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{{sidebar actor
[[File:Rooney arctic.jpg|thumb|...as Dr. Rooney]]
 
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|name = Bonita Friedericy
[[File:Rooney as Borg.jpg|thumb|...and the Borg drone she was transformed into]]
 
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|image = Rooney (22nd century).jpg
'''Bonita Friedericy''' {{born|10|October|1961}} is an actress who portrayed the [[scientist]] [[Rooney (female)|Rooney]] and later a [[Borg drone]] in the [[Star Trek: Enterprise|''Enterprise'']] episode {{e|Regeneration}}.
 
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|caption = ...as Rooney
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|birth name = Bonita Friedericy
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|birthday = {{d|10|October|1961}}
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|birthplace = Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
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|deathday =
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|deathplace =
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|roles = Actress
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|characters = {{dis|Rooney|22nd century}}
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|image2 = Rooney as Borg.jpg
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|caption2 = ...transformed into a Borg drone
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}}
 
'''Bonita Friedericy''' {{born|10|October|1961}} is an actress who portrayed {{dis|Rooney|22nd century}} who was later turned into a [[Borg drone]] in the {{s|ENT}} [[ENT Season 2|second season]] episode {{e|Regeneration}}. She filmed her scenes in early {{m|March|2003}}. Friedricy is married to [[John Billingsley]], who plays [[Doctor]] [[Phlox]] in ''Star Trek: Enterprise''. He had been trying to get her a role on ''Enterprise'' for a while, specifically to play one of his character's many wives. When she did guest star in "Regeneration", he made it a point to tell people that her name is pronounced "so that it rhymes with ''Fried and Greasy''".{{incite}}
   
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[[File:Bonita Friedericy and John Billingsley.jpg|thumb|left|A "borgified" Friedericy with husband John Billingsley]]
She is married to [[John Billingsley]], who plays [[Doctor|Dr.]] [[Phlox]] in ''Star Trek: Enterprise''. He had been trying to get her a role on ''Enterprise'' for a while, specifically to play one of his character's many wives. When she did guest star in "Regeneration", he made it a point to tell people that her name is pronounced "so that it rhymes with ''Fried and Greasy''".
 
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In an [[audio commentary]] for "Regeneration" on the [[ENT Season 2 Blu-ray]], Friedericy and Billingsley joked that Friedericy got the part of Rooney by sleeping with [[Charles Tucker III|Tucker]] actor [[Connor Trinneer]]. In reality, Friedericy auditioned for the role of Rooney, but when she walked into the room to audition, ''Star Trek: Enterprise'' creators and Executive Producers [[Rick Berman]] and [[Brannon Braga]] pretended not to know her. "''It was very unnerving, because I'm very shy and I didn't know whether I should say hello or not,''" Friedericy explained. "''So, I sort of waved at them and they both kind of looked distastefully at me, and looked up at the ceiling and then they said, 'Go,' and I thought I wasn't gonna get it, and it was sad, but then I got the call and I got it.''"
   
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On the set, Friedericy was referred to as a Borg baby. "''I was called the baby Borg because Borg are never little, and I'm five-foot-three,''" she remarked. Applying the Borg makeup to Friedericy for Rooney's assimilated appearance took five-and-a-half hours. This was longer than usual because the makeup team, not having done any Borg for a while, initially made a mistake with Rooney's Borg makeup. To portray the assimilated Rooney, Friedericy also wore a Borg costume that [[Roxann Dawson]] had previously worn, in {{VOY|Unimatrix Zero}}. Once Friedericy was made to look Borg, it was time for her to go before the cameras as the assimilated Rooney. Filming the character's death scene didn't require a stunt performer. "''I was really pleased with myself,''" she reminisced, "''because they squibbed me [repeatedly], and I did my own stunt.''" Each time Friedericy performed the stunt sequence, John Billingsley applauded her from off-camera. ([[ENT Season 2 Blu-ray]], "Regeneration" [[audio commentary]])
After ''Enterprise'', she worked with her husband again, playing wife to his character on the ABC series ''The Nine'', appearing with fellow ''Enterprise'' guest actors [[Conor O'Farrell]], [[Jamie McShane]], [[Zach Grenier]].
 
