- Birth nameRobyn Elizabeth Osborne
- Height5′ 7″ (1.70 m)
- Named a 2021 "Future Director of Studio Features" fellow by Blackmagic Collective, Robyn Paris is an award-winning writer/director/actor and MFA Screenwriting graduate of UCLA's school of Theatre, Film and TV. Described as "super-talented" by PopSugar, "zany and witty" by Tubefilter and a talent with "moxie and conviction" by the LA Times, Robyn is best known for her popular web series, "The Room Actors: Where Are They Now?" which she created/directed and starred in.
"The Room Actors: Where Are They Now?" screened at Oscar-qualifying film festivals all over the world, before launching in partnership with Funny or Die and accumulating over 1M views. Robyn won "Best Director" at Chicago Comedy Film Festival and "Best Web Series" at LA Indie Film Fest for the show, which stars the original actors from the cult film, "The Room" alongside seasoned comedians.
While a grad student at UCLA, Robyn won the Samuel Goldwyn screenwriting award for her dramatic feature, "Odd Man Out" about a family raising a schizophrenic child. She also won the Harmony Gold Screenwriting Award, the Jack Nicholson Screenwriting Award, Oliver's Prize, the National Association of Theatre Owners of California/Nevada Fellowship in Screenwriting and was nominated for a Humanitas Prize.
Robyn was born outside LA as Robyn Elizabeth Osborne. Her family moved east when she was six months old and she was raised in Greensboro, NC. Before pursuing a career in the arts, Robyn graduated with a BA from Duke University and worked as a management consultant in Washington, DC.
Known for playing the best friend "Michelle" in Tommy Wiseau's cult classic film "The Room," Robyn was portrayed by June Diane Raphael in the Oscar-nominated film, The Disaster Artist.- IMDb Mini Biography By: anonymous
- ChildrenJack Paris
- Originally from Greensboro, North Carolina.
- Graduated from Duke University with a BA in Public Policy Studies and UCLA School of Theatre, Film and TV with an MFA in screenwriting.
- Won the Samuel Goldwyn Screenwriting award for her feature script, Odd Man Out, about a family raising a schizophrenic son.
- She is of English, German, Irish, and Native American descent.
- Here is my advice to actors regarding bad movies: Do only films that you wouldn't mind talking about for the next 20 years. Because you never know what kind of longevity your projects will have, particularly with clips being available indefinitely online. An independent movie - good or bad - could take you anywhere. It could make you famous. It could make you notorious. It could be a worldwide phenomenon, or it could be "The Room." So, I say to all aspiring actors: Sidle up to the poker table of Hollywood, play your cards and see what you get. I did. Did I get a full house? More like two-of-a-kind with a wild card. But I'll take it. 'Cause at least it's funny. And I really like to laugh.
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