Pauline Little

Pauline Little ( born c. 1958) is a Scottish-born Canadian voice actress who currently resides in Montreal, Quebec.

Pauline Little
Bornc. 1958 (age 6162)
OccupationActress
Years active1975–present
Spouse(s)
(
m. 1988)
Children2

She voices Lulu's mother in The Little Lulu Show, the twins Lotus and Jasmine in The Little Flying Bears, Maya the Bee, Francine in Samurai Pizza Cats and Caillou's Grandma in Caillou.

She can also be seen in The Day After Tomorrow and Last Exit. Her stage roles included the 1993 production of Peter Cureton's Passages.[2]

Bio

Born in Scotland to theatrical parents, Little was raised in Montreal. Pauline graduated with a BFA in Theatre Performance from Concordia University in 1982 and began acting soon after. She started in theatre and then moved on to movies and television, but later moved on to doing voice acting work for animation.

She is married to actor and fellow Canadian Mark Camacho. Their son, Jesse Camacho, is also an actor, best known for the television series Less Than Kind.[3]

Filmography

Films

  • The Education of the Little Tree - Mrs. Higginbotham
  • Buster (1988)
  • Isn't She Great - Leslie Barnett
  • The Neighbor - Rebecca
  • Wicked Mines - Nicole's lawyer
  • Last Exit - Courier Clerk
  • The Day After Tomorrow - Lanson (SSL)
  • Let Them Eat - Madame Bault/Greta
  • Gleason - Motel Manager
  • Shades of Love: Moonlight Flight - Heavy Metal Singer
  • I'm Not There - Lady with Tape Recorder
  • Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis - Nurse Rita Dallas
  • Shattered Glass - Monica Merchant #2

Television

Animation

Video games

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gollark: testbot1 take <:transistorinv:736647658298540052>
gollark: Too baaaa,add, a piaoofmr?
gollark: testbot1, take a <:dodecahedron:736647657631514675>
gollark: Testbot1, take a <:bees:736647660286771271> <:dodecahedron:736647657631514675>.

References

  1. Pauline Little at K.L. Benzakein Talent
  2. "Passages is eloquent adieu by writer with AIDS". Montreal Gazette, 1993-10-22.
  3. Michael-Oliver Harding (2010-05-25). "Class of 2010: Jesse Camacho, the whiz kid". NIGHTLIFE.CA. Retrieved 2016-01-15.
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