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・ Sarah Johns
・ Sarah Johnson
・ Sarah Johnson (poet)
・ Sarah Jones
・ Sarah Jones (artist)
・ Sarah Gronert
・ Sarah Guppy
・ Sarah Guyot
・ Sarah Günther
・ Sarah H. Earle
・ Sarah H. Harding House
・ Sarah H. Kagan
・ Sarah Habel
・ Sarah Hackett Stevenson
・ Sarah Hadland
Sarah Hagan
・ Sarah Hagen
・ Sarah Hall
・ Sarah Hall (glass artist)
・ Sarah Hall (writer)
・ Sarah Hall Boardman
・ Sarah Hall Ingram
・ Sarah Hamilton
・ Sarah Hamilton (historian)
・ Sarah Hammer
・ Sarah Hanffou
・ Sarah Hanson-Young
・ Sarah Hardcastle
・ Sarah Harding
・ Sarah Harding (disambiguation)


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Sarah Hagan : ウィキペディア英語版
Sarah Hagan

Sarah Margaret Hagan (born May 24, 1984) is an American television and film actress.
==Life and career==
Hagan was born in Austin, Texas. She has been acting since the age of six, when her mother first signed her up for musical theater. Hagan was first involved with theater companies such as Houston's Playhouse 1960, the Houston Grand Opera (where she sang in the children's chorus), the Crighton Playhouse, the Houston Music Hall and the Bitter Truth Theater. From there, she made her screen debut in the 1997 feature film ''Faith'', where she played the title character at age 13; her TV debut came on an episode of the Calista Flockhart series ''Ally McBeal'' in 1999.
Hagan's first major break came when she was cast in a recurring role as Millie Kentner on the short-lived NBC cult TV series ''Freaks and Geeks'' (1999–2000). Following that show's cancellation, she was cast on the David Alan Grier NBC sitcom ''DAG'', where she was originally slated to play Camilla Whitman, daughter of the US President; however, the role of Camilla was recast when the pilot episode was revamped before airing.
Following the lead of several fellow ''Freaks and Geeks'' cast members, Hagan then appeared in an episode of the short-lived Fox sitcom ''Undeclared'' in 2001. Her next roles were a bit part in the Jack Black movie ''Orange County'' and a guest role as Melissa in ''Boston Public'' in 2002. After that, she was cast as Amanda in the seventh and final season of the hit cult series ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer''.
In recent TV roles, Hagan appeared on the ABC medical drama ''Grey's Anatomy'' as Devo, a teenage girl whose religious beliefs conflict with getting treatment for a heart condition she was diagnosed with; she appeared on the NBC drama ''Medium'', playing a character named Suzannah, a friend of Allison's (Patricia Arquette) who appeared in two dreams flashing back to Allison's teen years; and she played the role of Patricia on an episode of the CBS legal drama ''Close to Home''. She made her first venture into animation in 2007 when she played the voices of Lola Llama and Jungle Girl on two episodes of the Cartoon Network series ''My Gym Partner's a Monkey''.
Hagan next appeared in the direct-to-DVD Warner Bros. comedy feature ''Spring Breakdown'' (which was released on June 2, 2009), alongside Parker Posey and ''Saturday Night Live'' cast members Amy Poehler and Rachel Dratch; she plays Truvy, the friend of a college co-ed (Amber Tamblyn) who is also the daughter of a powerful senator. She recently appeared in the role of Sandy in the ''NCIS'' episode "Seek".

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