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Katee Sackhoff

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Katee Sackhoff
Katee Sackhoff (28457468288) Cropped.jpg
Sackhoff in 2018
Born
Kathryn Ann Sackhoff

April 8, 1980 (age 41)
OccupationActress
Years active1998–present
Partner(s)Robin Gadsby
(2018–present)

Kathryn Ann Sackhoff (born April 8, 1980) is an American actress known for playing Lieutenant Kara "Starbuck" Thrace on the Sci Fi Channel's television program Battlestar Galactica (2004–2009), Bo-Katan Kryze on the Disney+ series The Mandalorian, Niko Breckenridge on the Netflix series Another Life, Victoria "Vic" Moretti on the Netflix series Longmire, as the voice of Bitch Pudding on Robot Chicken (2005–present), and several other characters throughout her career. She was nominated for four Saturn Awards for her work on Battlestar Galactica and won the award for Best Supporting Actress on Television in 2005.

Sackhoff also starred in the short-lived TV series The Fearing Mind (2000–2001) and The Education of Max Bickford (2001–2002); had recurring roles in the TV series Bionic Woman (2007), Nip/Tuck (2009), and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2010–2011); and had a lead role in the eighth season of 24 as Dana Walsh (2010). She voices several characters, including Bitch Pudding, on Adult Swim's stop-motion animated series Robot Chicken. Between 2012 and 2017, she starred in the A&E and Netflix series Longmire as Deputy Sheriff Victoria "Vic" Moretti[1] before recurring on The Flash as Amunet and appearing twice as herself on The Big Bang Theory. Sackhoff has also voiced the Star Wars character Bo-Katan Kryze in Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2012–2020), Star Wars Rebels (2017), and portrayed the character in live action in the second season of the Disney+ original series The Mandalorian (2020).

She had lead roles in the films Halloween: Resurrection (2002), White Noise: The Light (2007), Batman: Year One (2011), The Haunting in Connecticut 2: Ghosts of Georgia (2013), Sexy Evil Genius (2013), Riddick (2013), Oculus (2013) and Don't Knock Twice (2016).

Early life[edit]

Sackhoff was born in PortlandOregon[2] and grew up in St. Helens, Oregon. Her mother, Mary, was an English-as-second-language (ESL) program coordinator, and her father, Dennis, a land developer.[3] She graduated from Sunset High School in Beaverton in 1998. She began swimming at an early age and by high school planned to pursue a career in the sport until her right knee was injured. This led her to begin practicing yoga — which she continues today — and to pursue an interest in acting.[4]

Career[edit]

Sackhoff at the 2008 Wizard World Convention

Sackhoff moved to Los Angeles when she was 17 years old.[5] Her first acting role was in the Lifetime movie Fifteen and Pregnant (starring Kirsten Dunst), in which she played a teenager with a baby. It motivated her to move to Hollywood and pursue an acting career after she graduated from high school. Sackhoff's first recurring role was as Annie in MTV's Undressed; she next won a supporting role as Nell Bickford in The Education of Max Bickford. She made her motion picture debut in My First Mister, then appeared as Jenna "Jen" Danzig in Halloween: Resurrection.

Sackhoff's most widely known role is as Kara "Starbuck" Thrace in the miniseries and follow-up TV series Battlestar Galactica, for which she won a Saturn Award in 2006 for Best Actress on Television. Her persona led the writers to develop the character as more complex and volatile. Galactica's executive producer Ron Moore described Sackhoff as having "magnetism"; and producer David Eick said, "We saw this whole other side that was all because of Katee: vulnerability, insecurity, desperation. We started freeing ourselves up to explore the weakness of the character because we knew Katee could express those things without compromising the character's strength."[6] Sackhoff said her performance was inspired by Linda Hamilton's portrayal of Sarah Connor in Terminator 2: Judgment Day: "I think that was the one character that I kind of looked to as far as body image and strength. I think I looked to her character and said, 'OK, that's kind of what you need to embody.'"[7] Toward the end of the filming of Battlestar Galactica, Sackhoff began feeling physically weak. Soon after filming wrapped, she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. After surgery to remove her thyroid, she required no radiation treatments and by February 2009 was in remission.[8]

In 2007, Sackhoff was cast as the evil cyborg Sarah Corvus in the short-lived NBC series Bionic Woman. David Eick, the show's executive producer, said, "[Sackhoff is] a very special find. Those actors who can combine the qualities of strength and vulnerability—they usually call those people movie stars."[6] Sackhoff plays the female lead in the action/sci-fi movie The Last Sentinel and the supernatural thriller White Noise: The Light.

