Background
Lindsay Pulsipher was born and grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah, with five siblings, and was inspired to be an actor by her mother, a theater actress.
Lindsay Pulsipher was born and grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah, with five siblings, and was inspired to be an actor by her mother, a theater actress.
She has had several roles in film and television, and is known for her series regular role as Rose Lawrence on A&East Network"s The Beast (2009). She joined the third season of Home Box Office"s True Blood (2010), playing were-panther Crystal Norris and love interest to Jason Stackhouse. I was doing that from the time I can remember.
lieutenant was always something I enjoyed doing".
She was influenced by Julie Christie and Audrey Hepburn who showed her "a whole new world as far as acting goes". Pulsipher"s parents were Latter-Day Saints but in her own words, "I went to church as a kid.
After appearing in several roles from 2000 to 2003 in the television series, Touched by an Angel, filmed in her hometown of Salt Lake City, and after starring in a couple of indie films, Pulsipher moved to Los Angeles to pursue a lifelong dream of a career in acting. She was given several guest starring roles in popular television series including House, Doctor of Medicine, Computer Society of India: New York (Crime Scene Investigation: New York) and NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and eventually received a regular role with Patrick Swayze in The Beast (2009).
She took the role of Crystal Norris beginning with the third season of the True Blood (2010).
She has starred in two features directed by Calvin Reeder: The Oregonian (2011), and The Rambler (2013). Pulsipher was confirmed as the replacement for Hilary Duff as Bonnie Parker in the remake of The Bonnie and Clyde Story, but was later replaced herself with English actress Holliday Grainger. "..I"m a very visual person.
When I"m reading a script or if I"m preparing for a scene I really like to create the story in a visual sense.
I take myself out of the character completely and almost watch the character as a spectator, if that makes sense. I"m observing the character as a third person.
So I don"t make it too personal so that she"s her own person. I read it like I do a novel.
When you read a book you create this image in your head of what these people are doing and the story in your head is more of a visual thing.
I guess that I do that with scripts, too. I almost look at it as a spectator as opposed to being right in lieutenant I know that sounds cheesy but then I feel like I can then learn from watching it if that makes sense".
Quotations:
"..I"m a very visual person. When I"m reading a script or if I"m preparing for a scene I really like to create the story in a visual sense. I take myself out of the character completely and almost watch the character as a spectator, if that makes sense.
I"m observing the character as a third person.
So I don"t make it too personal so that she"s her own person. I read it like I do a novel.
When you read a book you create this image in your head of what these people are doing and the story in your head is more of a visual thing. I guess that I do that with scripts, too.
I almost look at it as a spectator as opposed to being right in lieutenant
I know that sounds cheesy but then I feel like I can then learn from watching it if that makes sense".