|


|
Born in Santa Monica and raised in Bellevue, WA, Elisabeth
Eden, currently resides in the beautiful Seattle area with
husband, Jeff, and golden retriever, Bogey. Acutely aware of
her surroundings and fascinated with human behavior at a
very young age, her love for acting was set deep within her
heart. In utilizing her God-given talents and seizing
the many opportunities to let her creative juices flow as a
mural painter, teacher, writer, singer/musician, and an
athlete, she makes it a point not to miss the doors open to
her. From traveling around North America and Europe to
teaching two year olds, her passion for life and for people
has largely contributed to a wide variety of experiences and
a vast array of material to use as an actress.
Her first stage experience was in the Missoula Children’s
Theatre production of “Tales of Hans Christian Anderson” and
although theatre continued to dominate her experience in the
acting field throughout her school years and beyond, there
was always an underlying attraction to film. In November of
2005, after given a role as the leading lady in a short
film, she decided to pursue camera acting.
Since then she has been pro-active in making manifest her
lifelong dream with almost a dozen books read, recommended
film classes taken, short film and commercial experience
acquired and connections with talented people in the field
made. Though her entrepreneurial sense and people skills
have proven to be a great help, it is her heart for this
that has and will continue to make all the difference in her
success. It’s the something that says you can’t afford not
to, the life you feel when you do what you were made to do,
the drive to be the best at it and the will to press on no
matter what that just wont let go! She is excited to take it
to the next level and is eagerly anticipating the adventure
that lies ahead.
 |
Elisabeth
Eden
Actor

Link
here for extra photos
"When it comes to the task of understanding
ourselves and our world, I think we pay too much
attention to those grand themes and too little to
the particulars of those fleeting moments." ~
Malcolm Gladwell

|