Melanie Jayne Lynskey
Melanie Jayne Lynskey was born on May
16, 1977, in New Zealand. She is known for her quirky, soft-spoken but
headstrong characters. She primarily works in independent films. She has been
awarded a New Zealand Film Award as in addition to a Hollywood Film Award as
well as a Sundance Special Jury Award. Lynskey's first film role was an teen
killer in Peter Jackson's Heavenly Creatures (1994). After moving to the United
States in 1994, Lynskey launched a successful career as a supporting actress in
a number of big-budget and smaller-scale productions, including Ever After
(1998) and Detroit Rock City and But I'm a Cherleader (both 1999), Coyote Ugly
(2000), Abandon and Sweet Home Alabama (1902), Shattered Glass (2003) and Flags
of Our Fathers (2006). Lynskey received a nomination for the Gotham Award as
Breakthrough Performer and received critical acclaim for her character as a
divorced, depressed woman in The Goodbye I Must be Going (2012). It was a
pivotal moment in her professional career. She is a prominent figure within the
American independent film industry through her later role in Happy Christmas.
We'll Never Have Paris. Goodbye to All That (all 2014), The Intervention.
Rainbow Time. Little Boxes. I'm Not At Home in This World. And Then I'm Off.
Lady of the Manor. (2021). Outside of the film industry, Lynskey achieved fame
with her performance as Rose on the CBS sitcom Two and a Half Men (2003-2015).
She starred in Togetherness from 2015 to 2016. The show was nominated to win
the 2015 Critics’ Choice Television Award for the Best Supporting Artistress.
Megan as well as Beatrice in the Cartoon Network's Over the Garden Wall (2014)
were the voices. (2016-2018). She also starred as the main character of Molly
Strand, the first season of Hulu's Castle Rock (2018). Rosemary Thomson starred
in Mrs. America on FX (2020).
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