| Aaryn Élan Doyle | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Born | 1 January 1993 |
| Occupations | Actor, singer, rapper, songwriter, dancer, model |
| Years active | 1999–present |
| Website | http://whatittakesbylola-aaryndoyle.blogspot.com/ |
Aaryn Élan Doyle (born January 1, 1993)[1] is a Canadian actress, voice actor, singer, rapper, songwriter, dancer, and model. She is best known for her role as Lola Scott in the Disney Channel Original Movie "Camp Rock" performing her feature song "What it Takes" .[2] In the summer of 2008 Doyle was signed to the Ford Modeling Agency but is now with Spot 6.
Doyle is also the voice of Pansy in "Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends", and Foo in "The Save-Ums".
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Doyle is of Irish/Jewish and West Indian heritage, from Ontario, Canada. She started her career at the age of six following a win at MSA.[3] Doyle has appeared in films, television shows, and commercials, and has also lent her voice to many animation/voice-over projects. She was the lead female vocalist for a 12-piece Toronto band for 3 years from age 12 to 15, but now performs with other TO bands, and was a member of CTV’s Canadian Idol choir ensemble in 2005. During the summer of 2007 Aaryn Doyle joined the cast of Disney's Camp Rock with the Jonas Brothers, Demi Lovato, and Alyson Stoner.[4] As the character Lola Scott, Doyle was featured in the Camp Rock song "What It Takes", in addition to contributing vocals for the tracks "Our Time Is Here", "Hasta La Vista" and "We Rock".
In 2009, she didn't reprise her role in Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam because her manager was fired so he didn't try to get her in the sequel.
Aaryn Doyle has appeared in the films Sins of the Father with Ving Rhames and Colm Feore, and Jasper, Texas with Louis Gossett, Jr. and Jon Voigt. She is a cast member of the animated television series Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Kids with Brooke Shields, and Rick Moranis; then starring in Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends with Kristin Davis as Miss Spider. She also stars in the Emmy and Grammy award winning and nominated animated series The Save-Ums, as well as Friends and Heroes and the animated short film/TV movie Tomboy.
Past years have seen Doyle recording with her youth trio for a CCC production company and their tracks can be heard on CTS. Between the ages of 10 and 12, she has recorded over 70 pop/gospel songs, and starred in CBC radio dramas. In 2007 she appeared on an episode of Little Mosque on the Prairie as a teenage Muslim girl, followed by a guest starring role as a model on The Latest Buzz in season 3. In 2010, Doyle's vocal stylings can be heard in the pilot episode of Life Unexpected singing solo on the reproduced cover soundtrack of "I Will Always Love You" for a classic yet touching wildlife scene between lion and man..
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Sins of the Father | Carole Robertson | TV MOW (Movie of the Week) |
| 2003 | Jasper, Texas | Young Girl | TV MOW |
| 2003 | Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Kids | Pansy (voice) Baby Earwig (voice) Snow Drop (singing voice) |
22 episodes and two TV specials |
| 2003–2004, 2006 | The Save-Ums | Foo (voice) | 45 episodes |
| 2005 | Skylar | Skylar Honouree |
Drama (adapted for stage) |
| 2005 | Canadian Idol | Choir singer | Season 3 finale (CTV) |
| 2007 | Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame | Herself | Guest appearance on "Words to Music" awards gala (CBC) |
| 2007 | Little Mosque on the Prairie | Muslim teen girl | "Best Intentions" Halaqa Teen 3 (CBC) |
| 2007–2008 | Friends and Heroes | Flore (voice) | 13 episodes |
| 2008 | Tomboy | Kati | |
| 2008 | Entertainment Tonight Canada | Model | ET Canada (Global Television) |
| 2008 | Camp Rock | Lola Scott | Disney Channel Original Movie (Disney Channel) |
| 2009 | The Latest Buzz | Lily | Decode Entertainment (Family and Disney Channel) |
| 2010 | Life Unexpected | Vocalist – "I Will Always Love You" original soundtrack cover for pilot episode | CW Network, CBS Television Studios, LY Productions, Mojo Films, Warner Brothers (TV) |
| 2011 | Against the Wall | Flirty Model | Lifetime Television (USA) |
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Say Ginger Ale | Young Girl | Radio drama CBC production by A&E and Ann Jansen |
| 2005 | Skylar "Beyond the Sound Barrier" | Skylar | Radio drama CBC production/Immigration Series by Marjorie Chan/James Roy |
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