Arden Myrin is an American actress and comedian. Myrin plays Regina Sinclair on the Netflix series Insatiable. She joined the cast of season seven of Showtime’s Shameless and appeared in the world premiere of Steve Martin’s play Meteor Shower at the Long Wharf Theatre.
Arden Myrin Age
She was born on 10 December 1973, Little Compton, Rhode Island, United States. She is 45 years old as of 2018.
Arden Myrin Parents
Her father was an accountant, and her mother was a real estate agent but their names are not disclosed.
Arden Myrin Siblings
Her brother is Alarik Myrin who Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer – Zwift | LinkedIn
Arden Myrin Husband|Married
She got married to Dan Martin in 2007, December 30.
Arden Myrin Height
She is 1.62 m tall.
Arden Myrin photo
Arden Myrin Education
She attended the Friends Academy in Dartmouth, Massachusetts, where she graduated. She then attended Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts for high school. She is of Swedish and Norwegian heritage.[1]
Afterward, she attended Colorado College, a small liberal arts school, where she received a degree in theater and studio arts. She was elected commencement speaker at her graduation.
During one college break, Myrin began to study improvisational comedy and worked as an intern on NBC’s Late Night with Conan O’Brien, where she admits she “mostly ran the Xerox machine.”
Arden Myrin and Husband Adan Martin
Arden Myrin Career
Soon after graduation, she briefly moved to Chicago, where she became a member of the Improv Olympic and later relocated to New York City and Los Angeles, where she was part of the same group.
One of her memorable standup comedians acts included a section of her own life experiences called Straight Outta Lil’ Compton. Myrin also trained with the Los Angeles comedy troupes The Groundlings and Upright Citizens Brigade.
Arden Myrin Movies
Year
Title
Role
1997
I Think I Do
Wendy
1997
Deconstructing Harry
Mary
1997
In & Out
Student
1998
The Impostors
Stewardess with luggage
1999
30 Days
Stacey
2000
What Women Want
Darcy’s assistant
2001
Bubble Boy
Lorraine
2002
Highway
Lucy
2002
Auto Focus
Hippie girl
2003
Farm Sluts
Larry’s co-worker
2003
Soul Mates
Julie
2003
Dry Cycle
Sarah
2004
Kinsey
Emily
2004
Whistlin’ Dixie
Bunny LeVine
2004
Christmas with the Kranks
Daisy
2005
Heart of the Beholder
Patty
2005
I’m Not Gay
Foreperson
2007
Evan Almighty
Evan’s staffer
2009
The Informant!
Sarah Scott
2012
Wrong
Gabrielle
2013
Wrong Cops
Shirley
2018
Daphne & Velma
Principal Piper
2018
HeadShop
Shelby
2019
I Hate Kids
Janice Bodicker
2019
Satanic Panic
Arden Myrin Tv Shows
Year
Title
Role
1997–1999
Working
Abby Cosgrove
1999
Just Shoot Me!
Amy
2000
Nikki
Amy
2001
Friends
Brenda
2003
On the Spot
Caramel
2004
I’m with Her
Girl
2004
Reno 911!
Miss Nude Reno 1
2005
Kitchen Confidential
Wendy
2005–2009, 2016
Mad TV
Various characters
2006
Gilmore Girls
Claude
2006
Modern Men
Marcy
2007–2008
That’s So Hollywood
Herself
2007–2015
Good Day LA
Herself
2008–2014
Chelsea Lately
Herself
2009
True Jackson, VP
Jenna Lutrell
2009
Royal Pains
Bonnie Day
2009
Ruby & the Rockits
Erica
2009
Michael and Michael Have Issues
Various characters
2009
It’s On with Alexa Chung
Herself
2010
Party Down
Vanna De Milo
2011
Hot in Cleveland
Jasmine Breeze
2011
Hung
Joanie
2011
RuPaul’s Drag Race
Herself (guest judge)
2011–2012
Suburgatory
Jocelyn
2011, 2013
Psych
Chelsea
2012
Delocated
Marlo
2013
Inside Amy Schumer
Mail girl
2013
Orange Is the New Black
Dr. Brooks
2013
The Soul Man
Danielle
2013
Key & Peele
Marcy Whitchurch
2014
@midnight
Herself
2014
Legit
Tess
2014
Anger Management
Paula
2014
Quick Draw
Belle Starr
2015
The Exes
Stacy
2015
Fresh Off the Boat
Ashley Alexander
2015
Bones
Lori Tucker
2015
K.C. Undercover
Candice Adams
2015
2 Broke Girls
Jodie
2016
Hidden America with Jonah Ray
Anne Acton
2016
Shameless
Dollface Delores
2017
Still the King
Kaitlynn
2018
Corporate
Courtney
2018
Grey’s Anatomy
Kirsten
2018–present
Insatiable
Regina Sinclair
2018
Adam Ruins Everything
Cathy Marciola
2019
The Magicians
Helen
a2019
Teachers
Trish
Arden Myrin Mad Tv
She was cast member of Mad TV for the last four seasons along with Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Ike Barinholtz, and Bobby Lee.
She officially joined the cast of Mad TV in 2005 as a repertory performer for the eleventh season and remained with the show until it was canceled in 2009.
Arden Myrin: “Your Idea Of Comedy Is My Idea Of Creepy”
JULY 10, 2018
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Refinery29.
I am writing this on behalf of my 8-year-old self, who just wanted to grow up and be the next Gilda Radner or Madeline Kahn; who just wanted to get old enough to move to L.A. or NYC and make people laugh. It never occurred to me that a female wanting to do comedy was unusual or an act of rebellion.
