
Acting
Deborah Rhea Seehorn (born May 12, 1972) is an American actress and director. She is best known for playing attorney Kim Wexler in AMC's Better Call Saul (2015–2022), for which she has won two Satellite Awards for Best Supporting Actress and one Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress on Television. She has also appeared in NBC's Whitney (2011–2013), ABC's I'm with Her (2003–2004), and TNT's Franklin & Bash (2011–2014). Her mother was an executive assistant for the United States Navy, while her father was an agent in the Naval Investigative Service; her family moved frequently during her childhood, living in states such as Washington, D.C. and Arizona, as well as countries like Japan. Following in the footsteps of her father and grandmother, she studied painting, drawing, and architecture from a young age. She continued pursuing the visual arts, but had a growing passion for acting and was introduced to contemporary theater in college. She graduated from George Mason University in 1994 with a BA in Studio Art. While in college, Seehorn was looking to get into theater, after the encouragement of her acting teacher. She worked many ancillary positions in the theater industry in D.C. to try to get noticed. She ended up getting some major roles in local theater productions, but still needed to take odd jobs to help make ends meet; she took roles in various industrial short instructional films. She soon started getting parts in more television productions, often playing roles that she considered as "very wry, sarcastic, knowing women", similar to her idol Bea Arthur. However, most of these roles were short-run series cancelled after one or two seasons. In May 2014, Seehorn was cast in the Breaking Bad spin-off prequel series Better Call Saul. Seehorn portrays Kim Wexler, a lawyer and the love interest of the titular Jimmy McGill/Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk). The series premiered on February 8, 2015. For her role, she has twice won the Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film, once won the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress on Television, and has been nominated for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress on Television, and the Television Critics Association Award for Individual Achievement in Drama. Seehorn is currently starring in Vince Gilligan's next series after Better Call Saul. The series was ordered for two seasons by Apple TV+ in September 2022. The title of the project is Pluribus, and it premiered on Apple TV on November 7, 2025.

The tale of a workaholic dad-turned-dog who finds that being man's best friend shows him the most important job - being a great dad.

After their late former Captain is framed, Lowrey and Burnett try to clear his name, only to end up on the run themselves.

Hate Mail is an epistolary play something like Love Letters, with two actors reading letters and other correspondence, but it's a little wilder and more hysterically funny. It tells the story of Preston, a spoiled rich kid who meets his match in Dahlia, an angst-filled artist. Their worlds collide when Preston sends a complaint letter that gets Dahlia fired from her job, and then there's no turning back. The play stays with their increasingly crazed correspondence as they move from hate to love, and then right back again.
Karen wants to blow up her husband by planting a bomb in his briefcase. But the briefcase takes an unusual journey and winds up at a surprising destination.

In an alternative 1990s a lonely, dinosaur-obsessed boy named Wyrm struggles to complete a unique school requirement in which students wear electronic collars that detach only upon engaging in their first kiss.
Jonathan, a heartbroken English musician, arrives at a Washington DC dinner party. A flirtation with the Greek hostess, Evelyn, turns into an argument once the discussion turns to the etiquette of courtship. The rest of the guests join the fray.
Tina and Tadd, two socially-challenged thirty-somethings, attempt a face-to-face at a coffee shop after meeting online.

A put-upon member of Congress is harassed by inept politicians. Based on the BBC series, "The Thick of It."

Nick Pearson is a life-long bachelor who is finally settling down. On the brink of his wedding he is surprised to find he has a 13 year old son who has come to find his him through the help of a psychic. The problem is Nick can't stand kids and would happily send the boy back to live with his biological mother, except that no one has any clue who that might be. Having nowhere to turn Nick must hit the road with the boy and the neurotic, inept psychic to track down dozens of his disgraced ex-flings to whom he must ask the awkward question - with very mixed results.

Desperate to have children, Kate has been undergoing excessive infertility treatments, only to discover Bill has been hiding a secret that may change everything.
Emma wants more time to make a decision. About something. About anything. There's nothing actually wrong with her life, but it doesn't feel like there's anything especially right either. Maybe a visit to a fertility doctor will compel her to finally stop just cruising in the direction of the traffic, and act. As her doctor says, "At 36, it's better to do something, rather than nothing." But the visit turns out to shine a light on a different path she's been idling in, and it's going to really put a damper on furniture shopping for a new place with Alan.
Emma wants more time to make a decision. About something. About anything. There's nothing actually wrong with her life, but it doesn't feel like there's anything especially right either. Maybe a visit to a fertility doctor will compel her to finally stop just cruising in the direction of the traffic, and act. As her doctor says, "At 36, it's better to do something, rather than nothing." But the visit turns out to shine a light on a different path she's been idling in, and it's going to really put a damper on furniture shopping for a new place with Alan.
Emma wants more time to make a decision. About something. About anything. There's nothing actually wrong with her life, but it doesn't feel like there's anything especially right either. Maybe a visit to a fertility doctor will compel her to finally stop just cruising in the direction of the traffic, and act. As her doctor says, "At 36, it's better to do something, rather than nothing." But the visit turns out to shine a light on a different path she's been idling in, and it's going to really put a damper on furniture shopping for a new place with Alan.
Directed by Tamar Levine, For 'Shoot 'Em Up'. Story by Rhea Seehorn. Adapted by Lily Ladewig.







