KaDee Strickland

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KaDee Strickland bigraphy, stories - American actress

KaDee Strickland : biography

December 14, 1975 –

Katherine Dee "KaDee" Strickland (born December 14, 1975)Altamura, Mike. . EZ Entertainment. October 2004. Retrieved June 13, 2005. is an American actress known for her role as Charlotte King on the ABC drama Private Practice.

Well known in her hometown of Patterson, Georgia, when she was a child, she began acting during high school. Strickland studied the profession in Philadelphia and New York City, where she obtained mostly small roles in film, television and theater projects, among them The Sixth Sense (1999). Her participation in the 2003 Hollywood films Anything Else and Something’s Gotta Give led to her receiving significant parts in the horror pictures Anacondas and The Grudge (both 2004). In the period they were released, Strickland was referred to as "the pride of Patterson" and the horror fandom’s "newest scream queen", though her performances in both films received mixed critical reviews.

Fever Pitch The Wedding Bells Private Practice

Early life and education

Strickland was born in Blackshear, Georgia to Susan Strickland, a nurse, and Dee Strickland, a high school football coach, principal and superintendent. KaDee’s birthname is Katherine Dee; her parents combined the K in Katherine with her father’s name to make KaDee. She was raised in Patterson, Georgia, which she said is a "one-stoplight town", and she had a job picking tobacco on a local farm for eight years. When she was a child, Strickland watched the Woody Allen film Annie Hall (1975) and was, as she put it, "wanting to be in that place, and being completely taken with the energy of those people. I wanted to be in it". During her childhood, she was well known locally as a member of the Strickland family and for her extracurricular activities and achievements (she was the Homecoming Queen in elementary, middle and high school, the student council president and a cheerleader). She never considered a career in the performing arts until her participation in a one-act play performed by students of her high school: "[…] the minute I set foot on stage, that was it. Destiny took over. There were no other options. I felt like I fit my skin, I knew what I was here to do", Strickland said.

After graduating from high school, Strickland wanted to study drama at college in New York City, but her parents did not want her to live in such a large city so soon. Consequently, she applied instead to the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. During her studies there, she joined the Screen Actors Guild and considered using her given name, Katherine, as the first part of her stage name, before deciding she was "much too tomboy" for it. Strickland took a part-time waitressing job at a local restaurant and interned at a casting agency, where one of her tasks was to read lines at auditions for small roles in local film and television projects; the job landed Strickland her first film role. After graduating from university with a Fine Arts degree,. 101.5 The Point. Retrieved August 20, 2005. she was schooled in New York City,Head, Steve. . IGN FilmForce. September 20, 2004. Retrieved June 13, 2005. and in late 2003, she moved to Los Angeles, California. In 2006, Strickland received the University of the Arts’s Silver Star Alumni Award.

Career

Early work

Strickland’s career began in 1999 with a brief appearance as a mourner at a funeral after-party in The Sixth Sense, a two-line part that she received after impressing writer-director M. Night Shyamalan when reading lines for those auditioning for the film. According to Strickland, her role in the film helped her learn to temper her fake crying. The same year, she served as an extra in the independent film The Sterling Chase, and appeared in a small role opposite Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie in James Mangold’s drama Girl, Interrupted.

When staying in Philadelphia, Strickland had opportunities to take part in other films in production in and around the city. Those included Rel Dowdell’s Train Ride, a date rape thriller filmed in 1998, but not commercially released until 2005 because of financing problems.Secours, Molly. . The Tennessean. April 5, 2005. Retrieved June 13, 2005; Colbert, Ray. . video2edit.com. 2004. Retrieved October 3, 2010. She was also cast in the crime drama Diamond Men with Robert Forster and Donnie Wahlberg; it opened to sparkling reviews, with Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times declaring it "a fantastic film, with a good cast".. Metacritic. Retrieved June 13, 2005; Roeper, Richard. . Chicago Sun-Times. October 19, 2001. Retrieved August 22, 2005. After she moved to New York City, Strickland appeared in Adam Bhala Lough’s filmmaking debut, Bomb the System, which received unenthusiastic notices from critics and was not shown outside film festivals until 2005.. Metacritic. Retrieved June 13, 2005; . Internet Movie Database. Retrieved June 13, 2005.