- Data di nascita
- Altezza1,75 m
- June Diane Raphael è nata il 4 gennaio 1980. Luogo di nascita: Usa. È conosciuta come attrice e sceneggiatrice. È celebre per aver partecipato a Affare fatto (2015), Non mi scaricare (2008) e Anno uno (2009). È sposata con Paul Scheer dal 10 ottobre 2009. Hanno due figli/e.
- ConiugePaul Scheer(10 ottobre 2009 - presente) (2 bambini)
- BambiniAugust ScheerSam Scheer
- GenitoriDiane RaphaelJohn Raphael
- ParentiLauren Raphael(Sibling)Deanna Cheng(Sibling)
- Co-created the two-woman sketch comedy show, "Rode Hard and Put Away Wet", with her friend, Casey Wilson. The show originated at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York City and was hailed as a "Critics Pick" by TimeOut New York. "Rode Hard" was also an official 2005 selection of the HBO Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, Colorado and won Best Comedic Duo at the 2005 Emerging Comics of NY (ECNY) Awards. In late 2005, the show was performed for several months at the UCB Theater in Los Angeles.
- Performs at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in LA.
- Throws the annual It's Not Your Parents' Dance Party in LA to benefit the Bresdee Foundation, an after school program and family services organization that helps young people pursue an education. The event is also in honor of her parents, who have both passed.
- Gave birth to her 1st child at age 34, a son named August Scheer on April 30, 2014. Child's father is her husband, Paul Scheer.
- Gave birth to her 2nd child at age 36, a son named Sam Scheer in August 2016. Child's father is her husband, Paul Scheer.
- One Christmas I had no money, and so I went home and just, like, wrote a poem; I mean, I didn't write them, but I just handed out poems as Christmas presents. Like, 'Here's a Pablo Neruda poem that really made me think of you.'
- Comedy fans are the best fans. They embrace and support you doing low-budget work and will follow you to the end of the earth!
- I took a couple of classes in clowning, but that was more like Lucille Ball kind of slapstick, not Ringling Brothers. But we had to do things silently, and the teacher would do this running commentary. 'Does this make Clown sad? Oh, Clown doesn't like that, does Clown?' Always 'Clown.' Never a name.
- I love 'Les Mis' so much, like, since I was younger; I saw it when I was like, you know, 10, and I've seen it almost 18 times.
- I remember in second grade, everybody in the class had to come up with adjectives for each other, and I got shy. In a way, I force myself to perform, because if I didn't, I'd stay home rolled up in a ball watching 'The Real Housewives of Orange County' all day.
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