Home Actress Emily Swallow HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers April 2024 Emily Swallow Instagram - Happy Birthday to my big brother @swallzz. Even when he subjected me to tickle torture, I just wanted his approval. He was and is the coolest guy around, and I’m constantly learning from him. (However, because of the trauma inflicted by that tickling, I have a hair trigger reaction and will lash out violently at anyone who tries to tickle me now…just ask my husband.) #bigbrother #happybirthday #siblings #wussoch #tickle #tickletorture

Emily Swallow Instagram – Happy Birthday to my big brother @swallzz. Even when he subjected me to tickle torture, I just wanted his approval. He was and is the coolest guy around, and I’m constantly learning from him. (However, because of the trauma inflicted by that tickling, I have a hair trigger reaction and will lash out violently at anyone who tries to tickle me now…just ask my husband.) #bigbrother #happybirthday #siblings #wussoch #tickle #tickletorture

Emily Swallow Instagram - Happy Birthday to my big brother @swallzz. Even when he subjected me to tickle torture, I just wanted his approval. He was and is the coolest guy around, and I’m constantly learning from him. (However, because of the trauma inflicted by that tickling, I have a hair trigger reaction and will lash out violently at anyone who tries to tickle me now…just ask my husband.) #bigbrother #happybirthday #siblings #wussoch #tickle #tickletorture

Emily Swallow Instagram – Happy Birthday to my big brother @swallzz.
Even when he subjected me to tickle torture, I just wanted his approval. He was and is the coolest guy around, and I’m constantly learning from him.

(However, because of the trauma inflicted by that tickling, I have a hair trigger reaction and will lash out violently at anyone who tries to tickle me now…just ask my husband.)

#bigbrother #happybirthday #siblings #wussoch #tickle #tickletorture | Posted on 30/Jan/2024 22:33:32

Emily Swallow Instagram – I’ll admit – I was intimidated by Carl when I first met him.  Even when I was suited up in my armor, I was so aware of his size…not just his physical mass, but his confidence and swagger.  He knew the impact he had in this sense but, instead of trying to make himself smaller to make people comfortable, he made his generosity and curiosity bigger to welcome people in.  His seeking and delight in discovery is what I will remember the most.  His career spanned decades, but he never tired of talking about the craft of acting.  He had a student mindset, and whenever he directed something, he genuinely wanted feedback.  He’d text when an episode was about to air and he’d say “Please, tell me what you think.  I really want to know.”

He approached the craft as a human being first and foremost, no matter what world we were exploring.  When we’d get frustrated with technical aspects on set, he brought it back to “what do these people need deep down?” We shared o love of theater, and he came to see me in a production of King Lear where the phenomenal Joe Morton played Lear.  He took the time to stay afterwards and talk about what intrigued him.

I had the best time getting him to goof off at conventions, whether we were posing for a prom picture, capturing a jump shot, or hosting a push-up cosplay contest during our panel.  Speaking of panels – I absolutely loved sharing the stage for Q&A panels with him.  His stories were always vivid and personal, but he cracked me up when someone would ask him a complex question about similarities between two seemingly disparate characters and he’d say “I got paid to do both of them.” He delighted in the craft, but he was also very practical about it; he never lost sight of the humans underneath the characters. 

I’m in shock, as all of us are, that he’s gone.  He always seemed so robust, so full of life.  The thought of him stopping was impossible. 

To his kids and family- our hearts are with you.  Thank you for sharing him with us.

#carlweathers #thisistheway #greefcarga
Emily Swallow Instagram – It felt like a fedora kind of day for #thisisthewaywednesday this week. (Thanks, @penmanhats)

My in-laws were visiting this week and we went to see a movie that, if it weren’t based on a true story, would feel like a Hallmark movie.  And before you blow up my comments, I’m not slamming Hallmark movies!  I tried to find one when I was in Winnipeg! (https://youtu.be/okkI2_fP1Jg?si=TmRrNtVQ5ccFK7es)
But when the credits roll on a Hallmark movie, we are aware that we have to shift back to “real life.”

We went to see The Boys in the Boat, based on the book of the same name, based on the true story of the 1936 University of Washington JV Crew Team and their quest to compete in the Olympics, which were in Berlin that year.  They had NO REASON to think they could aspire to that goal.  Several of the guys on the team only joined because they needed help paying tuition while the US was coming out of The Depression.  Crew was not a popular sport on the west coast, and was most accessible to upper class athletes on the east coast.  But this team of men poured out their sweat and focus and gave up a need to have perfect control in order to work together as a team – no small feat, because rowing involves breathing and moving in perfect rhythm with your fellow rowers—row too fast and you lose control, row too slowly and…well, you lose.  They adapted to different bodies of water, they rode the wave of nerves when they were performing for crowds of thousands—and when Daniel James Brown asked Joe Rantz if he could write a book about him, Rantz said “No, you can write a book about the boat.”

Who’s part of your team?  Tag them below!👇 

#thisistheway  #teamwork #rowing #theboysintheboat #thearmorer #americanspirit #grit #resilience #joy #hardworkpaysoff

Check out the latest gallery of Emily Swallow