Lauren Ridloff

Actor

Birthday April 6, 1978

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Age 45 years old

Nationality United States

#25156 Most Popular

1978

Lauren Ridloff (Teruel; born April 6, 1978) is a deaf American actress known for her roles in the TV series The Walking Dead and the film Eternals.

Lauren Teruel was born on April 6, 1978, in Chicago, Illinois, in the United States.

She was born deaf to hearing parents, a Mexican-American father and an African-American mother.

Her father Hugo was a counselor at University of Illinois at Chicago.

He was also a musician, and Ridloff's mother was an artist.

Ridloff grew up in the Chicago neighborhood of Hyde Park.

Her parents thought their infant had a developmental delay, but by the time she was two years old, they learned that she was deaf.

They learned sign language with her and enrolled her in Catholic school with hearing children.

She performed well in school.

When she was 13 years old, she stopped using her voice so people would stop judging her intelligence based on her vocal intelligibility.

Following Catholic school, she attended the Model Secondary School for the Deaf in Washington, D.C., where she was among deaf and hard-of-hearing peers.

She began exploring the arts, starting with ceramics and becoming involved with drama.

In a school production of The Wiz, she played Dorothy.

She was also on the cheerleading team and became one of the first deaf American cheerleaders to compete internationally.

Ridloff chose to attend California State University, Northridge, a university with a large deaf and hard-of-hearing student population, because of its National Center on Deafness.

1980

When director Kenny Leon began producing a revival of the 1980 play Children of a Lesser God, he hired Ridloff to tutor him in American Sign Language.

2000

After she graduated in May 2000, she began working at the NCOD, where she was involved in a program to improve post-secondary school education for deaf and hard-of-hearing students.

Later in the year, she decided to compete in the National Association of the Deaf's Miss Deaf America competition, having been inspired by the competition she saw two years prior.

She won the preliminary competition of Miss Deaf Illinois and ultimately won Miss Deaf America.

She was the second consecutive CSUN graduate to win the crown, and she was also the first competitor of either African-American or Mexican-American descent to win the pageant.

Her activities in competition included an ASL performance of the book The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein.

After winning Miss Deaf America, she began a two-year stint of attending luncheons and graduation ceremonies as a spokesperson for NAD.

After graduating from CSUN, Ridloff went to Hunter College in New York to study education with the goal of becoming a children's author.

2001

She majored in English with an emphasis in creative writing, completing her degree in 2001.

While in college, she joined a local deaf performing group and took up hip-hop dancing.

2005

After earning her master's degree in education in 2005, She started teaching kindergarten and first grade at Public School 347 in Manhattan.

She was also involved with deaf community theater and film work for friends.

2006

She married Douglas Ridloff, who she met at CSUN, in 2006, and they have two children, both boys and both deaf.

After nine years of teaching, she left her teaching job to take care of the boys.

The family lived in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, a neighborhood of New York, until they moved to Austin, Texas, in 2022.

2017

Ridloff played a small role as a superpowered agent in the 2017 film Sign Gene: The First Deaf Superheroes.

She also joined the production of the 2017 film Wonderstruck as a consultant and was ultimately cast in a small role.

She also appeared in the lyric video for the song "Love Me Now" by John Legend.

2018

She gained prominence in 2018 with a lead role in the Broadway revival of Children of a Lesser God, earning her a Tony Award nomination for Best Actress in a Play.

Ridloff was born in Chicago, Illinois.

She attended California State University, Northridge and later earned a master's degree in education from Hunter College.

She initially worked as a teacher before pursuing acting, and she was also crowned Miss Deaf America.

Ridloff's acting career gained momentum when she was hired as an American Sign Language tutor for Kenny Leon, the director of Children of a Lesser God, and subsequently cast in the lead role.

She then joined the ninth season of The Walking Dead and was cast as the first deaf superhero in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the film Eternals.

In addition to acting, Ridloff has received various accolades and is actively involved in projects that expand representation in the entertainment industry.