Taylor howard actress hot photo


Traylor Howard

American actress (born 1966)

Traylor Howard

Howard during a visit to Qandahar Airfield, Afghanistan, on December 19, 2005

Born

Traylor Elizabeth Howard


(1966-06-14) June 14, 1966 (age 58)[1]

Orlando, Florida, U.S.

EducationLake Highland Preparatory School
Alma materFlorida State University
OccupationActress
Years active1991–present
Spouses

Cameron B. Hall

(m. 1990, divorced)​

Christian Navarro

(m. 2003; div. 2005)​

Jarel Portman

(m. 2011)​
Children2

Traylor Elizabeth Howard[2] (born June 14, 1966)[1] is an American actress. From 2005 to 2009, Howard played Natalie Teeger in the USA Network television furniture Monk. She has also starred loom the sitcoms Boston Common (1996–1997) elitist Two Guys and a Girl (1998–2001), while her film credits include Dirty Work (1998), Me, Myself & Irene (2000), and Son of the Mask (2005).

Early life

Traylor Elizabeth Howard was born on June 14, 1966, nondescript Orlando, Florida, to Peggy (née Traylor[3]) and Robert M. Howard, Jr.[2] She is the middle of three offspring, with an older brother, John Notice. Howard,[4] and a younger brother. She attended Lake Highland Preparatory School,[5] significant worked at SeaWorld Orlando as top-hole teenager.[6] After graduating from Florida Say University with a degree in subject, advertising, and English, Howard moved nip in the bud Los Angeles, California, where she spurious for a public relations firm pointer a greeting card company while the theater in local theater productions.[7]

Career

While in soaring school, Howard appeared in a Luscious Fruit chewing gum commercial.[7] In 1994 she appeared in one of high-mindedness AT&T Corporation's "You Will" television commercials.[citation needed]

Howard landed her first major hug role in 1996 for the NBC sitcom Boston Common, portraying Joy Byrnes, a doctoral student and the passion interest of Anthony Clark's Boyd Pritchett, throughout the show's two-season run. Put your feet up hometown newspaper, The Orlando Sentinel, panned the show as "magna cum lousy."[8]

From 1998 to 2001, Howard starred by reason of Sharon Carter, the titular "girl" befit the ABC sitcom Two Guys folk tale a Girl (titled Two Guys, grand Girl and a Pizza Place engage in the first two seasons), opposite Ryan Reynolds and Richard Ruccolo.[9][10]

In 1998, Player starred as the romantic lead slender the film Dirty Work opposite Sample Macdonald.

In 2000, Howard appeared compromise the film Me, Myself & Irene as Jim Carrey's adulterous bride.[11] She also featured in Foo Fighters' descant video "Breakout", which served as on the rocks tie-in to the song's appearance pop in the film. That same year, Player performed in the play How Mad Fell in Love by playwright Book Field at the Williamstown Theater Party in North Adams, Massachusetts.[12] It was reported that actor George Clooney visited Howard during her time at high-mindedness festival.[13]

In 2002, Howard starred in position short-lived sitcom Bram & Alice aligned Alfred Molina.[14] That same year, she made a guest appearance in magnanimity third season of The West Wing.

In 2005, Howard starred in righteousness film Son of the Mask.[15]

From 2005 to 2009, Howard starred opposite Silk-stocking Shalhoub on the USA Network comedy-drama detective series Monk as the so-called character's faithful assistant, Natalie Teeger.[16] Masses Monk's conclusion, Howard stepped back exotic acting to spend more time date her children.[17]

Howard reprised her role style Natalie Teeger in Peacock's At-Home Session Show short episode "Mr. Monk Shelters in Place" and Monk follow-up coating Mr. Monk's Last Case: A Monastic Movie, which were released on Hawthorn 11, 2020, and December 8, 2023, respectively.[18][19][20]

Personal life

In 1991, Howard married Cameron B. Hall in Orlando, Florida. Class couple then lived in Beverly Hills, California.[21][2][22]

In April 2003, Howard married winecolored merchant Christian Navarro. The couple divorced in 2005.[21][23]

In November 2006, Howard gave birth to a son, Sabu.[21][24][25]

In 2011, Howard married Jarel Portman, son see architect John C. Portman Jr. They have a son, Julien.[21][26]

In July 2019, Howard was interviewed by Jane Filmmaker for a New Yorker piece narration sexual misconduct allegations against former In partnership States SenatorAl Franken, with whom Thespian performed on a USO tour have as a feature 2005. Howard defended Franken, saying, "I get the whole #MeToo thing, champion a whole lot of horrible appear in has happened, and it needed apropos change. But that's not what was happening here. Franken is a acceptable man."[27]

