Kristalyn engle biography examples
Krista Miller Biography, Latest
Krista Miller is a Filipino actress and model. Jump to movie list.
Personal Information
Real Name –> Krystalyn Engle
Screen Name –> Krista Miller
Birth Date –> N/A (Age )
Hometown –> Philippines
Showbiz Career
Krista Miller is one of the talents of AQ Prime, a film production company.
Television Programs / Digital Series
2013 – Boracay Bodies
Movie List
2023 – Upuan
2022 – Bingwit
2014 – Kabaro
2014 – Hukluban
2013 – Alfredo S. Lim: The Untold Story
Controversies
In October 2016, Krista Miller was arrested and imprisoned on drug-related charges. She was released in 2018.
At one time, she was accused of being the third party that caused the separation of couple Cesar Montano and Sunshine Cruz but she denied it.
RELATED: Biography of Angeli Khang, Jela Cuenca, Nika Madrid
See also: Updated List of Famous Filipino Actresses
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Actress Krista Miller was released from jail after she was cleared from illegal drug trading.
charges.
The 27-year-old actress was found to have violated the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act (Republic Act No. 9165), reported INQUIRER.net.
Miller, whose real name is Krystalyn Bacolod Engle, was arrested on September 30, 2016 in a buy-bust operation at a gas station on General Tiburcio de Leon Street near Santolan Road in Valenzuela.
Her male companion, Aaron Medina, and two female models, Liaa Alelin Bola and Jeramie Padoina, were also arrested on the same day.
The two models, who were arrested at a house in Project 4, Quezon City, said that Miller was the one who sold them the drugs they used.
Judge Snooky Maria Ana C. Bareno-Sagayo of Branch 283 of the Valenzuela Regional Trial Court, the judge hearing Miller’s case, recently cleared the actress of her criminal charges and ordered her release.
Miller even provided INQUIRER.net a photo of her Certificate of Discharge.
(Photo credits: INQUIRER.net)
After her release, Miller shared a Facebook post which read, “Thank you, Lord!”
Miller is known for her roles in “Alfredo S. Lim: The Untold Story”, “Hukluban”, and “Kabaro”. Her name made headlines in 2013 when her name was dragged in the separation of Cesar Montano and Sunshine Cruz.
It was previously reported Montano and Cruz’ three daughters found out that their father was having an affair with the sexy actress after the latter sent romantic text messages and sexy photos to Montano.
Miller got involved in another controversy when she visited drug lord Ricardo “Chacha” Camata in a hospital outside New Bilibid Prison in June 2014.
A Challenge to Write Life-Changing Fiction (+Giveaway)
Stories have intentions.
That wonderful idea was just one of many nuggets I found myself highlighting in what has so far turned out to be my surprise read of the year—noted literary agent Donald Maass’s The Emotional Craft of Fiction.
Like many of you, I cut my teeth on Maass’s now-classic Writing the Breakout Novel, but for whatever reason never followed up with any of his other many writing guides, even though they’re all on my TBR list. Fast-forward sixteen years to when I caught Emotional Craft of Fiction as part of a Kindle sale. I started reading it about a month ago, fully expecting a smart but conventional tome of tips for drawing dimension into characters. I got that, but what I wasn’t expecting was that, non-fiction though it is, this would be one of those books with “intentions.”
Just as the best of all writing advice should, the wisdom found in this book applies to so much more than just writing. If storytelling is about exploring life, then good writing advice should inevitably evoke solid life advice as well. (Which, on a side note, is what I’m excited to learn Wesley Baines, a familiar name on this site, is exploring in a forthcoming book about the importance of writers developing traits such as empathy and wisdom.) I find it no coincidence that the two great interests of my life—storytelling and personal growth—continually converge. They are, in so many ways, the same interest.
Many people have taken the time to tell me they enjoyed my book Creating Character Arcs more for its insights into their own life changes than for that of their characters. My response is always an eager, “Right?!” Because that was totally my own experience in discovering character arcs. For me, understanding how to convincingly portray human change on the page was ultimately a journey in understanding how I change and grow.
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