Ingrid Torelli, Actress. Ingrid is an Australian actress known for her work on Bloom Season 2 (2020), The End (2020), Five Bedrooms (2019-2020), The Mirror (2020), Holy Spirit (2019), They Can't Hear You (2018), One Last Leaf (2018) and Red and Blue (2017). Ingrid played Matilda in the Melbourne season of Matilda the Musical in 2016 before turning her focus to film and television.
Ingrid Torrance, actor, coach, producer, director, and author has appeared in numerous movies and television series since 1994. She has also been an acting teacher since 1995 and an on set and off set coach since 1998. Ingrid has worked on such shows as Once Upon a Time (2011), The Killing (2011), Fringe (2008), The Good Wife (2009), and Blade: The Series (2006). She has appeared in such films as Double Jeopardy (1999), Act of War (1998), Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004), The Auburn Hills Breakdown (2008), and Driven to Kill (2009). Ingrid has been nominated for a Leo Award as Best Actress and was featured in Entertainment Weekly as a "Breakout" Actress.
Ingrid Tykhelle Kayser is known for Furia (2021), Lovleg (2018) and Bloodride (2020).
Born in Bratislava and raised in Canada, Ingrid Veninger formed pUNK Films in 2003 with a 'nothing is impossible' manifesto. Since 2008, Ingrid has directed six narrative fiction feature films, Only (2008), Modra (2010), I am a Good Person/I Am a Bad Person (2011), The Animal Project (2013), He Hated Pigeons (2015), Porcupine Lake (2017), and one feature documentary, The World or Nothing (2019), with premieres at festival worldwide including, TIFF, Rotterdam, Slamdance, Busan and Hot Docs. In addition to directing, Ingrid has produced features with Charles Officer (Nurse.Fighter.Boy (2008)), Anais Granofsky (The Limb Salesman (2004)), Peter Mettler (Gambling, Gods and LSD (2002), The End of Time (2012)). She is the winner of the TFCA Jay Scott Prize, EDA Award for Best Director, and the Women's International Film & Television Showcase (WIFTS) International Visionary Award. Ingrid is a filmmaking mentor at the Canadian Film Centre and full-time faculty in Cinema and Media Arts at York University in Toronto. She has participated in the Berlinale Talent Campus, Rotterdam Lab, and the inaugural TIFF Studio. In 2014, Ingrid initiated the pUNK Films Femmes Lab to foster more competitive feature films written and directed by Canadian women, sponsored by Academy Award winner Melissa Leo. Ingrid continues to champion gender parity in the entertainment industry.
Ingrid Visser is known for Retrospekt (2018), Eyewitness: Shark Attack (2020) and Whales Without Walls (2020).
Ingrid Vold is known for Dead End City (1988), Hell on the Battleground (1988) and Terror in Beverly Hills (1989).
Ingrid Vollan was born on 19 November 1956 in Alvdal, Hedmark, Norway. She is an actress, known for Troll (2022), Fortuna (1993) and Mammon (2014). She has been married to Duc Paul Mai-The since 2017.
Ingrid Vollset is an actress and producer, known for Paula, Why?, Uncommitted (2015) and Heavy Objects (2015).
Ingrid Von Moger is known for Calum Von Moger: Unbroken (2019).
The Netflix documentary There's Something in the Water is based on Dr. Waldron's book and was co-produced by Waldron, actress Ellen Page, Ian Daniel, and Julia Sanderson, and co-directed by Page and Daniel. Dr. Ingrid Waldron, Ph.D. was born in Montreal to Trinidadian parents. She is a sociologist, an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Health at Dalhousie University, the Director of the Environmental Noxiousness, Racial Inequities & Community Health Project (The ENRICH Project), and the Flagship Project Co-Lead of Improving the Health of People of African Descent at Dalhousie's Healthy Populations Institute. Dr. Waldron received a BA in Psychology from McGill University, an MA in Intercultural Education: Race, Ethnicity & Culture from the Institute of Education at the University of London, and a Ph.D. in Sociology & Equity Studies in Education from the University of Toronto. She was also a postdoctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. Her doctoral and postdoctoral research at the University of Toronto focused on the impacts of discrimination on the mental health of Black women in Toronto, their conceptualizations of mental illness and help-seeking, and racism within psychiatric discourse and practice. Her research, teaching, and community leadership and advocacy work in Nova Scotia are examining and addressing the health and mental health impacts of structural inequalities within health and mental health care, child welfare, and the environment in Indigenous, Black, immigrant, and refugee communities. She recently completed a study titled Black Women's Experiences with Mental Illness, Help-Seeking & Coping in the Halifax Regional Municipality: A Study Conducted to Inform NSHA's Nova Scotia Sisterhood Initiative. The findings will be used to inform a new health service for Black women in the HRM. As the Director of the ENRICH Project over the last 8 years, Dr. Waldron has been investigating the socio-economic, political, and health effects of environmental racism in Mi'kmaq and African Nova Scotian communities. The ENRICH Project formed the basis to the creation of the provincial bill An Act to Redress Environmental Racism (Bill 31) in April 2015 and the federal bill a National Strategy to Redress Environmental Racism (Bill C230) in February 2020. Both bills are the first bills to be introduced on environmental racism in the legislature in Canada. The ENRICH Project also formed the basis to Dr. Waldron's first book There's Something in the Water: Environmental Racism in Indigenous and Black Communities, which was published in 2018 by Fernwood Publishing. The book received the 2020 Society for Socialist Studies Errol Sharpe Book Prize and the 2019 Atlantic Book Award for Scholarly Writing.