Emma Cleasby

Emma Cleasby is an English theatre, television and film actress. She played Megan in the 2002 horror film Dog Soldiers.

Emma Cleasby
Born
Dent, Cumbria, England, UK
OccupationActress
Years active2000present

Career

Cleasby gained a degree in Drama from the University of Hull, and studied at the L'Ecole Philippe Gaulier. She has appeared on stage in productions of Private Lives, The Islander, Night Swimming, Vurt and Robin Hood. She has also appeared in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, directed by Adrian Noble, and as "Lady Anne" in the English Shakespeare Company's Richard III, directed by Michael Bogdanov.[1]

On television, Cleasby has appeared in British TV series Heartbeat, Holby City, Doctors, 55 Degrees North and Coronation Street, as well as one-off dramas Sweet Dreams and The Project.[1] Her appearance in Mogwai's music video Stanley Kubrick from EP+6 filmed in black and white placed her in the role of a beautiful woman with the video's characteristic of close unblinking expressions throughout. She has appeared in two films by director Neil Marshall - as Megan in the 2002 horror film Dog Soldiers - and Katherine Sinclair in Doomsday.[1] Cleasby also stars in the horror thriller F under the direction of Johannes Roberts.[2]

gollark: FEAR low-cost biotechnology.
gollark: It is, at least, possible to vaccinate against novel things very fast now.
gollark: We could probably manage decently high populations without removing vast quantities of environment with better management and application of existing technology, but nobody is doing this.
gollark: I mean, we chlorinate water now because of that sort of thing, you would have to get around all of that.
gollark: If you wanted to wipe out all humans for some reason, it would probably be quite effective to make a virus with reaaally delayed fatal effects which spreads well in the meantime.

References

  1. "Emma Cleasby" (PDF). www.kenmcreddie.com. Retrieved 19 December 2009.
  2. "BD Horror News - A Bloody Death in Johannes Roberts' 'F'". www.bloody-disgusting.com. Retrieved 19 December 2009.
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