Terri Hanauer

Terri Hanauer (born March 25, 1964 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian-American actress, film director, screenwriter and photographer.

Terri Hanauer
Born (1964-03-25) March 25, 1964
OccupationActress, Television and film director, photographer
Years active1981–present
Websitehttp://www.terrihanauer.com

Biography

Hanauer grew up in Canada and later moved to the United States; she holds dual citizenship in both countries. She studied at the New York University, where she obtained her degree in Theatre Arts. Later she worked as an actress in both America and Canada.[1][2]

Hanauer's debut in movies came in 1977's horror film David Cronenberg's 1977 Rabid (film) which Starred Marilyn Chambers as the lead. Hanauer's death in the film was her getting killed by Chamber's character in a spa, then being put in a medium-sized freeze bitten with rabies. Her death scene is used on mostly all American VHS and DVD covers since the early 80's.[3] at the time of filming, she was credited as Terry Schonblum.[4]

Hanauer began acting under the name Hanauer in 1981 with the television Scruples. Then she played several roles in television films and television series including Matlock (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1988-1989) Beggars and Choosers (2000-2001) and Havoc (2005).

Hanauer also played in the theater, she played at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles and the Arena Stage in Washington D.C..

Hanauer is also an active professional photographer who has photographed over a hundred actors such as John Glover and others. Her photos appeared in magazines, advertisements and websites.[2]

Because of her background as an actress and photographer decided to do directing and writing . She also wrote the comic theater play La Ronde De Lunch at the Skylight Theatre in Los Angeles. She won six LA Stage Scene Awardsincluding Best Director of a Comedy.[2]

gollark: Right now mesh networking is still quite early in its life and I don't think many of the problems have been worked out entirely yet.
gollark: They might be able to be once the stuff develops better and people work out exactly what works best.
gollark: I don't think you could make stuff compatible enough that you wouldn't need any intermediaries without it just essentially using the same networking stack.
gollark: The main issue, I think, is that they don't really work similarly at a *routing* level.
gollark: They don't need to be on the same frequency or anything, you could just have a device with multiple transceivers.

References

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