Who is Angela DiMarco?

AngelaDiMarco

Angela DiMarco was born and raised in Seattle, Washington. She was cast in her first feature film, Waiting for the Light (starring Shirley MacLaine and Teri Garr) when she was 10 years old. She attended Summit K-12 School of the Arts and then studied in Otterbein College’s BFA program. She then moved to Los Angeles, where she became a full time working and teaching artist. Since returning to the NW, she launched Mighty Tripod Productions and Mighty Tripod Acting Studio with her husband, David S. Hogan. They produce original work, teach classes, coach actors and have created an artistic platform in the NW. Angela continues to perform both on stage and screen.

Angela DiMarco is proudly represented by
Big Fish NW
Melissa@BigFishNW.com
877-424-4347 x3

FOLLOW ANGELA DIMARCO AT…

TWITTER: @ImAngelaDiMarco

INSTAGRAM: @ImAngelaDiMarco

IMDB SITE: imdb.me/angeladimarco

PRODUCTION COMPANY SITE: www.mightytripod.com

3 thoughts on “Who is Angela DiMarco?

  1. Thank you soooo much for coming Rebecca!

    I miss the show already! In case you are interested in more theatre and NEW WORKS, I will be part of the 14/48 new play festival in March! It’s a really cool festival where we present 14 new plays over 48 hours.

    We pull a genre, writers write all night Thursday, actors arrive Friday morning and are handed BRAND NEW plays, we rehearse and tech (with a live band) and fully stage and present 7 plays that night… THEN we do it all again! Writers write ALL NEW plays Friday night and we come back Saturday to offer 7 more new plays on Saturday night. Thus 14 new plays in 48 hours, 14/48.

    https://www.the1448projects.org

    I will be performing March 8th and 9th, hope to see you again!

    Be Mighty
    Angela

  2. Hi, Angela. I’m Rebecca Hughes, who met David, Bruno and you in the neighborhood.
    I wanted you to know how much I enjoyed your excellent performance in Beautiful. I saw the last performance and didn’t come back after because I had to rush back south.
    I got interested in Genie Gingold: funny that she says women don’t write songs; they seldom wrote plays either at that time.
    Lovely show, and I appreciated the inclusion of Weil/Mann, whose songs I happen to love even more than King/Goffman’s.
    Thank you for your performance, and I look forward to seeing you onstage again soon and around the ‘hood.
    Cheers,
    Rebecca
    3232 41st Ave SW, 206-941-7813.
    PS: My mom played Johnny Depp’s grandma in Don Juan DeMarco (similar spelling).

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