
Age: 66
female
Jamie Rose (born November 26, 1959) is an American actress. She started acting professionally at the age of six. Her first role was as a kid go-go dancer on a Kool-Aid commercial. She has starred in several television Series and Films, including Falcon Crest (1981), Lady Blue (1985), and the cult classic Chopper Chicks in Zombietown (1989) in which Billy Bob Thornton had his first major film role playing her husband. Rose has given workshops in university settings with actors for television, film and theater. She also consults with writers, helping them to potentiate readings and media appearances. Her seminars have been featured at the SAG Foundation and PEN America. Rose's essays and articles have been published in magazines such as Coast, Actors Ink, and Huff Post. She is the author of Shut Up and Dance! The Joy of Letting Go of the Lead (Tarcher/Penguin, 2011), a "dance of life" memoir exploring the relationship of masculine and feminine archetypes as embodied in the Argentine tango. Informed by a lifetime as a working artist and teacher - enriched by her long-time studies with her mentor, the brilliant psychiatrist and co-author of the international best-selling book, The Tools®, Dr. Phil Stutz - Jamie's engaging, empathic gifts led to her current work coaching everyone from Hedge Fund managers and lawyers, to screenwriters and actors, using Dr. Stutz's psycho-spiritual techniques for self-actualization. - IMDb Mini Biography By: annonymous

In the vine-twisted swamps of Louisiana, the shadows have teeth. Jack Winter has spent his entire life running from something no one else can see. His childhood is his darkest secret, but after a near fatal accident along a deserted road, the darkness he was sure he’d escaped rears its ugly head and smiles. But this time, he isn’t the only one who sees the soulless eyes of his past. This time, his six-year-old daughter Charlie leans into his ear and whispers: Daddy, I saw it too. And then she begins to change. Faced with reliving the nightmares of his childhood, Jack watches his daughter spiral into the shadows that had nearly consumed him twenty years before. But Charlie isn’t the only one who’s changing. Jack never outran the darkness. It’s been with him all along. And it’s hungrier than ever.