   
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Her arctic archaeology team coat from "Regeneration" was later sold off on the [[It's A Wrap! sale and auction]] on eBay. {{stala|5631}} Her Borg costume was sold off at the ''[[40 Years of Star Trek: The Collection]]'' auction at Christie's. {{stala|1778-335}}
Friedericy has also made guest appearances on ''Monk'' (with [[Clyde Kusatsu]] and [[Aaron Lustig]]), ''CSI'' (with [[Wallace Langham]] and [[Liz Vassey]]), ''Without a Trace'' (with [[Enrique Murciano]] and [[Mark A. Sheppard]]), Criminal Minds (with [[Tony Todd]]), ''Alias'' (with [[Terry O'Quinn]], [[Greg Grunberg]], and produced by [[J.J. Abrams]]), ''Becker'' (with [[Terry Farrell]]), ''Spin City'' (with [[Alan Ruck]]), Family Law (with [[Christopher McDonald]], [[Julie Warner]], [[Salli Elise Richardson]], and [[K Callan]]), ''The Practice'' (with [[Tucker Smallwood]]), ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' (with [[Harry Groener]]), ''The Drew Carey Show'' (with [[Diedrich Bader]] and [[Nan Martin]]), ''Strong Medicine'' (with [[Robert Foxworth]]), ''Dharma and Greg'' (with [[Mitchell Ryan]]), ''The West Wing'' (with [[Stephen Root]], [[David Clennon]], [[Van Epperson]], and Wallace Langham), ''7th Heaven'' (with [[Stephen Collins]], [[Catherine Hicks]]) and ''Scrubs'' (with [[Ken Jenkins]]).
 
   
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Friedericy was interviewed for the article "A Bonnie Lass" in the {{STM|108}} in 2003 and for "Top of the Phlox" in {{STM|115}} in 2004.
More recently, she has appeared in the regular role of General Beckman on the NBC series ''Chuck'', produced by [[Robert Duncan McNeill]]. She worked again with Tony Todd on the series until his character was killed off. Her ''Enterprise'' co-star [[Scott Bakula]] appeared in several episodes as the title character's father. [[John Fleck]], [[John Larroquette]], [[Clyde Kusatsu]], [[Faran Tahir]], [[Patrick Kilpatrick]], [[Robert Picardo]], and [[Christopher Lloyd]] have also made appearances on the show.
 
   
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== Career ==
In an interview, she compared the role of General Beckman to [[Vaughn Armstrong]]'s role as Admiral [[Maxwell Forrest]] on [[Star Trek: Enterprise|''Enterprise'']], appearing mostly on a viewscreen to send the main characters on various assignments. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihuq9DsoTbM]
 
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Friedericy is probably best known for her role as General Diane Beckman in the NBC series ''Chuck'', a role she played in seventy-four episodes between 2007 and 2012 during the complete run of the series. [[Robert Duncan McNeill]] worked as producer and also directed several episodes. On ''Chuck'', Friedericy worked with [[Tony Todd]], [[Scott Bakula]], [[John Fleck]], [[John Larroquette]], [[Clyde Kusatsu]], [[Faran Tahir]], [[Patrick Kilpatrick]], [[Robert Picardo]], and [[Christopher Lloyd]].
== External link ==
 
* {{IMDb-link|page=nm0295041}}
 
   
 
In an interview, she compared the role of General Beckman to [[Vaughn Armstrong]]'s role as [[Admiral]] [[Maxwell Forrest]] on ''Enterprise'', appearing mostly on a viewscreen to send the main characters on various assignments. {{YouTube|type=v|ihuq9DsoTbM}}
   
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Friedericy worked for around thirteen years as a teacher to finance her acting career until she made her stage debut in the early 1990s. Among her first screen roles are guest parts in episodes of ''Mad About You'' (1998, with [[David Carpenter]]), {{wt|Buffy the Vampire Slayer}} (1999, with [[Anthony Stewart Head]], [[Harry Groener]], [[Armin Shimerman]], and [[Jimmie F. Skaggs]]), ''Oh Baby'' (1999, with [[Ethan Dampf]], [[Peggy Jo Jacobs]], and [[Jennifer Savidge]]), ''The Practice'' (1999, with [[Tucker Smallwood]]), and {{wt|The Drew Carey Show}} (1999, with [[Diedrich Bader]], [[Nan Martin]], and [[Benjamin Brown]]) as well as featured roles in the family adventure ''Malaika'' (1998), {{wt|The Pornographer}} (1999, with [[Craig Wasson]], [[Todd Feder]], and [[Franc Luz]]), and {{wt|The Debtors}} (1999, with [[Michael J. Pollard]], [[Steve Schirripa]], [[Clement von Franckenstein]], [[David Youse]], and [[Kirk Alexander]]).
[[es:Bonita Friedericy]] [[nl:Bonita Friedericy]]
 
