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Kenneth Alan Williams (Scott Robbins) is a Chicago native and splits time between stage and screen. He trained with Second City Chicago, and has appeared on "ER," "Will and Grace" and "Chicago Hope." On stage, Williams recently completed the national tour of "The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial" with Ed Asner and Mike Ferrell, and he's currently in production for "Mr. Kolpert" at the Odyssey Theatre. He's taught Improvisation at UCLA and various Chicago/L.A. studio workshops. A devoted tennis lover, he frequently competes in weekend tournaments around Los Angeles. Kenneth lives in West LA with two dogs and a cat.
Kevin Chesley (Cat McCoy) is a founding member of the L.A.-based comedy troupe "TROOP!" - where all members are founding ones. He has directed and toured with The Hampstead Players, Asses & Elephants, and the comedy groups KARLA and Overtime. A graduate of both Act One and Emerson College, Kevin is currently the writer's assistant for Robert Nelson Jacobs ("Chocolat," "Out to Sea"). He is a Led Zeppelin fan and the son of a naval sea captain. He is married to Heather Chesley, who also appears in "The Eyes of Scott Robbins."
Heather Chesley (Jean Robbins) is a member of Actors Co-op Hollywood, where she has performed on stage in "Two Rooms," "Much Ado About Nothing," "Henry V" and "Shooting Stars." She also appeared in "Flea in Her Ear" at Los Angeles theatre A Noise Within. Chesley co-founded the Asses & Elephants Theatre Company which toured to the Minnesota Fringe Festival. She directed the revival of Alene Brosh McKenna's "Inside Lois" at Comedy Sports Stage in Los Angeles, and worked as the Hampstead Players' Assistant Artistic Director for two years. She currently teaches for South Coast Repertory's Teen Conservatory. She is married to Kevin Chesley, who also appears in "The Eyes of Scott Robbins."
Kirsten Gronfield (Bobbie) currently stars on the new TBS comedy "10 Items or Less." Gronfield collaborated with Director Jason Smith on "Steve Saves L.A.," the most elaborate hidden camera prank ever caught on tape. She starred in the comedy pilot "Take Me to Your Leader" for Imagine/Fox, and shared an uncomfortable moment with Dennis Quaid in "Yours, Mine and Ours." She recently co-wrote, produced and performed a two-woman show, "Material Girls" about teenage angst in the 80's. Her sketch-hybrid show "The Almost Grown-ups," returns to stages this fall.
Bruce Cronander (Chris Robbins) came into his own as an actor only late in life. Formerly a lawyer, he began a successful stage career in San Francisco, appearing in "First Monday in October", "After the Fall" "Six Degrees of Separation" and "Days of Wine and Roses." Since his move to Los Angeles he has appeared in the films "XXX:State of the Union" with William Defoe, "Living the Dream" with Sean Young, and "Prom-troversy" with Jane Lynch. He's also had parts on TV's "Arrested Development," "A&E Biography" and a number of national commercials.
Susan Josepher (Katherine Robbins) gave up a secure and successful career as a college teacher in Denver, and moved to Los Angeles to pursue her lifelong dream of acting. She studied improvisation at Second City and scene study with Carole D'Andrea. She has appeared in four independent films. Josepher also serves as the Docent Program Coordinator at the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles.
Kelly Keaton (Nurse Moira) was born and raised in northeast Wisconsin (Go Packers!) and has Undergraduate and Graduate degrees in Theatre. She has appeared in several national commercials including Buick, Hallmark, Moneygram, IBM, and Scrubbing Bubbles. Her extensive theatre credits include membership to Actors Co-op in Hollywood, where she's appeared in "Shooting Stars," "The Boys Next Door" and the original five woman show "Dancing with my Father." Recently, Keaton can be seen scolding Steve Martin and Eugene Levy in "Cheaper By the Dozen 2."
David Alan Graf (Warren Wood) has been an actor for over twenty years, gracing both the large and small screen. His performance in the independent sleeper "Bang" as a "legitimate" movie producer was lauded by critics as both satirical and disturbing. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun hailed his appearance in "Pups," calling it "(A) very real unraveling persona of a man who can't believe this is happening to him. David Alan Graf's portrayal of a kindly bank manager coming apart takes us inside the bank hostage situation itself." Graf's recent film work includes "Mysterious Skin". "This Girl's Life" "I Love Your Work," and the upcoming Prison comedy "Big Stan."
Laurie L. Baggao (Medical Consultant) Throughout her 24-year career as a registered nurse, Laurie Baggao has had the opportunity to explore different types of nursing, from geriatric rehabilitation with its strokes and fractured hips, to witnessing the technological advances in the routine equipment used in the ICU and CCU. She's seen the boom of home health care and the birth of the HMO; the evolution of case management to the development of new classes of drugs in treating infectious disease. Her most rewarding experience was working the Oncology/AIDS floor at Saint Joseph Hospital in Burbank, California. She had the opportunity to get to know her patients as they underwent chemo or radiation therapy over months and years. She considered it a privilege to help these individuals and see their quiet courage, strength, and dignity, as they fought as hard as they could, everyday.
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