Nancy Friedrich credits include guest starring roles on Amazon’s Homecoming, Hulu’s Pen15, and NBC’s A.
P.
Bio.
She has also recurred on Comedy Central’s Another Period and NBC’s A to Z and has a recurring role on the upcoming show, Mrs.
Davis.
Prior to LA Nancy acted in Chicago and was nominated for a Jeff Award for Lead Actress in a play for the role of Jennifer in The Dastardly Ficus and Other Tales of Woe and Misery, and she won the Jeff Award for Supporting Actress for her the role of Mary Warren in The Crucible.
Nancy also wrote and perfomed sketch comedy with her sketch comedy group Pennybear and performed improv at the iO Chicago with Virgin Daquiri, and at The Annoyance with In a World.
At The Annoyance she also co-wrote and perfomed the two person comedic play Waiting for Drew Peterson.
Since moving to Los Angeles she has performed characters in shows all over town including at Hot Tub with Kurt and Kristen, Super Serious Show, and Andy Kindler’s Partiular show.
She has also appeared in shorts such as Todd Halloween and Nadine, which she co-wrote & directed.
Nadine won Best Direction for a Comedy Short at the 2019 Central States Indie Fan Film Festival.
A regular runner, Nancy has tripped and fallen on most every sidewalk in Los Feliz.
Think a rustic getaway with no cell service, Internet or social media is a romantic way to repair your marriage and sex life? Think again. Meet Dan and Jeanine Dewerson. The only spark in their bedroom is from the wall socket. Their daughter's best friend is her iPad. Dan's not going to take it anymore and plans a quiet, relaxing weekend in a remote mountain town. No kids, no phones, no social media, only clean fresh air and lots of romance. But what starts as the perfect weekend quickly becomes disastrous with unearthly encounters, strong edibles, and cranky odd locals. Without GPS to guide them or social media to stave off their boredom, Dan and Jeanine are forced to reconnect with each other. Can a "digital detox" really save their marriage and their sanity?
Zu, a free spirit estranged from her family, suddenly finds herself the sole guardian of her half-sister, Music, a teenager on the autism spectrum whose whole world order has been beautifully crafted by her late grandmother. The film soon challenges whether it is Zu or Music who has a better view of the world, and that love, trust, and being able to be there for each other is everything.