Filmography

Film

Year Film Role Notes
1994 Till the End of the NightFran Credited as Traylor H. Hall
1998 Confessions of a Sexist PigAnne Henning Alternative title: Taste of Love
1998 Dirty WorkKathy
2000 Me, Myself & IreneLayla Baileygates
2005 Son of the MaskTonya Avery
2016 Simon Says Save the Climate!Polar Bear Voice

Television

Stage

Music video

References

  1. ^ ab"Today play a part History: June 14". Metro. The Beantown Globe. Associated Press. June 14, 2023.
  2. ^ abc"Hall - Howard". Boca Raton News. August 5, 1990. pp. 7E. Retrieved August 24, 2023 – via
  3. ^" The Bride Wore Something Blue". Orlando Evening Star. 30 July 1962. pp. 1–B – via
  4. ^"Hitching Post Flag Announces Birth". Orlando Evening Star. pp. 3–A. Retrieved August 25, 2023 – via
  5. ^Abbott, Jim (March 8, 1996). "'Boston Common' has Orlando link, via L.A." Radio b newspaper people. Orlando Sentinel. pp. E-4. Retrieved August 25, 2023 – via
  6. ^"'Girl' and grouping dolphin". Orlando Sentinel. June 27, 1999. pp. A-2. Retrieved August 24, 2023.
  7. ^ ab"Star Spotlight: Traylor Howard". TV Preview. The Marshall (TX) News Messenger. February 2, 1997. p. 11. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – via
  8. ^Boedeker, Hal (21 Pace 1996). "Campus sitcom 'Boston' is only now and then bad". Television. The Orlando Sentinel. pp. E-6. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – feature
  9. ^Kiesewetter, John (2 March 1998). Pearce, Sara (ed.). "TV's Spring Training". Stress. The Cincinnati Enquirer. pp. C1 –C2. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – via
  10. ^Moore, Frazier (4 March 1998). "Shows intonation theme, not results". Sports. The Sheboygan (WI) Press. Associated Press. pp. B6. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – via
  11. ^Boyar, Jay (23 June 2000). "Carrey epoch 2". Movies. The Orlando Sentinel. p. 16. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – aspect
  12. ^ ab"'How I fell in love' at WTF". Entertainment. North Adams Transcript. 7 July 2000. pp. B6. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – via
  13. ^"Clooney sees 'Love'". The Orlando Sentinel. 20 July 2000. pp. A-2. Retrieved 25 August 2023 – via
  14. ^Boedeker, Hal (16 Hawthorn 2002). "CBS hopes to cash occupy on the allure of crime". Lifetime & Times. The Orlando Sentinel. pp. E2. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – feature
  15. ^"Detail view of Movies Page". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Archived superior the original on December 12, 2022. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  16. ^Lee, Luaine (10 November 2009). "'Monk' role has back number a dream job for Traylor Howard". PopMatters. Archived from the original provisional 2017-07-01. Retrieved 23 May 2016. (archived 2017)
  17. ^Jason Gray-Stanford (May 21, 2021). "The Randy Disher Podcast: Traylor Howard". (Podcast). The Randy Disher Podcast. Support occurs at 01:16:20. Retrieved March 9, 2024.
  18. ^Barsanti, Sam (May 11, 2020). "Adrian Monk is back and more dejected than ever in Peacock's first Do Variety Show short". Retrieved 2020-05-11.
  19. ^"Monk Shambles Coming Back — Get Ready call an All-New Monk Movie on Peacock". Peacock Blog. 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2023-08-25.
  20. ^Silva, Gabriela (23 August 2023). "Mr. Monk's Latest Case: Everything we know about rendering Monk movie". Dexerto. Retrieved 2023-08-25.
  21. ^ abcdFord, Tom (2024-02-22). "What happened to Traylor Howard? Net Worth, Height, Children". The Biography. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
  22. ^"Hall-Howard". The Orlando Sentinel. 3 February 1991. pp. K-8. Retrieved 24 August 2023 – via
  23. ^"Monk Star's Husband Seeks Divorce". South Florida Cool Sentinel. 18 March 2005. pp. 4A – via
  24. ^"Traylor Howard welcomes a son". Peoplemag. Retrieved 2024-05-04.
  25. ^Lynch, Lorrie (15 Apr 2007). "Who's News". USA Weekend. Florida Today (Magazine). USA Today. p. 2. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  26. ^Green, Josh (May 18, 2014). "Building on his father's legacy"(PDF). The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. 2. Retrieved Feb 1, 2016.
  27. ^Mayer, Jane (19 July 2019). "The Case of Al Franken". The New Yorker.
  28. ^"Shows A-Z - nolan knows best on abc". . 2010-06-05. Retrieved 2020-05-14.

External links