Award-winning Canadian actress Susan Clark, born on March 8, 1943, took up acting at an early age (12) in her hometown of Sarnia, Ontario. Her family moved to Toronto around that period of time and she joined the Toronto Children's Players Theatre. Her first professional curtain call took place on the musical stage in a 1955 production of "Silk Stockings" which starred veteran actor Don Ameche. The "acting bug" bit hard and a very determined Susan pressed her family to allow her to study at London's prestigious Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. She gained valuable experience in repertory, making her London debut in "Poor Bitos" in the early 1960s. She even got a taste of on-camera work when she won multiple roles on a 1965 episode of The Benny Hill Show (1957). Returning to Canada, however, due to the illness of her father, she subsequently decided to trek, instead, to Los Angeles to continue her professional career. In search of on-camera work, she attracted notice in some guest roles on TV and this eventually led to a Universal contract. The ten-year contract was one of the last of its kind as Hollywood was witnessing the demise of the studio contract system. After gaining some exposure on episodes of The Virginian (1962) and Run for Your Life (1965), Susan's first screen assignment for Universal was as the second female lead in the soap-styled drama Banning (1967) starring Robert Wagner, in one of his typical jet-setting playboy parts, and the scintillating Jill St. John, who would wed her "Banning" leading man two decades later. From there, Susan only grew in stature. Playing the second female lead again in the critically-praised crimer Madigan (1968) starring Richard Widmark and Inger Stevens, she finally earned top female billing opposite Clint Eastwood in Coogan's Bluff (1968) playing a sexy parole officer and enjoying romantic clinches with the up-and-coming film icon on film. Tall and willowy with incandescent blue eyes, Susan continued to impress on celluloid with roles in Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here (1969), Valdez Is Coming (1971) and, in particular, Skin Game (1971). It was 70s TV-movies, however, that would take full advantage of Susan's vibrant, intelligent acting talents. First came the tender-hearted mini-movie Something for a Lonely Man (1968). While a vehicle for Bonanza's Dan Blocker, co-star Susan made a strong, spunky impression as his small-town romantic interest. This was followed by choice roles in The Challengers (1970) and The Astronaut (1972). 1975 was a banner year for Susan who not only provided a couple of excellent scenes as Gene Hackman's wife in the film-noir Night Moves (1975) but, made a resounding, Emmy-winning impression on TV audiences as feminist track-and-field Olympian-turned-golf star Babe Didrikson Zaharias, who is later felled by cancer, in the TV mini-bio Babe (1975). This was a pronounced victory for Susan both professionally and personally for it was on this set that she met her second husband, co-star Alex Karras, who played Babe's spouse George. Susan was in immediate demand and was quickly cast as another feisty, ill-fated heroine, this time in the form of famed aviatrix Amelia Earhart (1976). Predictably, Susan was wonderful and earned a second Emmy nomination for her efforts (she didn't win). She and Karras (who had a child, Katie, in 1980) went on to jointly act in and/or produce various film and TV projects, including the TV movies Jimmy B. & André (1980), and Maid in America (1982), and the films Nobody's Perfekt (1981) and Porky's (1981). This culminated in their biggest collaborative effort with the sitcom series Webster (1983) wherein both were unmercifully upstaged by the hopelessly cute antics of its tyke star Emmanuel Lewis. While the series hardly tested the couple's acting mettle and the plot was pretty much a "Diff'rent Strokes" rehash, the show proved quite popular on its own and put Clark and Karras firmly on the TV map between 1983 to 1988. Susan, herself, earned a Golden Globe nomination for "Best Actress in a Comedy Series". Following the sitcom' demise, Susan relinquished the limelight a bit and found contentment on the local Southern California stage. Relishing acting challenges in such wide-ranging plays as "Meetin's on the Porch" (1990) with Patty Duke and Carrie Snodgress, "Afterplay" (1998), "Bicoastal Women" (2003) and "The Importance of Being Earnest" (2004) (as Lady Bracknell), she eventually became a dedicated member of the Rubicon Theater Company in Los Angeles, gracing such plays there as "The Glass Menagerie", "Dancing at Lughnasa", "The Devil's Disciple" and, most recently, "A Delicate Balance." Featured in the TV movies Snowbound: The Jim and Jennifer Stolpa Story (1994), Tonya & Nancy: The Inside Story (1994) and Toe Tags (1996), she was last seen on camera co-starring in the dramatic TV series Emily of New Moon (1998) as ever-rigid Aunt Elizabeth, who assists in raising her orphaned niece. Susan has a daughter, Katie, by husband Karras who died of kidney failure in 2012.
Susan Colby is an actress, known for In the Moon's Shadow (2019).
Susan Collins is known for Twenty Feet from Stardom (2013), The Daily (2017) and State of the Union with John King (2009).
Susan Conklin is an actress and costume designer, known for The Flock (2007), Have Dreams, Will Travel (2007) and Woman Walks Ahead (2017).
Susan Connors is known for The Unknown (2005), Northern Exposure (1990) and Mrs. Columbo (1979).
Susan Coyne is a writer and actress, known for Slings and Arrows (2003), Blindness (2008) and Mozart in the Jungle (2014).
Susan Craig is an actor, known for Mr. What (2015).
Susan Currie is an actress, known for Space Station 76 (2014).
Susan Durrwachter joined the Screen Actor's Guild in 2000 by accident. She was a utility stand-in on NBC's 'Ed' and photo doubled for Julie Bowen. She worked on film/TV sets as stand-in/doubles for Kathyrn Erbe (Law & Order Criminal Intent), Sarah Jessica Parker (Sex & the City), Panic Room (Jodie Foster) etc. From 2002-2010, she worked as a booking producer for NBC/MSNBC/CNBC for Joe Scarborough, Donny Deutsch, Alison Stewart, Monica Crowley, Ron Reagan and Lester Holt. She is currently working at CNN as a producer for Piers Morgan Tonight. Susan's originally from Williamsport, Pennsylvania (home of the Little League World Series).
Susan Dalian was born in Baltimore, Maryland, USA as Susan Patterson Dalian. She is known for her role as the gun wielding, jilted bride, "Bebe" in the 2001 Sony Screen Gems film The Brothers opposite Shemar Moore with Morris Chestnut and Gabrielle Union. She studied acting at Baltimore School for the Arts, one of the top five performing arts high schools in the United States. She graduated and later went on to study at Boston University in their College of Fine Arts program earning a B.F.A in Acting. Her career started in San Francisco where she played roles acting in theater companies such as San Francisco Shakespeare Festival, CA Shakespeare Theater, Berkeley Repertory Theater, Marin Theater Company and Shakespeare Santa Cruz. While living there she also acted in several national commercials and voice overs. Later she moved to Los Angeles to begin acting in television and film. She got a big break when cast as a series regular in a pilot produced by Stephen J. Cannell (Spider's Web). She has appeared in several roles in television shows and feature films as well as short films. Susan is also a voice over actor and has voiced for several television and radio commercials as well as voicing characters for anime and video games, including the voice of "Storm" in the 2009 Cartoon Network show Wolverine and the X-men and "Haku" in Naruto. She has acted onstage at theaters such as South Coast Repertory (with Pulitzer Prize winning playwrights Lynn Nottage and Tracy Letts with director William Friedkin), The Actors' Gang (directed by Tim Robbins), and Indiana Repertory Theater, to name a few. She is also a stage director having directed several plays with various theater companies, as well as having co-directed and wrote the short film Bite Me which screened at Mammoth Lakes Film Festival and Festival Angaelica in 2019.