Even in this climate, when people are finally talking about treating women equally, I had one of the more degrading experiences of my entire career a few weeks ago. I’ve been doing comedy as an improviser, stand-up, sketch comedian, and actress for over 20 years.
When you do a spot at a stand-up show, the host might introduce you by mentioning a TV credit, or just say something general. “We are glad to have them here;” “It’s their first time on the show;” or “Please welcome”. But none of those were part of my introduction when I recently did standup at an alt-comedy show in Silver Lake hosted by two guys who were playing characters as morning show hosts. My intro was as follows:
“Our next comic is a female. Yup, she’s a girl comic. She’s got titties. That’s right guys, just picture taking out your wet dicks and sliding them back-and-forth between those big ole’ titties. Please welcome….”
The Funny Thing About “Unfunny” Women
And then they got my name wrong.
I don’t know if guys have any idea what it’s like to already be the only female in a lineup, which I was, and then to be so publicly humiliated and violated. Not only did I still have to go do my 10-minute set, but I was now starting at a disadvantage with the audience because the entire room JUST PICTURED TITTY FUCKING ME. When you really think about that act, it is so dominating.
Usually, the woman is pinned down for a man’s pleasure, and often he ejaculates on her. That was my introduction at a comedy show.
I turned to my friend who booked the show, and she said: “What the hell?” The audience nervously applauded and didn’t really laugh during the intro. I walked up onto the stage in a daze. I remember making awkward eye contact with a woman in the front row. The vibe in the room was not an ideal way to start a stand-up set.
“
One of these guys should know who I am because I’ve met him once before. A few years ago I had to do a television show with a panel of comedians, and he was one of them. He made jokes about me being covered in jizz during the taping. I don’t know if his comments made it into the edit of the show because I refused to watch myself be degraded on television.
I didn’t recognize his name when I agreed to do the show in Silver Lake, but as soon as I showed up I thought, Oh shit, it’s that guy. Still, I tried to rationalize for him and say, “Maybe that was a one-time thing. Maybe he was just doing it for the show.” Nope. I have now had two interactions with this man, and both times I have either had my breasts mentioned or me being covered in semen.
When people pull things like this on women, women don’t even get to start on a level playing field. There’s no blank slate. They have to stop and deal with the verbal assault first, and then attempt to change the energy of the room before moving on to doing their jobs — in my case doing my stand-up set. It’s extra confusing when it’s “alt-comedy,” and people are being ironic.
Alt comedy shows have historically been more welcoming to female and LGBTQ+ comedians. Even though the tone at this particular show was experimental and loose, and the men who introduced me were playing the parts of boorish characters, the effect is the same. It is misogyny hiding behind irony. And if you don’t roll with the punches, you look uptight.
The reality is when you are a comedian you have to be resilient. There are many things that happen on the road that come with the territory: hecklers, drunks, chasing paychecks with club owners, etc. But when you get harassed by your peers, it puts you in an odd position. You don’t want to seem like you don’t have a good sense of humor. Incidents like this are violating, degrading, aggressive, and still happen in various ways more often than you would think.
A few days after the incident, I told my friend Erin Foley, another comic, what had happened, and she asked me if I told the two guys to F off. The reality is I did not. I wish I had. I wish I was one of those people who could just tear someone a new asshole, and have the crowd eating out of my hand because I had the perfect cutting remark or comeback. That’s just not who I am.
I have delayed reactions. I’m always stunned when someone disrespects me that aggressively. I almost leave my body. I go on autopilot just to get out of that situation. In fight or flight, I flew, but I also still had to keep my wits about me because I still had to do my job.
Things like this still happen, and you eventually get worn down after years of subtle (and in this case, not so subtle) degradation.
I don’t know why they did it. Maybe they thought it was funny. The audience was not really laughing, but the men just kept riffing on and on about it. The room started spinning for me after the penises between my breasts line, so I couldn’t even tell you how the intro ended. Maybe these guys didn’t realize that there’s already such a bias when you do standup as a female and that you have to work a little harder to get the crowd on your side.
With that introduction, they essentially reduced me to an object. An object to be degraded – something with no worth. One of them has a new baby daughter. I wonder how he would feel if someone did this to her at her work? Or to his wife? Sister? Mom?
It’s been almost a year since the #Metoo movement started. This happened in June of 2018 after so many men have been called out for inappropriate behavior, not just in the comedy community, but globally. Discussion about it has been everywhere. It’s shocking to me that people still think degrading a woman like this for a cheap laugh is okay. A woman who is their guest, their co-worker, their peer. They think their comments are ironic, so they don’t hurt. Words are powerful.
In case anyone else out there didn’t get the memo, yes, women are funny. No, we don’t need you to call us a “girl comic” in our introduction. How about just a comic? And no need to comment on your dicks with our bodies when you bring us onstage — or ever, really.
I am proud of myself and my career. I try to be kind to people, I show up on time, and I’m always prepared. I am happy that there are so many wonderful female comics right now. And honestly, more often than not, the men that I have worked with across the country have been generous, wonderful, funny souls.
But things like this still happen, and you eventually get worn down after years of subtle (and in this case, not so subtle) degradation.
Time is truly up on all of this asinine behavior — and it is accepted. I’m so angry and over it. I have value. And to that 8-year old girl – even though I’m tired – I didn’t forget you. Women need to see other women onstage. I am proud to be a headlining comic.
I am proud to do festivals and shows in tiny venues and big venues with lots and lots of wonderful funny generous comedians of all genders. I wouldn’t be the same person if I had never seen Gilda or Madeleine (even though neither was a stand-up, they lit my fuse).
Maybe some young lady out there will see something in me that inspires her to want to own her voice and try her hand at telling jokes. I just pray for the next wave of funny young ladies out there that the path gets a little easier and a little kinder.