Kate Elliott

3/5

Biography

As a child in rural Oregon, Kate Elliott made up stories because she longed to escape to a world of lurid adventure fiction. She now writes fantasy, steampunk, and science fiction, often with a romantic edge. She currently lives in Hawaii, where she paddles outrigger canoes and spoils her schnauzer.

  • Aliases
  • Alis A. Rasmussen
  • Primary profession
  • Actress·production_manager·director
  • Country
  • New Zealand
  • Nationality
  • New Zealand
  • Gender
  • Female
  • Birth date
  • 27 July 1958
  • Place of birth
  • Des Moines· Iowa

Movies

TV

Books

Trivia

Although she loves acting, her first love is singing and is working on a (Pop) CD. Can sing ALL kinds of music from Pop to Country to Soft Rock to Opera and can sing in French, Italian and German.

Attended Epsom Girls Grammar in Auckland, New Zealand.

Kate likes to do her own stunts. She performed all of her fight scenes and harness work in Fresh Meat.

In Jean Kate took flying lessons, so she could fly the 1930s Bi-Plane.

Quotes

Listen, my father had written. Listen to hear if they are telling the truth or only part of the truth, for that is the lesson of history: that the victors tell the tale of their triumph in a manner to grant accolades to themselves and heap blame upon their rivals. Ask yourself if part of the story is being withheld by design or ignorance.

Above all else, do not fear to climb the victory tower.

How can it be men would put up with such an arrangement?'Why do some people demand it of women but not of men? It is just another way of doing things. As my father would have said, folk will have their customs according to their nature and their surroundings.

The history of the world begins with a seed. The seed is the kernel of what you are, but it is also the promise of what you can become.

You learn to ride on the path and keep your eyes open so you can see what is there, not what you wish were there. . . . And then after all you might discover that what is there is what you wished for all along.

Are these soldiers really our enemy, or only the worst reflection of our own selves?. . . We made them. We have to unmake them, not just defeat or kill them. .

Comments