HeadshotI’ll come clean up-front. Taylor M. Dooley is one of my favorite Atlanta actors. She’s known mostly for her comedy but can just as easily handle the meaty dramatic stuff. Forever in my memory is her performance in a reading of Theroun Patterson’s That Uganda Play — mousey housewife, a background character in Act 1, becomes a hair-raisingly frightening power monger in Act 2. Dooley can do almost anything (casting directors?). See her through March 12 in the scripted sketch comedy Woman of the Year at Dad’s Garage.

AGE: “Timeless.” (Direct quote.)

GREW UP: In tiny Free Home, Ga., in eastern Cherokee County. “A speck on the map between Canton and Cumming,” she says.

LIVES NOW: In Johns Creek with her husband, Ethan Rogowski and their daughters Veda (VAY-da), 4, and Edie, 20 months.

WHERE YOU’VE SEEN HER: Most recently in Throw Me on the Burnpile and Light It Up at Aurora Theatre. Also at Dad’s in such (um) family fare as Dementia Juice, Effed Up Fairy Tales, Slaughter Camp and Merry %#@!ing Christmas (with the Alliance Theatre). Also Anton in Show Business and The Dumb Waiter (Weird Sisters Theatre Project); Exit, Pursued by a Bear (Synchronicity Theatre); and as a day player on the Lifetime TV series “Drop Dead Diva.”

WHERE YOU’VE SEEN HER (ON FILM): In a supporting role in Mark of Love (2009), a full-length rom-com filmed in Los Angeles (see Netflix). The 2010 indie film Workshop, a six-person ensemble piece, plus the shorts Reptile Rescue (2010); Flying Naked (2006, co-executive producer and as an easily confused woman with crazy dreams); Rufus (also 2006); and Katiebird (2005).

ABOUT KATIEBIRD: The horror flick was her first film out of college. She played a young serial-killer-in-the-making. It “had a nice little underground following” and became a festival favorite.

WHERE YOU’VE HEARD HER: On the animated series “Rick and Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World” and voiceovers on commercials for Delta Community Credit Union, the Georgia Lottery, Walmart, SeaPak and the game “Brutal Legend.”

COMMERCIALLY SPEAKING: She’s among the great pool of Atlanta actors seen whooping it up (and saying little else) on Gas South TV ads.

EDUCATION/TRAINING: B.A. in theater studies from Emory University, plus ensemble work in Los Angeles with the Hollywood Refugees and the Escapees Improv Troupe. She’s in her fifth year as a general company member at Dad’s.

FIRST TIME ONSTAGE: Second grade on a school trip to Stone Mountain, where the tour guide asked Dooley and her classmates to take part in mini-history plays. All the girls’ roles were gone, so Dooley was asked to play a man. Her memory: “I said, ‘Take that, you traitor!’ then shot and killed someone famous. I had a huge fake rifle and was the hit of the day. The crowd went wild.”

WHY THEATER? Because other than my child being born nothing gives me the rush, the excitement. The ability to move an audience, whether to laughter or tears, to be able to help people escape, if only for a moment, there’s no greater experience. To have so many life experiences [via the roles she plays] without any real consequences. What more could you ask for? You think, ‘I’m going to bring this person to life. How am I going to animate this script?’ It’s always incredibly exciting.”

DREAM ROLE: The venomous Martha in Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

 

About Kathy Janich

Kathy Janich is a longtime arts journalist who has been seeing, working in or writing about the performing arts for most of her life. She's a member of the Theatre Communications Group, the Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas, Americans for the Arts and the National Arts Marketing Project. Full disclosure: She’s also an artistic associate at Synchronicity Theatre.

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