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Donna Casey

Donna Casey


You know that path that all your friends took that lead them to the big house, kids, and Hawiian vacation every year? Well, Donna took the other one. That other path lead her to experience the awesomeness of working in a restaurant and all of the levelheaded, sophisticated, gifts-from-God customers that she has met throughout the years. Without this, there would be no “Servitude,” no hilarity for you to enjoy and no outlet for the world to learn about what really happens when your server stops smiling at you and ducks into the kitchen to complain about you. Not YOU of course, but the other YOU, the guy sitting with you that you’re now embarrassed to be seen with. Enough about you, we’re talking about Donna now. She grew up in Austin, TX until the ripe age of 22 when she moved to NY for 3 years to study acting. As soon as she started to make a name for herself, she made the wise decision to move to LA and start over. Being young and talented, she did well for herself and came close to booking some life changing roles. That “close” has kept her hooked, like a gambler who knows her next big win is just a deal away. And it is this time, by God, it is!
www.thedonnacasey.com

Bryan Frank

Bryan Frank


How long does an actor go without work, before he can't call himself an actor anymore, and he's just a bartender? Enigmatic puzzles like this filled Bryan's mind, in his nine years of pouring tasty alcoholic concoctions for the Hollywood players. To avoid finding the answer, he decided to make his own show about restaurant life. He gathered five restaurant-savvy friends to tell them his idea, and together they developed Servitude.


Between serving drinks and writing scripts, Bryan is an accomplished storyboard artist for commercials, music videos, television and film. He currently works regularly on "Grey's Anatomy" and "Law & Order". His favorite hobby combines the best of both worlds: Getting people drunk until they pass out, then drawing inappropriate cartoons on their skin.


Bryan is very single. If you are at least two of the following: pretty, available, and female… contact him via this website. Or just come over. He's home.

Katie Leahey

Kate Leahey


This vertically challenged and versatile actress actually works with five members of the cast of Servitude in real life (yep we actually do this!) and was taking improv classes at IO West in Hollywood where she met fellow cast mate Jeremy McWilliams. She writes for the series as well as plays Aby Lynch. Her favorite day would be spent watching all of the "Star Wars" movies back to back with a plate of deviled eggs.

Don't forget to check out my new Sears commercial.
www.kateleahey.com

Jeremy McWilliams

Jeremy McWilliams


Jeremy McWilliams was born on the prairies of Kansas. Raised by Amish yearning parents that tormented him with country music, he developed creative ambitions. Seizing the opportunity for a rumspringa, he jumped off the wagon and hit the yellow brick road detouring in Santa Fe for an education and San Francisco for world experience. Like a Leprechaun he seized the opportunity to play shenanigans, either by belting a ditty, dancing a jig, or sipping the whiskey. But adventure comes at a steep price and he was shanghaied into waiting tables. Years in servitude he lost his soul working for an insane chef, meth-head managers, and many nut-so guests. Still Jeremy holds onto the dreams of his youth. He is a writer, actor, improviser, and artist living in LA and longing to tell an epic tale.

Brian Normoyle

Brian Normoyle


Brian is an actor and writer based in Los Angeles. Born in the Midwest and raised in Texas, he went to public schools and grew up a dirt-poor Christian in comparison to his wealthy peers. After swapping his Bible and its fear-based worldview for rational thought and works of non-fiction, he attended private universities for undergraduate and graduate school and moved to Europe. So – depending on which period of his life Sarah Palin is viewing – either he’s an average, middle-class “real” American or a socialist-sympathizing liberal elitist.


Audiences may recognise Brian from… well let’s face it… absolutely nothing – although he did spend several seasons wearing tights at an award-winning Shakespeare theater and has written a few politically pontificating articles for that den of liberal iniquity, the Huffington Post. His excessive Ivory-Tower education, years of fruitless classical training and crippling student loan debt haven't gone completely to waste, however; he’s dedicated the better part of the last decade (and a huge swath of his soul) to acting in the restaurant industry. Five nights a week he dons an apron and pretends he a) gives a shit; b) is above it all; and c) still has his dignity intact. None of which, of course, is true.


He still finds great joy in his love of Original Broadway Cast recordings and gin. And if you can read between the lines on that last part, you may be smarter than a fifth-grader. Or Michelle Bachmann.

Nori Jill Phillips

Nori Jill Phillips


Nori Jill was born a lover and a fighter to a free-spirited mother and strong-hearted, stable father in Northern California. That’s right, she’s a native folks, a rare species in more ways than one. Luckily, she acquired the best qualities of both of her parents which inspired her to follow her dreams of becoming a successful actress and massive philanthropist; to change the world for the better, but to go about it in a practical way. She completed her degree in Theater Arts and after realizing that that document was the world’s most expensive piece of toilet paper, she decided to “temporarily” take a job waiting tables until the scripts started rolling in. After booking roles in countless independent films, many television shows, and her own series on Comedy Central, Nori Jill is seconds away from being able to have the life of her dreams and finally give up her daily doses of Advil PM and Chardonnay in a futile attempt to dampen the reality of being a waiter--still. And hey, if you dare try to break her shell of positivity, you will be defeated. So just accept the hug, believe me, it’s much easier that way.