Here’s a rough cut of the trailer for Addison. From the official description:
“Addison” is the first feature length film by Room For Everyone Productions. It tells the story of Elias Weaver, a man who is traveling on the road to Nowheresville. … After having spent 10 years in Los Angeles pursuing an acting career with nothing to show for it except a girlfriend he can’t stand, an addiction to pills and booze, and the dubious honor of being The Ultra Sheen Deodorant spokesman, Elias packs up and heads back home to Addison, N.Y., to clear his head. It is there, in a town forgotten by time that he meets Rachel, a young woman with terminal cancer, and her rambunctious daughter.
Check out the film’s page on IndieGoGo to learn how to help fund the project — 50% of all proceeds after expenses will be donated to cancer research.
Stacey has landed a part in an eight-episode comedy Web series sponsored by Honda and Yahoo. The series, which will debut in mid-May, will shoot on location in Arizona; Austin, Texas; and New Orleans.
She also booked a small role in the new Steve Carell and Tina Fey movie Date Night!
You can catch Stacey in the Hanes commercial for its “Wedgie-Free” panties — she’s in the commercial featuring Scrubs‘ Sarah Chalke on a shopping trip. You can check it — as well as some behind-the-scenes footage also featuring Stacey — at WedgieFree.com!
Also now available on DVD is Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, in which you Stacey appears as “Pierced Eyebrow Girl.”
Stacey booked and shot a Hanes campaign, directed by Scrubs star Zach Braff. She also has two Chevy spots currently running: “We Believe” and “I Want.”
And she booked a small part on the new movie Eagle Eye, starring Shia LaBeouf and Billy Bob Thorton! She’ll shoot next week.
Loveless in Los Angeles, an indie film in which Stacey co-stars as “Lisa,” a jilted member of a book club, will be released nationwide on DVD Tuesday, May 29!
Loveless is a romantic comedy starring Dash Mihok (The Day After Tomorrow) and Brittany Daniel (The Game). The DVD includes a commentary by the director, Archie Gips, and Dash, plus 45 minutes of bonus and deleted scenes.