Cathy Ang didn’t storm into the industry with a scandal, a scream, or some tabloid-friendly meltdown. She slipped in like a clear note cutting through static—clean, precise, unmistakable once you heard it. Born in Fort Dodge, Iowa, to Chinese-Filipino parents, she grew up in Cupertino, California, the kind of place where ambition simmers quietly under the sun-bleached sidewalks and every kid is silently expected to outdo the last. But Cathy wasn’t angling for prestige or gold stars. She was building a voice—literally.
She trained it the way some people train for marathons. New York University, Steinhardt School, Bachelor of Music in Vocal Performance. While other students had their eyes on pop charts or Broadway marquees, Cathy’s gift was bigger than a single lane. She didn’t just sing—she inhabited sound. She worked the breath, the lift, the resonance, the strange emotional geometry of a phrase shaped just right. When she graduated in 2017, she had the kind of discipline most actors never develop. The stage had already taught her how to stand still, how to command a room, how to make a whisper louder than a shout.
Her first steps into the business weren’t glamorous. A White Castle cashier on Ramy. A handful of theater productions—Riot Antigone at La MaMa, KPOP off-Broadway, the kind of scrappy, hard-won roles where the air smells like sweat, rusted radiators, and over-caffeinated stage managers. Those early years grind most young talent down to dust. Cathy sharpened herself on them instead.
Then came the moon.
In 2020, she voiced Fei Fei in Netflix’s Over the Moon, an animated musical that needed someone who could pour a whole galaxy of emotion into a few vibrating airwaves. Cathy’s voice didn’t just fit—it lifted the film. She carried grief, longing, stubborn loyalty, and that cracked-open kind of childhood hope that adults spend decades trying to forget. Her performance didn’t feel like voice acting. It felt like confession.
But Hollywood doesn’t always reward tenderness. What it did reward, strangely enough, was truth. And that’s how she found herself landing the role of Lily Goldenblatt on And Just Like That…, the revival of Sex and the City. Lily—the awkward, artistic, sharp-eyed daughter who somehow manages to steal scenes from characters with two decades of cultural inertia behind them. Cathy didn’t play her as a caricature. She played her as a modern teen: guarded, hungry, brilliant, unpredictable. In a show filled with aging glamour and neurosis, Cathy brought something rawer—youth that wasn’t cute or tidy, just real.
And more roles followed, the way they do when the industry finally stops pretending it doesn’t see you: Lisa Snart/Golden Glider on Harley Quinn, young Morgan Elsbeth on Star Wars: Tales of the Empire, Pearl Pangan on Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man. A string of performances where her voice, face, and stance all have that same thing in common—intent. Nothing coasts. Nothing is phoned in. She plays every part like she’s refusing to let the audience look away.
Some actors get big by being loud. Cathy Ang gets big by being exact. By knowing exactly how much truth a scene can hold without breaking. By stepping into roles Hollywood used to ignore—Asian daughters, queer-coded comic-book characters, teenage girls with bite—and giving them full human weight.
And the thing about Cathy is that you get the sense she’s just getting started. She’s got the steadiness of someone who knows the long game, the stubborn optimism you only find in performers who still love the work itself, not the spotlight. She came from the Midwest, sharpened herself in California, and carved her voice into something formidable in New York.
Now she’s doing the hardest thing in the industry: succeeding without selling out. Growing without contorting. Becoming visible without becoming hollow.
Cathy Ang doesn’t shout. She doesn’t need to.
She just opens her mouth, and the room listens.



