Charlotte Newhouse

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Charlotte_Newhouse an entity of type: Thing

Charlotte Newhouse is an actress and writer known for creating, and starring in the Comedy Central series Idiotsitter, which premiered in 2014. She also appeared in Reno 911! (2006), Community (2009), (2010), The Big Bang Theory (The Desperation Emanation)(2010), (2010), Workaholics (2011), and Puss in Boots: The Three Diablos (2012). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Charlotte Newhouse
rdf:langString Charlotte Newhouse
rdf:langString Charlotte Newhouse
xsd:integer 49266958
xsd:integer 1116296766
xsd:integer 1978
rdf:langString Creating the series Idiotsitter
rdf:langString Actress, writer
rdf:langString Mark Newhouse
rdf:langString Norman Newhouse
rdf:langString Samuel Irving Newhouse Sr.
rdf:langString Charlotte Newhouse is an actress and writer known for creating, and starring in the Comedy Central series Idiotsitter, which premiered in 2014. She also appeared in Reno 911! (2006), Community (2009), (2010), The Big Bang Theory (The Desperation Emanation)(2010), (2010), Workaholics (2011), and Puss in Boots: The Three Diablos (2012). Newhouse was a member of The Groundlings, along with and Ryan Gaul. A 2011 L.A. Times review noted their performance as "a cappella singers who enthusiastically perform Toto's "Africa" even though they are missing six members of their group ("Throat Culture") and know only the background and percussion parts". In 2015 she played the lead role of Mackenzie in the comedy short Sensitive Guys, directed by . In January 2016, Comedy Central debuted a new series, Idiotsitter, in which Newhouse portrays Harvard graduate Wilhelmina "Billie" Brown, who is hired by wealthy, negligent parents to supervise their incorrigible grown daughter, Gene (Jillian Bell), who is serving time under house arrest. Idiotsitter was launched as a web series in early 2014, before being picked up in June 2014 by Comedy Central for network airing. The show renewed for a second season in 2016. She is a creator of the show with Workaholics co-star Jillian Bell, who she met as a member of the Los Angeles-based compedy troupe The Groundlings.
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xsd:gYear 1978

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