Supporting Cast Information
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Kim Horning as Kathleen Perkins
Kim is thrilled to be joining the cast of Exodus 20:13. Recent credits include The Gin
Game, I Hate Hamlet and Seven Keys to Baldpate at Bristol Valley Theater and The
Bald Soprano at The Holmdel Theater Company in New Jersey. Kim has also worked
quite a bit in New York theater in such venues as The Neighborhood Playhouse,
Theater for the New City, and Ensemble Studio Theater. Film credits include Taste,
York Street 1929 and Queen of Beasts. Kim is a member of NRDC and Greenpeace.

Jerry Marsini as Harold Regan
Jerry has worked in a number of thrilling plays and mind-bending
films you've never heard of. However, a few of his somewhat
recognizable roles and NY theater credits include: Solyony in The
Three Sisters, Sejanus in I, Claudius Live, Alexas in Antony &
Cleopatra, Jack in The Importance of Being Earnest, the title role
in Eugene Ionesco's The Viscount, The Doormat in Another Urban
Riff's MONO, Edgar in E.L. Doctorow's Drinks Before Dinner,
Josthinkle and Ludwig in the U.S. premiere of Ariane Mnouchkine's
Mephisto, and Hagen and Fricka in the Ridicu-fest revival of
Charles Ludlam's Der Ring Gott Farblonjet.

Caroline G. Pleasant as Gladys David
Caroline is a professional actress who has performed and studied throughout the DC
metro area as well as teaching a youth creative drama program for the non-profit
group Teens Count. She has appeared on the popular television shows Homicide
and The Corner, had a recurring role on The Wire and performed in two History
Channel programs, The Cole Conspiracy and the soon to be aired Ground Zero.
Caroline has starred in countless stage productions including A Little Child Shall
Lead Them, Flyin’ West, The Pity Party (for which she received the David S.
Schroeder Award), Happy Ending, Nuts, The Firebugs and was a member of the
original stage cast of the multi-genre performance-art piece Flying Lessons. Notable
film roles include the judge in the independent feature Black’s Law and a sex addict
in John Water’s A Dirty Shame. When not performing, Caroline volunteers as a
counselor for Prince George’s County Suicide and Crisis Prevention Center.

Jewel Greenberg as Linda Dorcy
Jewel holds a B.A. in Theatre (honors) from the University of Puget Sound
in Tacoma, WA where she focused on acting and directing. She relocated
to DC in 2002 to begin work at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. Jewel
has since served as dramaturg and director for outreach programs at
both the Woolly and Young Playwrights’ Theater while pursuing her
career in acting. Locally, she has appeared with the Madcap Players,
Theatre Alliance and the Washington Shakespeare Company, and on the
stages of the Woolly Mammoth, Young Playwrights’ Theater, Open Circle
Theater, Imagination Stage, and Adventure Theatre. Jewel also appeared
in BLACK KRAUT Production’s previous feature film, Verschwinden.

Kenneth McCoy as Father Andrew McNally
The Irish born actor started his training at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in
New York City. He went on to study with the late Bill Wendt of the Actor's Studio; Robert
McCaskill, director of Chicago City Limits and coach on the film Girlfight; and the famed
Alice Spivak. Kenneth has worked on stage and in film under the direction of Jim
Farmer, Michael Cuesta, and Harold Trumpetero. He also appeared as the menacing
Stuart in Black Kraut Productions' most recent feature Verschwinden.

Anita Anthonj as Hannah Watts
Anita has studied theatre and appeared in productions around the world, from New York
to Cincinnati, from Strasbourg, France to her homeland of Germany. Some of her
favorite roles include Mhyrrine in Lysistrate, The Shadow in Mam'zel Ophélie, the
Abbess in A Comedy of Errors, and most recently as Cara Brown in Guns, Shackles &
Winter Coats at the Where Eagles Dare Theatre in New York. Anita's film work includes
lead roles in the short films The Filth and Never Assume as well as a supporting role in
James Furino's feature Stealing Martin Lane, starring Dylan Baker. She is currently
training at the Circle in the Square Theatre in New York City and is scheduled to
graduate in April.

