Mia Kirshner
Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Kirshner came from a family of Holocaust survivors; her journalist father was born in a displaced camp in Germany and her mother was a Bulgarian-Jewish refugee. Kirshner majored in Russian literature at McGill University in Montreal before pursuing an acting career in the early 1990s. One of her first regular gigs was on the television show, "Dracula: The Series" (syndicated, 1990) about two children and their vampire-hunting uncle who go up against a modern-day Dracula. At age 17, Kirshner started taking on highly sexualized, bad-girl types that she would play throughout her career. She portrayed a young clairvoyant dominatrix in the dark comedy "Love and Human Remains" before her memorable turn as a bisexual teen stripper in Atom Egoyan's "Exotica," a role that called on the actress to convey a maturity well beyond her years. In 1995, Kirshner had supporting roles in films such as the Southern gothic coming-of-age tale, "The Grass Harp," starring Sissy Spacek and Walter Matthau, as well as in the suspense thriller "Murder in the First" as Kevin Bacon's younger sister. She landed a lead role opposite Vincent Perez in "The Crow: City of Angels" (1996), playing a tattoo artist who helped bring Perez' character back to life. Kirshner revealed a lighter side with a featured role in the gross-out parody "Not Another Teen Movie" (2001) as a mean Catholic schoolgirl who seduces her brother and an elderly woman, a role that spoofed Sarah Michelle Gellar's manipulative New York socialite character in the 1999 drama, "Cruel Intentions."Kirshner made her American TV debut on the short-lived CBS series "Wolf Lake" (2001-02) before appearing in the action-filled drama, "24" (Fox, 2001-2010) starring Kiefer Sutherland. On "24," Kirshner went back to her roots, playing a conniving bisexual woman who is also a professional assassin. In 2006, she appeared in Brian De Palma's noir thriller "The Black Dahlia" about two cops whose lives unravel as they investigate the real-life L.A. murder of would-be actress Elizabeth Short (Kirshner), whose tortured, dissected body was famously found in a vacant lot in 1946. The talented actress finally left obscurity behind when she was cast in the critically acclaimed series "The L Word," which centered on a small, close-knit group of lesbians living in Los Angeles. She played Jenny Schecter, a twenty-something writer from Chicago, IL who moves to Los Angeles to live with her boyfriend but finds herself drawn to a woman. Having played so many mysterious roles in the past gave Kirshner a vast array of feelings to draw; all of which helped bring out the humanity of a woman who lies and cheats incessantly, and was considered the most despicable on the show. Kirshner's character also had one of the most intense and erotically charged sex scenes (with actress Karina Lombard) on the provocative show which only added fire to Kirshner's growing popularity and made her a favorite pin-up for thousands of lesbians. After the "The L Word" ended, Kirshner did not stray too far from television, guest starring on "The Vampire Diaries" as Elena Gilbert's (Nina Dobrev) long-lost birth mother who was turned into a vampire; a role that well prepared her to play a vampire queen in the feature film blood fest, "30 Days of Night: Dark Days" (2010).