A DOG’S WAY HOME (2019) About The Cast

David the Bruce • January 13, 2019

Ashley Judd, Jonah Hauer-King, Edward James Olmos, Alexandra Shipp, Wes Studi, and Bryce Dallas Howard

ASHLEY JUDD (Terri), JONAH HAUER-KING (Lucas), EDWARD JAMES OLMOS (Axel), ALEXANDRA SHIPP (Olivia), WES STUDI (Captain Mica), BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD (Bella),

ABOUT THE CAST

An eighth generation Eastern Kentuckian, ASHLEY JUDD (Terri) first proved her acting abilities in her debut feature film role as Ruby Lee Gissing in Victor Nunez’s internationally acclaimed Ruby in Paradise . Having won major acting awards worldwide, Judd has demonstrated her range in a variety of genres and is a proven box office draw. Presently, she serves as Global Goodwill Ambassador for UNFPA, is the Global Ambassador for Population Services International, and also for Polaris Project. Judd serves on the Advisory Boards of International Center for Research on Women, Apne Aap Worldwide, and Demand Abolition. She is Chairperson of the Women’s Media Center Speech Project: Curbing. She is a graduate of the University of Kentucky, and in 2010, earned an MPA from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. Her paper, Gender Violence, Law and Social Justice won the Dean’s Scholar Award at Harvard Law School. In 2017, Judd was named one Time Magazine’s Person of The Year for her activism and leadership in the feminist movement.

Judd will reprise her role of BB Yates in the third season of the espionage drama “Berlin Station.” The show will premiere on December 3rd on Epix.

In 2016, Judd appeared in Black Bear Pictures’ Barry as Ann Dunham, Barack Obama’s mother. The film follows President Obama during his time as a college student in New York City and premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. Additionally, Judd was seen in Chris McCoy’s Good Kids which opened October 21, 2016.

Judd also can be seen in the independent film Big Stone Gap , written and directed by Adriana Trigiani who also penned the novel by the same title. Judd played the lead character, Ava Maria Mulligan alongside Jane Krakowski, Patrick Wilson, Jenna Elfman and Whoopi Goldberg, among others. The film premiered at the Virginia Film Festival in fall 2014 and received the Best Ensemble award at the 2015 Bentonville Film Festival. The film released nationwide by Picturehouse in October 2015.

In 2015 Judd also appeared in Insurgent , the second film in the Divergent franchise based on Veronica Roth’s New York Times bestselling trilogy, Divergent . Judd reprised her role of Natalie Prior the mother of Tris Prior (Shailene Woodley). The film follows Tris as she continues to fight to prevent her kind from being exterminated by an authoritarian government.

In January 2014, Judd appeared in the first episode of PBS’ three-part documentary series “A Path Appears.” From the creative team behind “Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide,” “A Path Appears” follows Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn and a group of dedicated actor/advocates as they uncover the harshest forms of gender-based oppression and human rights violations, and solutions being implemented to combat them. Judd’s episode focused on survivors trafficked into a life of prostitution in the United States, as well as effective programs that fight commercial exploitation and restore lives.

Judd also appeared in Dolphin Tale 2 , the sequel to 2011’s hit family film Dolphin Tale. She is reprising her role as Lorraine Nelson alongside returning cast members Morgan Freeman, Harry Connick Jr. and Kris Kristofferson.

In 2012, Judd starred in ABC’s miniseries “Missing” as Becca Winstone, an ex-CIA agent who would do anything to get her son back after discovering his disappeared while studying abroad. Sean Bean, Cliff Curtis and Adriano Giannini co-starred. In 2012, Judd was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie for her performance in “Missing.”

In 2011, Judd co-starred with Patrick Dempsey and Tim Blake Nelson in the independent film Flypaper written by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore and directed by Rob Minkoff. Judd portrayed a bank teller caught in the middle of two simultaneous robberies, while Dempsey attempted to save her from danger.

In January 2010, Judd co-starred with Dwayne Johnson in the 20th Century Fox comedy and fantasy film Tooth Fairy as the wife of a hard-hitting minor-league hockey player who is sentenced to one week’s tooth fairy duty after telling his daughter tooth fairies aren’t real.

