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Miranda Frigon (born February 8, 1980) is a Canadian actress and singer-songwriter. She starred in the television series Primeval: New World (2012-13) and Day of the Dead (2021) and played Lynn Liggett-Smith in the Hallmark Movies & Mysteries movie series Aurora Teagarden Mysteries from 2015 to 2022.
Miranda Frigon as Maddy Randall, a police officer (Joe Randall's Sister) Jessica McLeod as Megan Randall, is Joe Randall's daughter; Dylan Schmid as Jackson Randall, is Joe Randall's son; William B. Davis as Ben, a lighthouse keeper; Grace Vukovic as Julie; Ben Witmer as Jake; Thea Gill as Tara Laykin, head of the FOA; Aliyah O'Brien as Alicia ...
The first film received average reviews from critics, who noted Mills and Bassinger's performances. Joel Keller from Decider wrote in his review: "While it’s tempting to give V.C. Andrews’ Dawn a recommendation just on the strength of the performances of Mills and Bassinger, the rest of the first episode is cheaply made with an underbaked ...
Her most recent Hallmark film was A Sprinkle of Deceit: ... Miranda Frigon and Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe. Related: A Man From the 18th Century Finds Himself in 2022 in Hallmark Mystery's Rip in Time ...
Aurora Teagarden is a fictional character created by author Charlaine Harris.She is the protagonist of a series of eleven crime novels written from 1990 to 2017. Hallmark Movies & Mysteries began adapting the novels in 2014 for their original film series The Aurora Teagarden Mysteries with Candace Cameron Bure in the title role, part of the network’s "Mystery Wheel" umbrella series.
They are brought to the Sanctuary for study, where it is later determined that the sisters, Danu (Miranda Frigon), Tatha (Leah Cairns) and Caird (Laura Mennell), have been held in suspended animation for 1,200 years.
Social Security scams soared in recent years due to the combination of the COVID-19 pandemic and increasingly sophisticated technologies. According to FBI data, Americans 60 and older reported $3.1...
White Noise is a 2005 supernatural horror film directed by Geoffrey Sax and starring Michael Keaton and Deborah Kara Unger.The title refers to electronic voice phenomena (EVP), where anomalous voice-like sounds, which some believe to be from the "other side" — interpreted as spirit voices, are found on electronic audio recordings.