Shay Astar (born September 29, 1981) is an American actress, singer, and songwriter. She is best known for her work in the late 1990s, portraying the neo-feminist August Leffler, a semi-regular character on the sitcom 3rd Rock from the Sun. She played Elizabeth in the Halloween comedy film Ernest Scared Stupid and Paula Kelly in the Boy Meets World episode "I Am Not a Crook". Astar portrayed an imaginary friend named Isabella in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Imaginary Friend" in 1992. In 1996, she played Andrea on the cartoon series The Oz Kids.
The California-born Astar released her first EP, "Blue Music EP," on May 24, 2010. This was followed by her full length debut, "Blue Music" on September 28, 2010.
Astar is a New Zealand television presenter who appears on the weekday morning series, Good Morning as the arts and crafts presenter. She was formerly the yoga instructor on the show.
Astar was born and raised in Southland.
Astar trained in floristry and has worked as an art teacher, floral designer and design tutor before taking a year out to write three yet to be published books. Her focus was on floral design in the many homes owned around the world by the Sultan of Brunei. Astar then decided to return to New Zealand and commenced working on the Good Morning show in 1998.
Astar currently lives in Auckland with partner, affectionately called "The Engineer" and her son affectionately called "The Boy".
Attar (Aramaic); Athtar (South Arabia); Astar (Abyssinia); Ashtar (Moab); Ashtar(t) or Astarte (Canaan)) is the masculinized version of Venus, the morning and evening star, in some manifestations of Semitic mythology. The name is derived from that of Ištar an Assyro-Babylonian who inherited the qualities of the (4th-3rd millennium) Sumerian Inanna, the original goddess of the planet Venus. In Canaanite legend, Attar attempts to usurp the throne of the dead god Baal Hadad but proves inadequate. In semi-arid regions of western Asia he was sometimes worshipped as a rain god. In more southerly regions he is probably known as Dhu-Samani.
Attar was worshipped in Southern Arabia in pre-Islamic times. A god of war, he was often referred to as "He who is Bold in Battle". One of his symbols was the spear-point and the antelope was his sacred animal. He had power over Venus, the morning star, and was believed to provide humankind with water.
In ancient times, Arabia shared the gods of Mesopotamia, being so close to Babylon, except the genders and symbols of these deities were later swapped around. For instance, the sun god Shamash became the sun goddess Shams, and in southern Arabia Ishtar became the male storm god Athtar. Athtar was a god of the thunderstorm, dispensing natural irrigation in the form of rain. Athtar also represented fertility and water as essential to fertility. When representing water he stood not just for the act of raining itself, but rather for the useful flow of the water after the rain, in the wadi, the Arabian watercourse which is dry except in the rainy season.
Astar may refer to:
Rest and piece eternal give them
Whose God?
And light for ever shine down upon them
Free the souls that faithful departed from hell.
What advocate entreat to speak for me.
When from the dust shall rise
What was hidden is uncovered