In 2009, Judd starred in the independent film Helen , written and directed by Sandra Nettlebeck. This dramatic story revolved around a music professor named Helen (Judd) who suffered from a deep, debilitating depression and the only one who could relate to her pain was a young female student. Helen premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival and was released in theatres on July 30, 2010.

Returning to her indie roots in 2006, Judd starred in the feature film Come Early Morning , written and directed by actress Joey Lauren Adams and in the Lionsgate film, Bug , as a lonely, paranoid, and traumatized recluse. Bug was written by Tracy Letts, based on his play of the same name and directed by William Friedkin. The film won the International Press Award in Cannes in 2006 and Judd’s performance generated a considerable amount of critical acclaim. The film was embraced by critics and audiences at the Sundance Film Festival as well, which was Judd’s first time at the Festival since her debut in Ruby in Paradise.

On the small screen, Judd appeared as the focus of the National Geographic documentary featuring her travels to India in early 2007 on behalf of her ongoing commitment as Global Ambassador for YouthAids. The documentary aired on December 1, World Aids Day. In 2006, a similar documentary aired on The Learning Channel that featured Judd’s travels to Central America with her friend, colleague, actor, feminist, and human rights activist, Salma Hayek.

In 2004, Judd delivered a heartfelt, emotional performance as socialite Linda Lee Porter in the MGM Studios, Cole Porter bio-pic, De Lovely, for which she earned a Golden Globe nomination. The film chronicled their marriage, which inspired such famous Cole Porter tunes as Anything Goes. De Lovely premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.

In early 2004, Judd starred in Twisted for director Philip Kauffman and as well as starred on Broadway for six months in the leading role of Maggie in Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” was produced by Bill Kenwright and directed by Anthony Page and was a success by all standards.

Judd had a very successful and diverse 2002. She had a small, but significant appearance as Tina Modotti in the Julie Taymor directed bio-pic of Frida Kahlo . In addition, Judd had a strong supporting role in The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood starring amongst an impressive cast including Sandra Bullock, Ellen Burstyn, Maggie Smith and James Garner. The film was directed by Callie Khouri and was based on the best-selling novel of the same name by Rebecca Wells.

Judd also starred in 20th Century Fox’s High Crimes which re-teamed her with Kiss the Girls co-star, Morgan Freeman. The film was written by Joseph Finder and directed by Carl Franklin. Also for 20th Century Fox, Judd starred with Greg Kinnear and Hugh Jackman in Someone Like You for director, Tony Goldwyn. With a turn to the romantic comedy genre, Judd portrayed a producer of a popular day time talk show who had a romance with the show's executive producer.

Judd’s other film credits include Where the Heart Is, opposite Natalie Portman, Bruce Beresford's box-office success Double Jeopardy, opposite Tommy Lee Jones for Paramount, as well as Eye of the Beholder with Ewan McGregor. Judd also starred in Walt Disney Pictures' 1998 drama Simon Birch , based on the John Irving novel, A Prayer for Owen Meaney.

In 1997, Judd starred opposite Morgan Freeman in Paramount Pictures' box-office hit Kiss the Girls , as well as MGM's The Locusts, in which she co-starred opposite Vince Vaughn and Kate Capshaw. Judd was also seen in Michael Mann's Heat , for which she won critical acclaim opposite Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino and Val Kilmer. In the summer of 1996, she appeared in Joel Schumacher's A Time to Kill, opposite Samuel L. Jackson, Sandra Bullock and Matthew McConaughey. In late 1996, she was seen starring opposite Luke Perry in John McNaughton's black comedy Normal Life . Also in 1996, Judd received an Emmy nomination and a Golden Globe nomination for her portrayal of Norma Jean Dougherty in HBO's “Norma Jean & Marilyn."

