Caroline Grace-Cassidy Explained

Caroline Grace-Cassidy
Birth Place:Dublin, Ireland
Children:2

Caroline Grace-Cassidy (née Caroline Grace) is an Irish film and television actress, screenwriter, and author of seven novels. She is also known as a TV panelist.

Career

Grace's first major acting role was as Miss Mull in Custer's Last Stand Up, a BAFTA-winning children's television series, and she later acted in a range of Irish domestic and international releases, including work with Jim Sheridan. She is best known for her role in David Gordon Green's comedy fantasy film Your Highness. She became a full-time novelist and screenwriter in 2011.

Her debut novel, When Love Takes Over, was released by Poolbeg Press on 7 February 2012. The Irish Times newspaper named Grace-Cassidy on their list of People to Watch in 2012.[1] Since then she has published The Other Side Of Wonderful (2013), I Always Knew (2014), Already Taken (2015), The Week I Ruined My Life (2016), The Importance Of Being Me (2017), and Bride Squad Runaway (2019) with U.K. publishers Black & White Publishing, with The Unforeseen Love Story Of Lexie Byrne due in 2021.

Grace-Cassidy has been a regular panelist with Midday, later renamed The Elaine Show, on TV3, now Virgin Media One, since 2012.[2] [3]

She is a creative director at Document Films and a co-founder of the TV and film house Park Pictures.[2] She has written eight short films: Princess Rehab (2013), Galway Fleadh-winning I AM JESUS (2014), Torn (2014), Even Droids Have Friends (2015), Cineuropa Award-winning Love At First Light (2015), Blackbird (2016), Reach (2017), and Run (2019). She is the co-writer of The Quiet Woman, which is currently in development with Park Films, supported by Screen Ireland.[4]

As of 2016, Grace-Cassidy's seventh novel, Bride Squad Runaway, was being adapted as a television drama,[5] and a film adaptation of her fifth novel, The Week I Ruined My Life, was announced in 2017.[6]

Personal life

Grace-Cassidy is married to Kevin, with two daughters as of 2016.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: O'Connell. Brian. 31 December 2011. People to watch in 2012. live. The Irish Times. https://web.archive.org/web/20170922194117/https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/people/people-to-watch-in-2012-1.17323 . 22 September 2017 .
  2. Web site: Lee. Jenny. 13 June 2016. Dublin author Caroline Grace-Cassidy on affairs of the heart. 4 April 2021. The Irish News.
  3. Web site: Grace-Cassidy. Caroline. 17 July 2017. My cultural life... Caroline Grace-Cassidy. 4 April 2021. Independent.ie.
  4. Web site: The Quiet Woman. live. 4 April 2021. Park Films. https://web.archive.org/web/20201124150154/https://parkfilms.ie/the-quiet-woman/ . 24 November 2020 .
  5. Web site: Finn. Melanie. 21 June 2016. Irish author Caroline Grace-Cassidy is 'over the moon' as Hollywood picks up her script. 4 April 2021. Independent.ie.
  6. Web site: 16 March 2017.
    1. IrishFilm: Adaptation of Caroline Grace-Cassidy's The Week I Ruined My Life in the works
    . live. 4 April 2021. Scannain. https://web.archive.org/web/20191210113133/https://scannain.com/irish/week-i-ruined-my-life-development/ . 10 December 2019 .