opposite Holly Hunter, Bloodline (2015) opposite Kyle Chandler, and Lifetime's The Christmas Contract (2018) opposite Hilarie Burton and Cheryl Ladd and numerous other TV series. Other TV appearances include NBC's Bluff City Law (2019) and HBO's The Outsider (2020). As a successful film actress as well, Susan's credits on the big screen include Walkaway Joe (2020) opposite David Strathairn, and Danny Madden's award winning Beast Beast (2020) produced by Alec Baldwin. Her lead roles have included Picking Back Up (2018) where she portrays an alcoholic/addict and received a Best Actress Nomination from WIFF in Los Angeles. Other lead roles include working in female driven films Doorstep (2019) and Windblown (2019). In her most challenging role, Susan plays a woman with the early onset of Alzheimers in I'll Be Here for a While (2019). As a Producer, she formed Her Little Red Productions, Llc, in 2014. She has written and/or produced several award winning short films. Portrait of a Woman at Dawn (2019), written and directed by the talented Cullen Douglas, premiered in Los Angeles to rave reviews on the festival circuit. She also helped produce another award winning documentary of Lisa Mills, Marching Forward (2019). Susan has been married to Jimbo Jahna since 1987. They have two children, Caroline and Bo and their rescue dog, Lily.
Susan Gayle Watts is known for her honest and intense portrayals of women in film, television and theatre. For many years Susan taught junior high and high school in the inner city by day and both starred in and directed theatre by night at various venues in Hollywood, California. After taking a sabbatical, Susan is back to pursuing her passion with verve and vigor.
Susan George was born on July 26, 1950 in Surbiton, Surrey, England. She is an actress and producer, known for Straw Dogs (1971), Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974) and Mandingo (1975). She was previously married to Simon MacCorkindale.
Born in Manhattan Beach, California, Gibney moved to Webster, New York at a young age. She graduated from Buffalo State College in New York with a major in theater and earned a Master of Fine Arts degree from the Yale School of Drama. Living in New York after school, she appeared in several off-Broadway productions. After working in Los Angeles for three years, Gibney returned to New York to refresh her theatre roots. She landed a permanent place in Hollywood in 1996.
Susan Gillias is an actress, known for The Rook (2019), Informer (2018) and Cardinal Burns (2012).
Susan Glanville was born on March 16, 1944 in Wells, Somerset, England.
Susan Glatzer's track record of productions and acquisitions has garnered seven Academy Awards and 19 Academy Award nominations, along with numerous awards at the Cannes, Sundance and Venice film festivals. She has a broad knowledge of the international market and success in developing and producing commercially viable projects for the worldwide marketplace. Serving as Senior Vice President for the Motion Picture Group at Paramount Pictures, Susan concentrated on co-productions and worldwide acquisitions. During her tenure at Paramount, she acquired films for worldwide distribution and brought into the studio and nurtured young writing and directing talent. Ms. Glatzer served as head of the production and acquisitions department for October Films in New York and relocated to Los Angeles to carry out those responsibilities as well as establish and run the company's West Coast office. During her tenure at October Films and USA Films she served as Production Executive on seven films. Among the projects Ms. Glatzer has been involved with are Traffic, Napoleon Dynamite, Secrets & Lies, Narc, Breaking the Waves and High Art. In addition, directors that Susan has worked with include Robert Altman, Albert Brooks, Mike Leigh, Lisa Cholodenko, Joe Carnahan and David Lynch. As a consultant, Ms. Glatzer has developed TV pitches with clients for ABC, Columbia Tri-Star Television, Lionsgate Television, HBO, Showtime and Bravo. Ms. Glatzer has served on the Board of Directors for the International Documentary Association, was a member of IFP's Gotham Awards Committee, a Founding Member of New York Women's Film Festival, a member of the Programming Committee for New York's Channel 13, PBS's flagship station, and a Juror at the AFI Film Festival, Seattle International Film Festival and Hamptons Film Festival. Ms. Glatzer's directorial debut, "Alive and Kicking," a documentary about swing dancing, premiered at the SXSW Film Festival and was released theatrically in 2017 by Magnolia Pictures. "Alive and Kicking" was named the film to watch by The New York Times Watching section, received a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and was invited to be part of the 2018/19 American Film Showcase, the State Department's diplomacy through cinema program.