Judd made her debut theatre performance in the Naked Angels' production of "Busted," directed by Timothy Hutton. She then went on to star as Madge on Broadway in William Inge's Pulitzer-prize winning play, "Picnic" at the Roundabout Theatre Company, while simultaneously filming an unforgettable supporting role in the Miramax Film Smoke , portraying the daughter of Harvey Keitel and Stockard Channing.

Judd is also on the board of directors for PSI (Population Services International). Judd joined PSI as board member in 2004 after serving as Global Ambassador for PSI’s HIV education and prevention program, YouthAIDS since 2002. Judd has visited PSI programs in Thailand, Cambodia, Madagascar, Kenya, South Africa, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, India, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In her work, she witnesses the lives of the exploited and poor to help educated the world about the reality of global poverty and bring solutions to the devastating effects of social injustice and gender inequality.

Judd was the subject of three award-winning documentaries aired in more than 150 countries worldwide on VH1, The Discovery Channel and The National Geographic Channel. In her role as PSI board member, Judd has graced the covers of countless magazines and been the subject of newspaper and television interviews bringing vital awareness to issues closest to her heart, gender inequality and poverty alleviation. Judd has visited legislators on Capitol Hill, addressed the General Assembly of the UN on the scourge human trafficking, spoke at the National Press Club, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for the protection of vulnerable women from violence, sexual abuse and HIV and, most recently served as an expert panelist at Clinton Global Initiative to discuss the issue of safe water and the empowerment of girls in the developing world.

PSI is a DC based nonprofit organization operating in more than 65 countries. With programs in malaria, reproductive health, child survival and HIV, PSI promotes products, services and healthy behavior that enable low-income and vulnerable people to lead healthier lives.

Judd is also a spokesperson for organizations Defenders for Wildlife and The Sierra Club, providing her time and voice to advocate against practices of aerial wolf hunting (Defenders for Wildlife) and mountaintop removal coal mining (The Sierra Club).

A Phi Beta Kappa nominee and Honors Program student of the University of Kentucky with a major in French and four minors, Judd studied the Meisner technique in acting when she first went to Hollywood. In May 2010, Judd received her Mid-Career Masters in Public Administration from Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Judd is currently pursuing a PhD for public policy at the University of California, Berkeley. When not in school, she resides in Tennessee with her beloved pets and enjoys a quiet, rural life.


JONAH HAUER-KING (Lucas) is currently shooting the new BBC Series “World on Fire” with Lesley Manville and Helen Hunt, and Francois Girard’s The Song of Names with Clive Owen and Tim Roth. Earlier this year, Hauer-King shot opposite Naomi Watts and Bobby Cannavale in James DeMonaco’s Once Upon a Time in Staten Island . Hauer-King can currently be seen in BBC's Little Women , with Maya Hawke, and in Old Boys with Alex Lawther. Up next, Hauer-King will be seen starring in Ashes in Snow , opening in January. He was also in the West End’s run of “The Entertainer” starring opposite Kenneth Branagh. He studied at Cambridge University, which has produced the likes of Eddie Redmayne and Tom Hiddleston.


EDWARD JAMES OLMOS (Axel) has achieved extraordinary success as an actor, producer and humanitarian. The Tony, Emmy and Academy Award® nominated actor is probably best known to young audiences for his work on the SYFY television series “Battlestar Galactica” as Admiral William Adama. Although the series kept the actor busy during its run from 2003 through 2009, it didn’t stop him from directing the HBO movie Walkout in 2007, for which he earned a DGA Nomination in the Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Movies for Television category.

Olmos’ career in entertainment spans over 30 years. In that time, he created a signature style and aesthetic that he applies to every artist endeavor, often grounding his characters in reality and gravitas. His dedication to his craft has brought him attention across the industry, and with audiences worldwide.

Originally a musician, Olmos branched out into acting, appearing in many small theatre productions until portraying the iconic El Pachuco in “Zoot Suit.” The play moved to Broadway and Olmos earned a Tony nomination for the role, which he revised in the 1981 film version.


Olmos went on to appear in the films Wolfen, Blade Runner, and The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez before starring in his biggest role to date, that of Lieutenant Martin Castillo in the iconic 80’s television series “Miami Vice” opposite Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas. During his time on the Michael Mann series, Olmos earned two Golden Globe and Emmy Award nominations, resulting in a win from each.


