That’s that idiot from Dash & Lily!!
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I went down a weird Rabbit hole. I was curious if there was any actors native to Louisiana who could possibly play a live action Gambit. Don’t Judge me I’ve been awake for over we 20 hours so my brain is mush.
And i may have stumbled upon an actor who could play him.
Glenn McCuen
He’s from Baton Rouge Louisiana. Is a well trained gymnast has a bit of a martial artist background but stopped to focus on his gymnastics skills. Has been acting since 2005 and is currently 33. Idk my tired brain can see him playing Gambit.
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11th Hour Audio Challenge 2023
Well, this is a lovely surprise!
During October, 11th Hour Audio encourage producers, writers, actors and sound designers to come together to create an original piece of audio drama horror within 28 days.
After all the productions have been released, a panel of judges listen to decide on their Creator Recognition awards.
I was delighted to be awarded the Scream Quing for best voice acting performance in a horror show for my roles as Elizabeth in the gothic Victorian melodrama The Vacant Sea - A Widow's Walk and Hare in the zombie caper Alas, Poor Stuart.
Congratulations to all the teams for producing their shows, with special thanks to Owen McCuen and Glenn Mercer for asking me to join their casts.
You can listen to these episodes and all the other fantastic entries here:
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Glenn McCuen and Austin Abrams behind the scenes of Dash and Lily via Glenn McCuen’s instagram
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Dash & Lily (1:3 Hanukkah)
There's a lot to unpack in this episode. The feelings between Dash (Austin Abrams) and Lily (Midori Frances) are starting to get real. The difference is that Lily can admit that to Langston (Troy Iwata), but Dash can't admit that to Boomer (Dante Brown). In an effort to show Lily that being weird is a good thing, Dash sends her to an underground Jewish punk show (known as The Challah Back Boys). In the most iconic outfit, Lily makes her appearance and rocks out. Then she bumps into the very boy who shamed her for being weird all those years ago -Edgar Thiebaud (Glenn McCuen).
This is a more emotionally charged episode, especially for the 99% of people who have at some point struggled socially. Add in drag queens, galoshes, and jewcore, I give it 4.5 stars.
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