Michelle Trout as Charlotte Weaver
Michelle is delighted to join the cast of Exodus. Premiering this past October in
Baltimore was Livelihood (37.5 Productions) - a 'splatstick' where Michelle had a
principal role as an extremely bad-natured mother-in-law zombie. Other film characters
include abusive mother of a teenage killer (Kamikazes: A Deathography), creepy
alcoholic (Secret Sin), sadistic elementary school principal (When Mother & Father
Fought), First Lady (Bottled Genie), and haughty college professor (Gray Tale). “I've
had my fingers chopped off, been run through with a spear, head split open with a
machete, electrocuted, poisoned, drunk, and drugged. I'm looking forward to being
strangled, shot, stabbed, and drowned.” TV and stage characters ranged from socialite
to "sassy, brassy, heart of gold" bartender.
Sean Brennan as Ralph Weaver
Sean has appeared on film as a principal role in House Call, in various
National Public Service Announcements and a Department of
Education industrial. His regional theatre credits include Cosimo de
Medici in The Shakespeare Theatre Company's Lorenzaccio and a
Midshipman in Billy Budd with the Washington National Opera. He has
appeared in numerous community theatre productions, with favorite
roles being Elmer in Best Christmas Pageant Ever; Mr. Hardcastle in
She Stoops to Conquer; Coachman in Pinocchio; Boy in Velveteen
Rabbit; Bombur in The Hobbit; and Cat in Honk!. He has trained under
Diane Hardin, Chambers Stevens, Brenna McDonough, Sareva
Racher; and studied with The Shakespeare Theatre Company.

Christine D. Lee as Joan Koo
Christine is a Washington, D.C. actress that has appeared in numerous plays,
films and industrials. On stage, she played Lucy in Paradise Lost at the
American Century Theater and Johnna in Naomi in the Living Room at the
Montgomery Playhouse. Christine's film work includes leading roles in the
independent feature Date Number One and What's Eating R. Muellering, which
was produced as part of the D.C. 48-Hour Film Project. She has also had
supporting roles in Painted Smiles, Secret Sin, and the short I Quit. Christine
has studied at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre School and The Theatre Lab and
has been coached by Lisa Nanni-Messegee.

Breanna Pine as Mary Foley
Originally from Lawrence, Kansas, Breanna graduated from Emerson
College in Boston with a degree in Performing Arts. Favorite theatre
credits include Kathy in The Last Five Years, Nellie in Floyd Collins,
Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream and Irina in Three Sisters. This fall,
Breanna was very excited to work with Kenneth Lonergan in his new movie
Margaret, and was also privileged to perform with the Comedy Trio Happy
Hour in their short film You'll Never Write a Treatment That Sells.

Bill White as Peter Trenton
Trained at The American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, Bill will be appearing as
one-eyed Irish surgeon John Coates Cox in Prince Among Slaves, a feature-length
national TV special directed by Bill Duke, being filmed on location Fall 2006. TV credits
include Chief Justice John Marshall in PBS’ History of the Supreme Court, Russian
swindler Dmitri Mickhailovich for FJC TV, and a member of the Continental Congress in
The Bill of Rights. Film roles include catholic priest Father McNichols in Thread and boss
Glenn Fleming in Company Ink. Industrial/commercial parts include a French circus
ringmaster, a lover in a soap opera, a congressional chairman, and various doctors and
fathers. On stage, leading roles include Paul in Split at the Mary MacArthur Theatre in New
York, Henry VIII in Anne of the Thousand Days, Doc Porter in Crimes of the Heart, Henry
Higgins in My Fair Lady, and Norman in The Dresser. www.aboutbillwhite.com

Brian Ross Huse as Phillip Astor
Brian is a professional actor and dancer living in Washington, DC. Over the years he has
appeared on stage as Geoffrey in The Lion In Winter, Master Simon in Moliere's The
Miser, and danced in over forty ballet productions. Brian's television work includes multiple
roles on the popular show The Wire and most recently Project Ground Zero for the History
Channel. He also appears in the feature film The Visiting directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel.