Nancy Hower
View on WikipediaThis biography of a living person includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2012) |
Nancy Hower is an American actress, director, screenwriter and producer.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (January 2023) |
Nancy Hower grew up in Wyckoff, New Jersey, and is one of nine children. She appeared onstage for the first time as a senior in high school. Upon graduating from high school, Hower continued her studies at the Juilliard School in New York City where she majored in drama. During her years at Juilliard, she appeared in such productions as King Lear, And A Nightingale Sang, Macbeth, The Fifth of July, and The Would-Be Gentleman. She also later appeared in two stage productions at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts.
Career
[edit]Hower began her professional acting career playing the role of Andrea in The Years at the Manhattan Theatre Club in 1993. She has also been in several on and off-Broadway stage productions throughout her career. In 1994, she made her film debut with a supporting role in the comedy film Insomnia. In 1998, she appeared in the airline disaster film Blackout Effect. Other film work includes a role in the short independent film Tunnel Vision (1998) and an FBI agent in the sci-fi movie The Last Man on Planet Earth (1999). Hower also had a role in Standing On Fishes (1999), and although her name appears in the end credits of this movie, her role was cut from the final version. She has had guest-starring roles in the television series Suddenly Susan and The Sentinel.
Star Trek: Voyager
[edit]Hower had a recurring role as Ensign Samantha Wildman on the sci-fi series Star Trek: Voyager. She appeared in eight episodes of the series' seven-year run. Her character is head of Voyager's xenobiology department and, in the episode "Deadlock" (Season 2), she gives birth to a daughter called Naomi Wildman.[2]
Hower's Voyager appearances are, in chronological order: "Elogium" (Season 2), "Tattoo" (Season 2), "Dreadnought" (Season 2), "Deadlock" (Season 2), "Basics, Pt. 2" (Season 3), "Mortal Coil" (Season 4), "Once Upon A Time" (Season 5), and "Fury" (Season 6).
Wildman was also mentioned, but not seen, in several other Voyager episodes.
Music
[edit]Hower formerly fronted two alternative rock bands, WENCH and STELLA. STELLA was the opening act on Meat Loaf's 2001 UK tour. She sang lead, played rhythm guitar, and wrote all of the band's music.[citation needed]
Hower also co-wrote the original music for the play Momma in 2001, as well as writing and recording an unreleased rock opera titled Girl On Mars. Also in 2001, she played the role of Yitzak in Hedwig and the Angry Inch in Los Angeles.[citation needed]
2003–present
[edit]Hower wrote and directed the short film The Wizard of Id, an unreleased film about a musician who discovers that he has the power to change the lives of the people around him through his music.[citation needed] In 2003, Hower directed the stage play City Limits at the Keck Theater in Los Angeles.[citation needed]
Hower wrote, directed, produced and edited the independent film Memron (2004), a mockumentary on the Enron scandal.[citation needed] In 2004, she also directed the stage play The Lights Change at the Keck Theatre.
Following the success of Memron, Hower teamed up with fellow Memron producers Robert Hickey, John Lehr, and Evie Peck to create a comedy improv series titled 10 Items or Less. The TBS show stars John Lehr as a less than successful businessman who takes over the family supermarket when his father dies. 10 Items or Less premiered on TBS on November 27, 2006.
Hower provided vocals for the film Catch and Release (2007), in which she also plays a small role.
In 2013, Hower directed and co-wrote the Hulu original series Quickdraw, which was renewed for a second season in 2014.
On January 12, 2023, Jamie Lynn Spears announced that production had begun on a sequel film entitled, Zoey 102, set to premiere in 2023 on Paramount+, with original series cast members Spears, Sean Flynn, Christopher Massey, Erin Sanders, Matthew Underwood, Jack Salvatore, Jr., and Abby Wilde reprising their roles. Production began in January 2023 in North Carolina. Hower directed, with Spears attached as executive producer.[3][4][5]
The film was released on July 27, 2023, on Paramount+.[6][7]
References
[edit]- ^ "Happy Birthday Nancy Hower 🎂 ...to more wonderful years 🥂 #StarTrekVoyager | #startrek | #startrekunitedgives". twitter.com.
- ^ Michael Okuda & Denise Okuda (October 1999). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Pocket Books. p. 561. ISBN 0-671-53609-5.
- ^ "Jamie Lynn Spears on Instagram: "it's OFFICIAL! 🎬 Are you ready…. @paramountplus @nickelodeon"".
- ^ "'Zoey 101' YA Revival Movie Set at Paramount+ with Jamie Lynn Spears & More Original Series Cast". January 12, 2023.
- ^ "'Zoey 101' Sequel Movie Starring Jamie Lynn Spears Ordered at Paramount+". variety.com. 12 January 2023.
- ^ "Jamie Lynn Spears reprises her iconic role in Zoey 102 first-look photos". ew.com.
- ^ Swift, Andy (June 20, 2023). "Zoey 102 Trailer Reunites Jamie Lynn Spears With Her Nickelodeon Classmates, 15 Years Later". TVLine. Archived from the original on June 20, 2023. Retrieved June 20, 2023.
External links
[edit]- Nancy Hower at IMDb
Nancy Hower
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Upbringing and initial artistic interests
Nancy Hower was born on May 11, 1966, in Wyckoff, New Jersey, where she spent her formative years.[3] [4] Her initial foray into the performing arts occurred during her senior year of high school, when she made her first onstage appearance.[3] This experience ignited her passion for acting, prompting her to pursue formal training immediately after graduation by enrolling at the Juilliard School in New York City to study drama.[3]Acting career
Theater and stage beginnings
Hower received formal training at the Juilliard School, participating in student productions such as a 1980s rendition of Molière's The Would-Be Gentleman alongside classmates including Elizabeth Marvel and Michael Stuhlbarg.[5] This education laid the groundwork for her stage work, emphasizing classical techniques and ensemble performance. Her professional theater debut took place on December 24, 1993, when she starred in the lead role of Andrea in Arthur Schnitzler's The Years (also known as Lebensjahre), directed by Jack Hofsiss at the Manhattan Theatre Club's City Center Stage II.[3][6] In the play, set amid familial discord in early 20th-century Vienna, Hower's character navigates emotional turmoil within a dissolving household, earning note for contributing to the production's rhythmic intensity despite mixed critical reception.[7] The following year, in January 1994, Hower appeared as Marya, the inspector's daughter, in a Broadway revival of Nikolai Gogol's The Government Inspector at the Lyceum Theatre, a comedic satire on corruption where her role involved romantic entanglements with the protagonist.[8] These early off-Broadway and Broadway engagements marked her entry into New York theater circles, building on her training through roles demanding nuanced dramatic and physical expressiveness.[9]Television roles
Hower's prominent television acting role was the recurring portrayal of Ensign Samantha Wildman, a Starfleet science officer and mother, on the science fiction series Star Trek: Voyager. She appeared in eight episodes across five seasons, beginning with the second-season episode "Elogium," which aired on October 6, 1995, and concluding with the sixth-season episode "Once Upon a Time" in 1999.[1][10] The character featured in storylines involving Wildman's accelerated pregnancy, family dynamics aboard the stranded USS Voyager, and interactions with alien species, contributing to the series' exploration of human resilience in deep space.[11] In addition to Voyager, Hower made guest appearances on several other series in the 1990s. She played Sheriff Kelli McNeil in a 1997 episode of The Sentinel.[4] She also guest-starred on Suddenly Susan and Crisis Center, short-lived shows that highlighted her versatility in supporting roles amid procedural and dramatic narratives.[6] These appearances, primarily in one-off capacities, underscored her early career focus on genre and ensemble television before transitioning to directing.[2]Film appearances
Hower's film roles have been limited to minor supporting parts in independent and mid-budget features, primarily in the late 1990s and mid-2000s.[6] Her earliest credited appearance was as Guitar Chick Fan in the 1997 independent comedy Colin Fitz Lives!, directed by Robert McCorkle, which follows security guards protecting a rock legend's grave.[12] In 1999, she portrayed Anna's Assistant in Standing on Fishes, a 89-minute comedy directed by Meredith Scott Lynn and Bradford Tatum about a Hollywood executive's chaotic life.[13] Her final known acting credit in film came in 2006 as Deadhead Singer in Catch and Release, a romantic comedy directed by Susannah Grant starring Jennifer Garner, where she provided vocals during a Grateful Dead tribute scene.[14]| Year | Title | Role | Director(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Colin Fitz Lives! | Guitar Chick Fan | Robert McCorkle |
| 1999 | Standing on Fishes | Anna's Assistant | Meredith Scott Lynn, Bradford Tatum |
| 2006 | Catch and Release | Deadhead Singer | Susannah Grant |