In 1988, the actor was nominated for an Academy Award® and won the Golden Globe for his portrayal of Jaime Escalante in Stand and Deliver . He directed his first motion picture, American Me , in which he also starred, in 1992.

Olmos’ passion for the arts grows every year, but he never forgets to give back to the communities that support him with their dedication and support. He is an international advocate, spokesman, and humanitarian working with organizations such as Thank You Ocean, Project Hope Foundation, Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, The Boys and Girls Club of America, The River Keepers, Dr. Andros’ Diabetic Foot Global Conference and he speaks up to 150 times a year in schools, universities, and corporations.

Other credits as an actor include the motion pictures My Family/Mi Familia; Selena, which was a breakout film for Jennifer Lopez; and In the Time of Butterflies , in which he played Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo. In television, he enjoyed a recurring role as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Roberto Mendoza in the NBC drama “The West Wing,” portrayed a widowed father in the PBS drama “American Family: Journey of Dreams,” and recently directed the YouTube phenomena “The Short Film BP Doesn’t Want You to See,” featured on Larry King/CNN.


ALEXANDRA SHIPP (Olivia) is best known for her role as the iconic mohawked super heroine Storm in Twentieth Century Fox’s X-Men: Apocalypse. She plays a younger version of Storm. Determined to make the mutant character her own, she delivers a new spin on Storm, and will be reprising the role in the next feature X-Men: Dark Phoenix, set to release June 7th, 2019.

Shipp was named the recipient of the annual Women in Film Face of the Future Award in recognition of her extraordinary acting achievement and embodiment of timeless style and grace. She was honored at the 2018 Women in Film Crystal + Lucy Awards. Shipp was also honored with a Raising Star Award at the 2018 Napa Valley Film Festival.

Shipp recently completed work on New Line’s Son of Shaft, opposite Samuel L. Jackson and Regina King. The film is slated to open June 17th, 2019. Shipp is currently filming Netflix’s original film All the Bright Places, based on the popular Young Adult book. Shipp will appear in the film opposite Elle Fanning.

Shipp was recently seen in Fox 2000’s coming-of-age story Love, Simon , based on the popular Young Adult book Simon vs. the Homo Sapien Agenda. She starred in the film opposite Nick Robinson and Kathrine Langford. Shipp appeared in Universal Pictures’ Oscar® nominated feature Straight Outta Compton, which has become the highest grossing music biopic of all-time. Her other film credits include the two-hander Tragedy Girls, opposite Deadpool’s Brianna Hildebrand, and the title role of Aaliyah in the Lifetime biopic, Aaliyah: Princess of R&B .

Originally from Phoenix, Arizona, Shipp moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career at 17. She is known for her role as KT Rush, on Nickelodeon teen drama-mystery series, “House of Anubis” and made her film debut in the Fox feature film, Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel, playing the role of Valentina.

Aside from acting, she is a songwriter, pianist, and guitar player.

Shipp currently resides in Los Angeles, California.

From small-town Oklahoma native to internationally acclaimed actor and musician, WES STUDI (Captain Mica) credits his passion and multi-faceted background for his powerful character portrayals that forever changed a Hollywood stereotype.

Drawing from his rich life experience, Studi moved audiences with unforgettable performances in Dances with Wolves, The Last of the Mohicans, Geronimo: An American Legend, and Heat, as well as James Cameron's Avatar and Paul Weitz’s Being Flynn. Most recently Studi starred opposite Christian Bale in the critically acclaimed Hostiles , directed by Scott Cooper, with whom Studi is collaborating on another project this fall. Breaking new ground, he brought fully-developed Native American characters to the screen, and then took his craft a step further, highlighting the success of Native Americans in non-traditional roles.

In 2013, he was inducted into the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum’s Hall of Great Western Performers. Throughout his 30-year career he’s won numerous awards, including several First Americans in the Arts awards and the 2009 Santa Fe Film Festival Lifetime Achievement Award.

