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  1. Chelsie Florence Preston Crayford (born 1987), sometimes credited as Chelsie Florence, is a New Zealand actress. Early life. Preston Crayford was born in Wellington to film maker Gaylene Preston and musician Jonathan Crayford.

  2. 7,210 Followers, 2,054 Following, 103 Posts - Chelsie Preston Crayford (@chelsieflorence) on Instagram: "actor/filmmaker 🇵🇸🕊".

  3. Chelsie Preston Crayford rose to fame in her mum Gaylene Preston's film Home By Christmas and TV mini-series Hope and Wire. The Underbelly star is to appear...

  4. Jul 13, 2024 · It's a daunting time to make a movie, but Chelsie Preston Crayford is "thrilled beyond words" to get funding for her semi-autobiographical feature Caterpillar. The New Zealand actor chats to Charlotte Ryan about acting, music and telling a story "set in the world" of her own teenage life in early-2000s Wellington.

  5. Feb 29, 2024 · Created by Screentime New Zealand, A Remarkable Place to Die is a four x 90-minute murder mystery series, starring national treasures Rebecca Gibney (Under the Vines) and Chelsie Preston Crayford (The Bad Seed).

  6. Chelsie Preston Crayford talks to Kim Knight about being back on screen, 18 months after the moment that changed her life forever. The suburbs sound like scaffolding.

  7. Preston Crayford, fresh off starring roles in Nude Tuesday, M3GAN and Baby Done, stars as Melissa, a journalist who travels down South to investigate the “Christchurch Carver”, as the papers...

  8. She also won awards in Australia for TV thriller The Code and a starring role as a crimelord in the 1920s edition of Underbelly. In 2017 she acted in Kiwi movie drama The Inland Road. Formerly known as Chelsie Preston Crayford, she is the daughter of director Gaylene Preston and musician Jonathan Crayford.

  9. Chelsie Preston Crayford is known as an Actor, Director, and Writer. Some of her work includes What We Do in the Shadows, The Royal Treatment, M3GAN, Eagle vs Shark, Savage, The Code, Nude Tuesday, and Ash vs Evil Dead.

  10. Chelsie Preston Crayford grew up with NZIFF but was surprised to find her first short film shanghaied onto the programme in 2013. I can’t even recall my first encounter with the New Zealand International Film Festival; it seems so strongly embedded in the tapestry of my life.