Marlon Braccia

Biography

Marlon Braccia is a Los Angeles–based actor and voice artist with a degree in Drama and Communication Arts from Hofstra University. She began her career in New York City as a parts model before transitioning into on-camera work across television and film, while simultaneously building a strong foundation in voiceover. She hosted 50 episodes of Yoga Time with Marlon Braccia, delivering live, unedited performances that required precision, stamina, and presence; the series later sold 1.3 million DVDs and continues to stream today. Her acting credits include portraying Elizabeth Taylor in both Gods and Monsters (directed by Bill Condon) and E! True Hollywood Stories, demonstrating a refined ability to embody real-life figures with nuance and authority. Braccia has led multiple original film projects, including the comedic short Angie & Abigail (Hollywood Film Shorts Fest), in which she portrayed three distinct roles; the period drama St Mary the Angels, where she played Queen Caterina; and A Spy Among Us, as a White House cabinet member with a covert double life. These works were written, produced, and directed by Braccia, underscoring her command of character, tone, and narrative across genres. In parallel, Braccia has worked extensively with animation, commercial, interactive, and long-form narration scripts since 2014, and is one of the founding members of Tim Friedlander’s Gardner Street VO Workout Group—often referred to as the “Groundlings of VO.” She remains an active presence in the voiceover community both in and out of the studio. Her ongoing narration project, Musings on Theosophy, reflects a facility for delivering complex, archaic texts—interwoven with Sanskrit, Greek, Hebrew, and other languages—with clarity and emotional accessibility. Currently, Braccia is completing a political voiceover demo and developing scripts for her registered adult animated series, Hollywood Rats. An Angeleno of 30 years, born in Philadelphia and shaped by time in New York, Braccia has traveled to 37 countries, cultivating a keen ear for dialect and cultural nuance. A lifelong film noir enthusiast, initiated yogi, and practitioner of pranayama, she brings breath control, discipline, and artistic sensitivity to both screen and microphone. Notably, at just four years old, she represented the March of Dimes in a citywide charitable drive—an early indication of the presence and poise that continue to define her work.

Movies