Lini Evans is a Canadian singer and actress. She starred alongside
Lacey Chabert in one of The New York Times' Top 5 Holiday TV movies
"The Tree That Saved Christmas" which set records as the highest rated
Up original movie of all-time and was directed by David
Winning.[1][2]A favorite televised role for Lini was singing her own
Japanese version of The End of the World (Skeeter Davis song) in
Season One of Amazon Studios' series The Man in the High Castle.
Episode 8 was named after this song and directed by Karyn Kusama. Her
version of the song will be included on her upcoming multilingual
music album.Among numerous roles on Film & TV, she played Alan
Thicke's fiancée in Stop the Wedding, Nicola Peltz's mother Amelia
Martin on Bates Motel, and Debra Harper on Supernatural. She has
reprised roles for several successful TV movies.Residing in Vancouver,
B.C. and performing worldwide, Calgary-born Evans sings in eight
languages including Cantonese, Mandarin, Japanese, French, Spanish,
Tagalog, and Vietnamese. She has performed for Chinese Premier Zhu
Rongji, Japanese royalty in Kobe and in Mandarin with Han Lei for the
finale duet of renowned Our Chinese Heart concert at Rogers
Arena.[3][4][5]
Lacey Chabert in one of The New York Times' Top 5 Holiday TV movies
"The Tree That Saved Christmas" which set records as the highest rated
Up original movie of all-time and was directed by David
Winning.[1][2]A favorite televised role for Lini was singing her own
Japanese version of The End of the World (Skeeter Davis song) in
Season One of Amazon Studios' series The Man in the High Castle.
Episode 8 was named after this song and directed by Karyn Kusama. Her
version of the song will be included on her upcoming multilingual
music album.Among numerous roles on Film & TV, she played Alan
Thicke's fiancée in Stop the Wedding, Nicola Peltz's mother Amelia
Martin on Bates Motel, and Debra Harper on Supernatural. She has
reprised roles for several successful TV movies.Residing in Vancouver,
B.C. and performing worldwide, Calgary-born Evans sings in eight
languages including Cantonese, Mandarin, Japanese, French, Spanish,
Tagalog, and Vietnamese. She has performed for Chinese Premier Zhu
Rongji, Japanese royalty in Kobe and in Mandarin with Han Lei for the
finale duet of renowned Our Chinese Heart concert at Rogers
Arena.[3][4][5]
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