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[[Category:Performers|Friedericy, Bonita]]
 
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Further television work includes ''Family Law'' (2000, with [[Salli Richardson-Whitfield]], [[Christopher McDonald]], [[Julie Warner]], [[K Callan]], and [[Annette Helde]]), {{wt|3rd Rock from the Sun}} (2000), ''Strong Medicine'' (2000, with [[Robert Foxworth]] and [[Whoopi Goldberg]]), ''Spin City'' (2001, with [[Alan Ruck]]), {{wt|Becker}} (2001, with [[Terry Farrell]]), {{wt|Dharma & Greg}} (2001, with [[Mitchell Ryan]] and [[Tracey Ellis]]), {{wt|Malcolm in the Middle}} (2002, with [[Dennis Cockrum]]), {{wt|Scrubs (TV series)|Scrubs}} (2002, with [[Ken Jenkins]]), {{wt|Alias (TV series)|Alias}} (2003, with [[Victor Garber]], [[Terry O'Quinn]], [[Ken Lally]], and [[Greg Grunberg]]), {{wt|Angel (1999TV series)|Angel}} (2003), {{wt|7th Heaven (TV series)|7th Heaven}} (2004, with [[Catherine Hicks]] and [[Stephen Collins]]), ''Veronica Mars'' (2004), {{wt|Bones (TV series)|Bones}} (2005), {{wt|Criminal Minds}} (2005, with Tony Todd and [[Sharisse Baker-Bernard]]), {{wt|CSI: Crime Scene Investigation}} (2006, with [[Wallace Langham]] and [[Liz Vassey]]), {{wt|Monk (TV series)|Monk}} (2006, with [[Clyde Kusatsu]] and [[Aaron Lustig]]), {{wt|The West Wing}} (2004 and 2006, with [[Stephen Root]], [[David Clennon]], [[Van Epperson]], and Wallace Langham), and {{wt|Without a Trace}} (2007, with [[Enrique Murciano]] and [[Mark A. Sheppard]]).
[[Category:ENT performers|Friedericy, Bonita]]
 
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In 2006, Friedericy portrayed Mary Foote in three episodes of {{wt|The Nine (TV series)|The Nine}}, playing the on-screen wife of her real life husband John Billingsley. She also worked with [[Jessica Collins]], [[Conor O'Farrell]], [[Matt Kaminsky]], [[Ron Ostrow]], [[Jamie McShane]], and [[Zach Grenier]] on these episodes.
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Beside her work on ''Chuck'', Friedericy also had recurring roles in episodes of {{wt|My Name Is Earl}} (2008, with [[Jim Lau]], [[Jack Axelrod]], and [[Frank Collison]]), ''The Starter Wife'' (2008, with [[Ronny Cox]], [[James Black]], and [[Robin Atkin Downes]]), and ''Twentysixmiles'' (2010, again working with husband John Billingsley) and appeared in ''Parks and Recreation'' (2010, with [[Jim O'Heir]]), {{wt|Castle (TV series)|Castle}} (2012, with [[Penny Johnson Jerald]] and [[Patrick Fischler]]), ''Justified'' (2013, with [[Jim Beaver]]), ''Hart of Dixie'' (2013, with [[Cress Williams]]), and ''Intelligence'' (2014, with John Billingsley, [[Tony Amendola]], and [[J. Downing]]).
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Film work includes the drama ''Par 6'' (2002), {{wt|House of Sand and Fog (film)|House of Sand and Fog}} (2003, with [[Mark Chaet]], [[Marco Rodriguez]], [[Al Rodrigo]], [[Spencer Garrett]], and [[Michael Papajohn]]), {{wt|Christmas with the Kranks}} (2004, playing the wife of "Regeneration" co-star [[John Short]]), {{wt|Akeelah and the Bee}} (2006, with [[Tzi Ma]] and Craig Wasson), the comedy ''Stay'' (2006, with [[Melinda Page Hamilton]]), {{wt|Next (2007 film)|Next}} (2007), {{wt|South of Pico}} (2007, with [[Jimmy Bennett]] and [[Paul Rae]]), {{wt|Alien Raiders}} (2008), {{wt|Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief}} (2010), {{wt|Paranormal Activity 3}} (2011, executive produced by [[Akiva Goldsman]]), {{wt|The Lords of Salem (film)|The Lords of Salem}} (2012, with [[Bruce Davison]], [[Meg Foster]], [[Richard Fancy]], [[Andrew Prine]], [[Michael Berryman]], [[Sid Haig]], [[Clint Howard]], [[Daniel Roebuck]], and [[Roger Morrissey]]), and {{wt|Shotgun Wedding (2013 film)|Shotgun Wedding}} (2013).
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More recently, Friedericy filmed episodes of ''Impastor'' (2015), ''How to Get Away with Murder'' (2015, with [[Famke Janssen]], [[Roger Rignack]], and [[Billy Brown]]), ''The Friendless Five'' (2015), and ''The People V. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story'' (2016, with [[Bruce Greenwood]] and [[Michael McGrady]]) as well as the drama ''Salt Water'' (2016, with [[Deborah Strang]]) on which she also worked as producer and the thriller ''Madtown'' (2016, playing again the wife of real life husband John Billingsley).
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== External links ==
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* {{twitter|bfriedericy|Bonita Friedericy|external}}
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* {{imdb|name/nm0295041||external}}
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* {{fandom|chuck-nbc|Bonita Friedericy|the ''Chuck'' wiki}}
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* {{fandom|scrubs|Bonita Friedericy|the ''Scrubs'' wiki}}
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* {{Wikipedia}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT|Friedericy, Bonita}}
 
