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Laura Harris

Laura Elizabeth Harris (born November 20, 1976[1][2]) is a Canadian actress who has appeared in a wide variety of movies and television shows. She is probably best known for her roles as Marybeth Louise Hutchinson in The Faculty (1998), Maggie in Severance (2006), Daisy Adair in Dead Like Me, and Marie Warner in Season 2 of 24.[3] She took a hiatus from acting in 2015 after almost 28 years, but began reappearing in roles from 2021. She is sometimes credited as Elizabeth Harris and Laura E. Harris.

Early life

Harris is the daughter of schoolteachers. She began acting in radio dramas[4] and animation series when she was five years old.[5] As a child Harris was educated at Crofton House School[5] and attended college through UC correspondence.[6] After working nearly 14 years in television, she broke into feature film acting as a teenager.

Career

Harris is known for her roles as Grim Reaper Daisy Adair in the cable series Dead Like Me[7] and as Marie Warner in the spy drama 24.[5] Her film career dates back to 1990 when she appeared in an adaptation of Stephen King's It as Loni.[8] She appeared as Marybeth Louise Hutchinson in The Faculty in 1998.[9][10]

In 2006, Laura Harris starred as Maggie in a British-German horror film called Severance, directed by Christopher Smith, and written by Smith and James Moran.[11]

In the summer of 2009, she co-starred in the internationally co-produced science fiction series Defying Gravity as Zoe Barnes.[12]

She has also done voice-overs in animated TV shows including The New Adventures of Beany and Cecil, Astonishing X-Men, Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. and My Little Pony Tales.

While never officially quit acting, she switched her focus in 2010 to education and began attending college at UC Berkeley. While there, she began to show an interest in activism.[13] In 2013, she began working for a tech company that also worked to improve local communities, politically and otherwise.[13]

In 2021, after a 6 year hiatus from acting, Laura took on the role of Willow Ward on the Netflix show Scaredy Cats, appearing in 3 episodes.[13] Also in 2021 Laura had a part in the Lifetime Channel movie Gone Mom.[13]

Filmography

Film

Television

References

  1. ^ Laura Harris' bio at www.northernstars.ca
  2. ^ "Close-up: Laura Harris" by Jay Bobbin, Chicago Tribune (16 Dec, 2007) Retrieved from ProQuest 420682332
  3. ^ Wilder, Gabriel (July 14, 2007). "Dead Like Me, series2". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  4. ^ "Tomorrow's Star: At 21, is she Vancouver's next really big thing?" by Glen Schaefer, The Province (13 April, 1998) [Final Edition] Retrieved from ProQuest 269171963
  5. ^ a b c "Actor is liberated by role; Laura Harris used to playing women from U.S. Midwest" by Alex Strachan, Leader Post (10 Oct, 2007) [Final Edition] Retrieved from ProQuest 349883216
  6. ^ "Learning to love L.A.: Vancouver actress Laura Harris finds the heart behind Tinseltown's glitz" by Glen Schaefer, The Province (1 April, 2001) [Final Edition] Retrieved from ProQuest 269276184
  7. ^ "Soul Survivors Dead Like Me's Reapers Find Romance in Second Season" by Tom Jicha, South Florida Sun-Sentinel (24 July, 2004) [Broward Metro Edition] Retrieved from ProQuest 387733667
  8. ^ "Stephen King's IT: Every Future Star In The 1990 Miniseries" by Michael Kennedy at screenrant.com
  9. ^ The Faculty review by Dennis Harvey at variety.com
  10. ^ "Good For Her: A Timeline of Women Monsters In Film" by Sharai Bohannon at www.dreadcentral.com
  11. ^ Severance review by Derek Elley at variety.com
  12. ^ "Inner-Space Problems in Outer Space" by Alessandra Stanley at www.nytimes.com
  13. ^ a b c d Lee, Nick (June 21, 2022). "Whatever Happened To Laura Harris? (2022 Update)". Ned Hardy. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  14. ^ "'Habitat': Future Schlock" by Tom Shales at www.washingtonpost.com
  15. ^ "Quebec Scene" at playbackonline.ca
  16. ^ Suicide Kings review by Joe Leydon at variety.com
  17. ^ The Manor review by Cathy Meils at variety.com
  18. ^ The Highwayman review by Erin Richter at ew.com
  19. ^ "Industry pact brings first-run films to First Nation reserves" by Etan Vlessing at playbackonline.ca
  20. ^ "Coming Soon: Preggoland" by Julianna Cummins at playbackonline.ca
  21. ^ "Abc Monday Night Movie a Kidnapping in the Family" by John P. McCarthy at variety.com
  22. ^ "Broadcast: Mo’ MOWs from Filmworks" at playbackonline.ca
  23. ^ "Sonoda shooting Beasts" by Cheryl Binning at playbackonline.ca

External links