Miranda Kwok
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Miranda Kwok is screenwriter, actress, and film producer born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Biography/Education
Miranda began her studies in the arts at the age of ten when she attended the Claude Watson School for the Arts, Canada's premiere multidisciplinary school for the performance and visual arts. While at Claude Watson, Miranda majored in Visual Arts and minored in Drama and Dance. Miranda made her television debut at the age of thirteen, and since then, has performed in several leading, supporting and guest starring roles in film, television and theatre.
Miranda continued her education at Earl Haig Secondary School, where she completed the Claude Watson Arts Program as well as the Academy Program for the intellectually gifted.
Miranda completed an Honors Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and Psychology at the University of Toronto. At the same time, Miranda provided her services as a counselor for crisis intervention at a number of community shelters and crisis centers.
Miranda was a participant in "Project: Involve," a mentorship program at the IFP in Los Angeles. Through the directors of "Project: Involve," Miranda was recommended for and subsequently won a full scholarship award at The Los Angeles Film School for their Feature Development Program – which she completed with Honors.
Miranda was on the front cover of the February 2008 edition of The North York Post magazine.[1]
Miranda is a Black Belt in the Martial Art of Wushu.
Screenwriting
Miranda won the grand prize in the Slamdance Screenplay Competition for a historical drama that she wrote entitled Song of Silence.[2] In addition to Slamdance, Miranda was a finalist in several screenwriting competitions and won a nomination by APA Film for the ABC New Talent Development Scholarship Grant Program.[3]
Song of Silence was optioned by Jeff Apple, producer of In the Line of Fire and The Recruit. Attached to direct is Jonathan Kaplan who directed Jodi Foster in her Oscar winning performance in The Accused and Michelle Pfeiffer in her Academy Award nominated performance in Love Field.
Miranda's first television spec script House: The Transplant earned her a placement in the 2008-2009 CBS Diversity Initiative Writers Mentoring Program. She was also a Finalist in the NBC Writers on the Verge Program.
In 2010, Miranda won a placement as an Honoree in the WGA Writer Access Project for professional screenwriters.[2]
Miranda worked as a writers on the first season of Spartacus: Blood and Sand, an original television drama on Starz Network. Steven S. DeKnight served as the Head Writer and Showrunner of the series, and the series was produced by Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert and Joshua Donen.Futon Critic
In 2014, Entertainment One Television acquired format rights to the racy Finnish fantasy drama series Nymphs and will develop and produce a U.S. version of the TV series to be written by Miranda Kwok. [3]
Awards
- 2004 Slamdance Film Festival Sparky Award for Best Screenplay
Selected filmography
- Killing Moon (2000) – Pam
- Jane Doe (2001) – Kwan
- Ride or Die (2003) – Tommy Wong
- F*Stop (2004) – Cornelia
- Mr. Fix It (2006) – Melanie
- The Eden Formula (2006) – Kate Lo
- The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (2006) – Stacy Li
- Saurian (2006) – Chi
- Richard III (2008) – Portia
- iMurders (2009) – Janet Ling
- Fear Chamber (2009) – Kathryn Rose
- Immortally Yours (2009) – Sylvia
- Taken by Force (2009) – Lim Jing
- Letting Go (2010) – Dana
- Bare Knuckles (2013) – Kim Sue
Recurring television credits
- Sanctuary (2011) – Story Editor
- Spartacus: Blood and Sand (2010) – Staff Writer
- ER (2002) – Kristen Shoop
- Earth: Final Conflict (1997–1998) – Kwai Ling Hong
Selected television credits
- "Spartacus: Blood and Sand" (2010) – episode "Shadow Games" – Written By
- "Spartacus: Blood and Sand" (2010) – episode "Party Favors" – Written By
- "Charmed" – episode "Payback's a Witch" (2006) – Dominax
- "7th Heaven" – episode "The One Thing" (2003) – Julie Liu
- "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" – episode "Dirty Girls" (2003) – Fighting Potential
- "The Invisible Man" – episode "Money For Nothing: Part 2" (2001) – Nurse
- "Once A Thief" – episode "Family Reunion" (1998)
- "PSI Factor: Chronicles of the Paranormal" – episode "Kiss Of The Tiger" (1998) – Sing
Notes
External links
- Wikipedia articles with possible conflicts of interest from January 2008
- Canadian television actresses
- Canadian film actresses
- Canadian actresses of Asian descent
- Canadian people of Chinese descent
- Actresses from Toronto
- University of Toronto alumni
- Living people
- Canadian wushu practitioners
- Canadian television writers
- 20th-century Canadian actresses
- 21st-century Canadian actresses
- Canadian film producers
- Canadian screenwriters