- Height5′ 8″ (1.73 m)
- Kristine Renee Farley fell in love with acting at Henderson County High in Henderson Kentucky, where she hails originally. She was an active member in the Drama Club, participated in a nation wide project called TheatreLink, and graduated with honors in Dramatics. Kristine Renee began acting in film in 2009. During this time she has worked with several independent film production companies throughout the mid-west including the award-winning Big Biting Pig Productions, the award-winning Alien Jungle Bug Productions, Kentucky's first SAG Signatory Company Catnippery Productions, Short Pictures Independent, Renegade Art Productions, and Third Helix Pictures; many regional student films including one for the New York Film Academy, one for IUPUI, and USI's inaugural accredited film production; as well as can be seen in local commercials. She continued her screen work when she made the move to New York City in 2015. While there, she attended the Stella Adler Studio of Acting and had the opportunity to work core background on season three of Gotham, was featured in an episode of the first season of Bull on CBS as Misty Marx. She also played a role in the feature film Bully starring Danny Trejo. She is no stranger to the stage and has been performing in theatrical and musical productions since she was 7 years old. Kristine Renee has graced the stages of The Alley Theater in Louisville, Myer's Dinner Theatre in Indiana, the Evansville Civic Theatre as well as Civic's Underground at the Annex, Henderson County Fine Arts Center, and the Glema Mahr Center for the Arts. Kristine Renee is also an event coordinator for MayDay Film Festival in Evansville, Indiana. Most recently, she has taken on production roles including producer, production manager, script supervisor, casting director, and makeup.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Kristine Renee Farley
- If necessity is the mother of invention, creativity is the bastard child of misery.
- The thing I love most about acting is performing for an audience. Making them feel alive with the emotions I portray in my character. When you remove the audience from the equation, you remove the best thing about acting. Acting is a visual and auditory art form. It needs to be seen and heard to be creative. Otherwise, we're just playing pretend.
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