Interestingly, acting was never a goal in Studi’s youth. Unlike many actors who dive into performing at an early age, he discovered acting later in life.

The eldest son of a ranch hand, Studi was born in 1947 in Nofire Hollow, in Northeastern Oklahoma. He spoke only his native Cherokee until he was 5, when he was enrolled in the Murrell Home to attend public school. He later attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Northern Oklahoma, where he remained through high school graduation. Yet, unlike many fellow Native American students, he never forgot his language.

Studi joined the U.S. Army and while stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia, stories from returning Vietnam War veterans set his blood on fire. With only 12 months of his six-year service left, Studi volunteered to go to Vietnam. He served one tour in South Vietnam with the 9th Infantry Division in the Mekong Delta, living his own future war stories. At one point his company was pinned down in the Mekong Delta – and nearly killed by friendly fire.

After an honorable military discharge, Studi returned home with a fire in the belly, and became seriously involved with Native American politics. He joined the American Indian Movement (AIM) and participated in the Trail of Broken Treaties protest march in 1972, where hundreds of Native American activists marched on Washington. He was one of the protesters who briefly occupied the Bureau of Indian Affairs Building there. In 1973, Studi participated in the occupation at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, for which he was arrested.

Studi now sees his political activism as a form of post-Vietnam catharsis. "I began to purge the bad feelings within myself," he says, adding that he joined the resisters because "I wanted to make myself a viable part of the machinery that affected my people."

Recognizing his current path could lead to self-destruction, Studi changed course and channeled his feelings toward positive change. Shortly after Wounded Knee, Studi moved to the Tahlequah, Oklahoma, where he worked for the Cherokee Nation, and helped start the Cherokee Phoenix, a bilingual newspaper still in publication today. During that time Studi put his linguistic skills to work and began teaching the Cherokee language in the community. Later attending Northeastern University in Tahlequah, he made further attempts at positive influence in his work with his people.

After college, Studi shifted his attention to running his own horse ranch and became a professional horse trainer. It was during this era that he began acting at The American Indian Theatre Company in Tulsa in 1983, where he found both the adrenaline rush he craved and the cathartic release he needed. “When you’re able to release those feelings in an acting form, it’s healthier than leaving them inside,” he says of discovering acting.

Studi first took the professional stage in 1984 with “Black Elk Speaks” and has never looked back. As his success grew on stage, he expanded to productions for Nebraska Public Television in the summer of 1985. Not long after, he moved to Los Angeles, landing his first film role in Powwow Highway and making his TV debut in a small role in the ABC TV-movie Longarm in 1988.

In 1990, Studi portrayed a terrifyingly memorable Pawnee warrior in Dances with Wolves . Two years later he landed the role of Magua in Michael Mann’s The Last of the Mohicans, the performance that put him on the map.

Studi drew on his own combat training, anger and sense of enforced isolation for his riveting depiction of the vengeful Magua. He soon became known for his film roles portraying strong Native American characters as he strove to portray them with poignancy and authenticity.

Studi went on to play the title character in the Walter Hill-directed film Geronimo: An American Legend (1993) alongside veteran actors Gene Hackman and Robert Duvall, for which he won a Western Heritage Award. He also made memorable appearances in such films as Heat (1995) as Al Pacino's partner, Deep Rising (1998) and Mystery Men (1999). In 2002, he brought legendary character Lt. Joe Leaphorn to life for a series of PBS movies produced by Robert Redford and based on Tony Hillerman's books Skinwalkers, Coyote Waits, and A Thief of Time.

Studi’ other notable film credits include: The Only Good Indian, which he also produced, The New World, Street Fighter, Seraphim Falls, Three Priests, and such prestigious television movies as Crazy Horse, Comanche Moon, Streets of Laredo, Broken Chain and Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee . His television credits include “Penny Dreadful,” “The Red Road,” “The Mentalist,” “Hell on Wheels,” and General Abner in “Kings.”