[[es:Bonita Friedericy]]
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[[nl:Bonita Friedericy]]
 
[[Category:Performers]]
 
[[Category:ENT performers]]

Latest revision as of 09:27, 6 April 2024

Real world article
(written from a Production point of view)

Bonita Friedericy (born 10 October 1961; age 62) is an actress who portrayed Rooney who was later turned into a Borg drone in the Star Trek: Enterprise second season episode "Regeneration". She filmed her scenes in early March 2003. Friedricy is married to John Billingsley, who plays Doctor Phlox in Star Trek: Enterprise. He had been trying to get her a role on Enterprise for a while, specifically to play one of his character's many wives. When she did guest star in "Regeneration", he made it a point to tell people that her name is pronounced "so that it rhymes with Fried and Greasy". (citation needededit)

Bonita Friedericy and John Billingsley

A "borgified" Friedericy with husband John Billingsley

In an audio commentary for "Regeneration" on the ENT Season 2 Blu-ray, Friedericy and Billingsley joked that Friedericy got the part of Rooney by sleeping with Tucker actor Connor Trinneer. In reality, Friedericy auditioned for the role of Rooney, but when she walked into the room to audition, Star Trek: Enterprise creators and Executive Producers Rick Berman and Brannon Braga pretended not to know her. "It was very unnerving, because I'm very shy and I didn't know whether I should say hello or not," Friedericy explained. "So, I sort of waved at them and they both kind of looked distastefully at me, and looked up at the ceiling and then they said, 'Go,' and I thought I wasn't gonna get it, and it was sad, but then I got the call and I got it."

On the set, Friedericy was referred to as a Borg baby. "I was called the baby Borg because Borg are never little, and I'm five-foot-three," she remarked. Applying the Borg makeup to Friedericy for Rooney's assimilated appearance took five-and-a-half hours. This was longer than usual because the makeup team, not having done any Borg for a while, initially made a mistake with Rooney's Borg makeup. To portray the assimilated Rooney, Friedericy also wore a Borg costume that Roxann Dawson had previously worn, in VOY: "Unimatrix Zero". Once Friedericy was made to look Borg, it was time for her to go before the cameras as the assimilated Rooney. Filming the character's death scene didn't require a stunt performer. "I was really pleased with myself," she reminisced, "because they squibbed me [repeatedly], and I did my own stunt." Each time Friedericy performed the stunt sequence, John Billingsley applauded her from off-camera. (ENT Season 2 Blu-ray, "Regeneration" audio commentary)

Her arctic archaeology team coat from "Regeneration" was later sold off on the It's A Wrap! sale and auction on eBay. [1] Her Borg costume was sold off at the 40 Years of Star Trek: The Collection auction at Christie's. [2]

Friedericy was interviewed for the article "A Bonnie Lass" in the Star Trek Monthly issue 108 in 2003 and for "Top of the Phlox" in Star Trek Magazine issue 115 in 2004.

Career

Friedericy is probably best known for her role as General Diane Beckman in the NBC series Chuck, a role she played in seventy-four episodes between 2007 and 2012 during the complete run of the series. Robert Duncan McNeill worked as producer and also directed several episodes. On Chuck, Friedericy worked with Tony Todd, Scott Bakula, John Fleck, John Larroquette, Clyde Kusatsu, Faran Tahir, Patrick Kilpatrick, Robert Picardo, and Christopher Lloyd.

