
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Christine Weatherup has been acting professionally since she was a teenager. She graduated from USC, where she triple majored in Cinematic Arts, Theatre & Political Science.
Christine starred in the award-winning indie feature Bread and Butter, opposite Bobby Moynihan (SNL), Micah Hauptman and Lauren Lapkus. She has worked extensively in film and television, including Watchmen, Westworld, Mad Men, and Grey's Anatomy.
In addition to acting, Christine produces, writes and directs. She produced and acts in the award-winning webseries Squaresville, which has garnered millions of views and was featured on Entertainment Weekly's "Must List". She traveled the festival circuit with her award-winning short film Killed In Action, and is currently in post-production on the feature What Are You Doing New Year's?, which she wrote, directed, and stars in.
Christine starred in the award-winning indie feature Bread and Butter, opposite Bobby Moynihan (SNL), Micah Hauptman and Lauren Lapkus. She has worked extensively in film and television, including Watchmen, Westworld, Mad Men, and Grey's Anatomy.
In addition to acting, Christine produces, writes and directs. She produced and acts in the award-winning webseries Squaresville, which has garnered millions of views and was featured on Entertainment Weekly's "Must List". She traveled the festival circuit with her award-winning short film Killed In Action, and is currently in post-production on the feature What Are You Doing New Year's?, which she wrote, directed, and stars in.
“First-rate performance … real, spontaneous performance ... Weatherup has the sparkle of a classic stage comedienne” “Outstanding acting … an attractive naturalness … Weatherup is extremely provocative, |
“She is strong and intelligent ... It’s an almost film stealing performance” “And much of this satisfying subtlety is due to Weatherup, filling the screen as much with what Amelia doesn't say as the things she does.” |
“Weatherup's Tracy is an emotionally volatile woman riddled with conflicts, manipulative, and pathologically self-destructive” Weatherup carries the film gracefully. She makes Amelia relatable: we’ve all known one or we’ve been one.” |