At home, Studi’ artistic talent extends well beyond acting. He’s a skilled stone carver, working primarily in soapstone and other soft stones. He’s also an accomplished musician. Playing bass and guitar he fronts the band Firecat of Discord with his wife, singer Maura Dhu, primarily performing original music. Firecat released their first self-titled CD in 1998, touring the U.S. in 2000. Their music was also featured in the short film Bonnie Looksaway’s Iron Art Wagon , which Studi directed.

Additionally, Studi wrote two children's books, The Adventures of Billy Bean and More Adventures of Billy Bean for the Cherokee Bilingual/Cross Cultural Education Center. In 2006, Studi was honored with the Golden Boot Award.

Studi remains a passionate activist and academic. He’s taken a national leadership role in the promotion and preservation of indigenous languages, acting as the spokesperson for the Santa Fe-based Indigenous Language Institute, and working as a language consultant on several films, including Avatar and the PBS documentary We Shall Remain. He’s also active in encouraging the next generation of film makers and performers, providing mentorship and participating in apprenticeship programs.

Studi and Maura live in Santa Fe, N.M. They have one son, Kholan. Studi also has a son, Daniel, and a daughter, Leah, from a previous marriage.


BRYCE DALLAS HOWARD (Bella) continues to be a versatile and dynamic talent, both on-screen and behind the camera. Howard will next be seen in Paramount’s Rocketman, produced by Matthew Vaughn with Elton John and David Furnish, the biopic about the musical legend is set for release on May 17, 2019. As a filmmaker, Howard will be directing the adaptation of Matthew Quick’s novel Sorta Like a Rockstar for Netflix as well as, the feature length documentary Dads with Imagine Entertainment.

Earlier this year, Howard starred alongside Chris Pratt in Universal’s Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, the sequel to the 2015 box office juggernaut Jurassic World. In 2017, Howard starred with Matthew McConaughey in Stephen Gaghan’s Gold. The previous year, she starred in an episode of Netflix’s critically acclaimed series “Black Mirror.” Howard’s episode, “Nosedive,” directed by Joe Wright, garnered her a 2017 SAG Award nomination in the category of Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series.

Other film credits include Disney’s Pete’s Dragon alongside Robert Redford, Clint Eastwood’s Hereafter with Matt Damon, 50/50 opposite Seth Rogen and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Tate Taylor’s award-winning screen adaptation of The Help as well as The Twilight Saga: Eclipse; Tennessee Williams’ The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond; McG’s Terminator Salvation ; Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man 3; M. Night Shyamalan’s Lady in the Water; and Lars von Trier’s Manderlay. Howard made her film debut in M. Night Shyamalan’s The Village opposite Joaquin Phoenix. She also received a 2008 Golden Globe nomination for her performance as Rosalind in HBO’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s As You Like It , written and directed by Kenneth Branagh.

Howard has directed for multiple campaigns such as Canon’s “Project Imagination,” MoroccanOil’s “Inspired,” Vanity Fair’s “Decade Series” with Radical Media, and Glamour Magazine’s “Reel Moments.” Howard has also directed for MTV’s Supervideo: “M83’s Claudia Lewis,” Sony and Lifetime’s “Five More: Call Me Crazy” and “Solemates” in conjunction with Canon’s “Project Imagination: The Trailer”, which screened at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. With over a dozen short films under the belt, she has received numerous accolades for her work, including being shortlisted for an Oscar in 2012 for her half hour film When You Find Me. Howard also produced the Sony Classics film Restless starring Mia Wasikowska with director Gus Van Sant. Restless was featured as part of the 2011 Toronto Film Festival and opened the 2011 Cannes Film Festival Un Certain Regard selection.

Leaving the Tisch School of the Arts program at New York University to perform on the New York stage, Howard starred in in the Roundabout’s Broadway production of “Tartuffe”, in the Public Theatre’s “As You Like It”, in the Manhattan Theater Club’s production of Alan Ayckbourn’s “House/Garden” and in the Bay Street Theater Festival’s production of “Our Town”.

Howard is the founder of Nine Muses Entertainment and is currently a guest lecturer crafting and teaching a new course at NYU Tisch School of the Arts within the Drama Department.

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