Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Actress, Director, Writer |
Birth Day | October 16, 1979 |
Birth Place | East St. Louis, Illinois, United States |
Age | 44 YEARS OLD |
Birth Sign | Scorpio |
Other names | Misty Mundae Sadie Lane |
Occupation | Film actress, musician, model |
Net worth: $950,000 (2024)
Erin Brown, a multifaceted talent based in the United States, has established herself as an accomplished actress, director, and writer. With her remarkable skills, she has won the hearts of many audiences worldwide. As of 2024, Erin Brown's net worth is estimated to be approximately $950,000. Throughout her career, she has worked passionately, exhibiting her versatility in various creative roles. Her accomplishments and contributions to the entertainment industry have helped her attain both critical acclaim and financial success. Erin Brown's continued dedication to her craft promises an even brighter future ahead.
Biography/Timeline
From 1997 to 2002, Brown worked for pornographic film production company Factory 2000. She signed an exclusive contract with E.I. Independent Cinema, performing mainly in softcore pornography under the stage name Misty Mundae. During this period she also appeared (as Misty Mundae) in the 1999 hardcore film Vampire Strangler alongside her then-boyfriend william Hellfire, who also directed the film.
She appeared in a Columbine massacre-inspired B movie, Duck! The Carbine High Massacre in 1999. In 2003, Brown began to perform in low-budget horror films produced by E.I. Independent Cinema's horror division Shock-O-Rama Cinema, such as The Screaming Dead, Bite Me!, Shock-O-Rama, and Chantal. At the 2006 New Jersey International Film and Screenplay Festival (later renamed the Hoboken International Film Festival), she was nominated for Best Actress, for her role in the psychological thriller Sinful.
In 2000, she traveled to Paris to film the U.S./French co-production Vampire of Notre Dame which was later acquired and distributed by Seduction Cinema under the title An Erotic Vampire in Paris. Brown also wrote, directed, and starred in a 2002 remake of the 1969 film Lustful Addiction. Some other E.I. produced films starring Brown as Misty Mundae include Play-mate of the Apes (2002), Spiderbabe (2003) and Lord of The G-Strings (2004).
Later in 2003, she appeared in a CKY music video for the song "Shock and Terror" directed by Bam Margera. In 2004, Brown released her short film Voodoun Blues direct to DVD through Shock-O-Rama Cinema. This film had won an award for best short film at her college film festival. Shortly after this, she sold her interest in the Misty Mundae name to EI Independent Cinema, left that company, and retired from softcore films to pursue mainstream acting.
In 2005 EI Independent Cinema—since renamed Pop Cinema—announced its intent to continue releasing previously-filmed softcore films starring Brown as Misty Mundae.
In August 2006, Brown was cast in a major role in The Rage, directed by Robert Kurtzman, which was released on DVD in 2008. In 2007 she had a supporting role in the independent film All Along, a romantic comedy written by and starring Bill Page. She also starred in the Polonia brothers film Splatter Beach. In March 2007 she was cast in Dying God, directed by Fabrice Lambot. Dying God was released in France in 2008.
In January 2008, Pop Cinema announced a limited convention tour to promote the release of An Erotic Werewolf in London. Brown appeared as Mundae to greet fans at such shows as Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors and Chiller Theatre. One month later a two-DVD collector's edition of Vampire Strangler was released. In July 2008, Screamkings.com licensed the Misty Mundae name from Pop Cinema and announced the feature film Sculpture, the first feature film to star Brown as Misty Mundae since the 2005 Shock-O-Rama.
In 2009, she began appearing in the Cinemax TV series Lingerie as Stephanie.
In 2012, Lukas Persson directed a post-apocalyptic western short starring Brown called This Girl's Gun, which won her the best Actress award at the 2012 PollyGrind Film Festival.
Brown's success in horror movies was such that an item in Sci Fi Weekly included Misty Mundae on "the list of living horror icons—the ones whose movies you might pay to see or rent, the ones you'd stand in line to shake hands with or to snag an autograph from", along with Robert Englund, Linda Blair, Malcolm McDowell, Elvira, and Jamie Lee Curtis, among others.