In an interview, she compared the role of General Beckman to Vaughn Armstrong's role as Admiral Maxwell Forrest on Enterprise, appearing mostly on a viewscreen to send the main characters on various assignments. [3]

Friedericy worked for around thirteen years as a teacher to finance her acting career until she made her stage debut in the early 1990s. Among her first screen roles are guest parts in episodes of Mad About You (1998, with David Carpenter), Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1999, with Anthony Stewart Head, Harry Groener, Armin Shimerman, and Jimmie F. Skaggs), Oh Baby (1999, with Ethan Dampf, Peggy Jo Jacobs, and Jennifer Savidge), The Practice (1999, with Tucker Smallwood), and The Drew Carey Show (1999, with Diedrich Bader, Nan Martin, and Benjamin Brown) as well as featured roles in the family adventure Malaika (1998), The Pornographer (1999, with Craig Wasson, Todd Feder, and Franc Luz), and The Debtors (1999, with Michael J. Pollard, Steve Schirripa, Clement von Franckenstein, David Youse, and Kirk Alexander).

Further television work includes Family Law (2000, with Salli Richardson-Whitfield, Christopher McDonald, Julie Warner, K Callan, and Annette Helde), 3rd Rock from the Sun (2000), Strong Medicine (2000, with Robert Foxworth and Whoopi Goldberg), Spin City (2001, with Alan Ruck), Becker (2001, with Terry Farrell), Dharma & Greg (2001, with Mitchell Ryan and Tracey Ellis), Malcolm in the Middle (2002, with Dennis Cockrum), Scrubs (2002, with Ken Jenkins), Alias (2003, with Victor Garber, Terry O'Quinn, Ken Lally, and Greg Grunberg), Angel (2003), 7th Heaven (2004, with Catherine Hicks and Stephen Collins), Veronica Mars (2004), Bones (2005), Criminal Minds (2005, with Tony Todd and Sharisse Baker-Bernard), CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2006, with Wallace Langham and Liz Vassey), Monk (2006, with Clyde Kusatsu and Aaron Lustig), The West Wing (2004 and 2006, with Stephen Root, David Clennon, Van Epperson, and Wallace Langham), and Without a Trace (2007, with Enrique Murciano and Mark A. Sheppard).

In 2006, Friedericy portrayed Mary Foote in three episodes of The Nine, playing the on-screen wife of her real life husband John Billingsley. She also worked with Jessica Collins, Conor O'Farrell, Matt Kaminsky, Ron Ostrow, Jamie McShane, and Zach Grenier on these episodes.

Beside her work on Chuck, Friedericy also had recurring roles in episodes of My Name Is Earl (2008, with Jim Lau, Jack Axelrod, and Frank Collison), The Starter Wife (2008, with Ronny Cox, James Black, and Robin Atkin Downes), and Twentysixmiles (2010, again working with husband John Billingsley) and appeared in Parks and Recreation (2010, with Jim O'Heir), Castle (2012, with Penny Johnson Jerald and Patrick Fischler), Justified (2013, with Jim Beaver), Hart of Dixie (2013, with Cress Williams), and Intelligence (2014, with John Billingsley, Tony Amendola, and J. Downing).

Film work includes the drama Par 6 (2002), House of Sand and Fog (2003, with Mark Chaet, Marco Rodriguez, Al Rodrigo, Spencer Garrett, and Michael Papajohn), Christmas with the Kranks (2004, playing the wife of "Regeneration" co-star John Short), Akeelah and the Bee (2006, with Tzi Ma and Craig Wasson), the comedy Stay (2006, with Melinda Page Hamilton), Next (2007), South of Pico (2007, with Jimmy Bennett and Paul Rae), Alien Raiders (2008), Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010), Paranormal Activity 3 (2011, executive produced by Akiva Goldsman), The Lords of Salem (2012, with Bruce Davison, Meg Foster, Richard Fancy, Andrew Prine, Michael Berryman, Sid Haig, Clint Howard, Daniel Roebuck, and Roger Morrissey), and Shotgun Wedding (2013).

More recently, Friedericy filmed episodes of Impastor (2015), How to Get Away with Murder (2015, with Famke Janssen, Roger Rignack, and Billy Brown), The Friendless Five (2015), and The People V. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story (2016, with Bruce Greenwood and Michael McGrady) as well as the drama Salt Water (2016, with Deborah Strang) on which she also worked as producer and the thriller Madtown (2016, playing again the wife of real life husband John Billingsley).

External links