Katee Sackhoff in May 2015

Sackhoff appears as the main character in the Lifetime Original Movie How I Married My High School Crush.[9] She has made guest appearances in Cold CaseERLaw & Order, and Robot Chicken. Sackhoff provided the voice of a female marine in the video game Halo 3 and is featured in the viral marketing campaign for Resistance 2. In 2011, she provided the voice for Black Cat 2099 in Spider-Man: Edge of Time. She voiced Sarah Essen in the DC Comics animated film, Batman: Year One. She appears in four episodes of the fifth season of the series Nip/Tuck playing a new doctor, Dr. Theodora Rowe.[10][11] However, for the sixth season Sackhoff was replaced by Rose McGowan for the role due to scheduling conflicts.[12][13] Sackhoff headlined NBC's Dick Wolf-produced cop drama Lost and Found as Tessa, "an offbeat female LAPD detective who, after butting heads with the higher-ups, is sent as a punishment to the basement to work on John Doe and Jane Doe cases." The pilot was filmed in January 2009. NBC decided not to pick up the series.[14] In 2009, she appeared as herself in "The Vengeance Formulation" episode of the CBS situation comedy The Big Bang Theory. In the episode, she is fantasized as Howard Wolowitz's dream girl.[15] She appears again in season 4, in the same role. Sackhoff appeared as a series regular in the eighth season of the TV series 24, playing Dana Walsh, a CTU data analyst with a secret.

In February 2010, Sackhoff signed on to play the lead in an ABC crime drama pilot, Boston's Finest. ABC decided not to pick up the series.[16]

She made a special appearance in the Futurama episode "Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences".[17] In the fall of 2010, Sackhoff joined the cast of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation as Detective Reed, a smart investigator who does not do well with sensitivity.[18] In 2011, Sackhoff guest starred in an episode of Workaholics as a homeless drug addict named Rachel.

From 2012 to 2017, Sackhoff co-starred as the lead female role in Longmire, an A&E/Netflix television series based on the novels by Craig Johnson. Sackhoff played Sheriff's Deputy Vic Moretti.[19][20]

From 2012, Sackhoff provided voice acting for the Lucasfilm Animation series Star Wars: The Clone Wars, in which she played Bo-Katan Kryze, member of the revolutionary Mandalorian Death Watch and Nite Owls. She reprised this role in the sequel to the series, Star Wars Rebels, and in the seventh season of the original series produced by Disney+ in 2020. Also in 2020, Sackhoff appeared as Bo-Katan Kryze in the Disney+ live action original series The Mandalorian.[21]

Sackhoff played Dahl, a mercenary hired to track down Vin Diesel's intergalactic convict character in Riddick.[22]

In August 2012, Sackhoff became the co-host of the Schmoes Know Movies podcast on the Toad Hop Network. One of her first shows was with guest Sean Astin.[23]

Sackhoff announced in April 2015 a new TV series project, Rain, which she wrote and is executive-producing through her Fly Free Productions.[24] She also had a role in the video game Call of Duty: Black Ops III, performing voice over and motion capture as Sarah Hall.[25] She portrayed Pink Ranger Kimberly in Power/Rangers, a short depicting a dystopian future in the Power Rangers universe.[26]

In 2017, Sackhoff joined The CW series The Flash in the recurring role of villain Blacksmith for its fourth season, billed as a special guest star.

On April 26, 2018, it was announced that Sackhoff was cast in a main role on the Netflix science-fiction drama series, Another Life.[27]

Personal life[edit]

Sackhoff and her Battlestar Galactica co-star Tricia Helfer co-founded the Acting Outlaws, a motorcycle-riding charity with which they have worked to raise awareness and funds for causes including the Gulf Restoration Network, the Humane Society, and the Red Cross amfAR.[28][29]

She began practicing Transcendental Meditation in 2015, and has said, "What it taught me was that you can't fail at meditation."[30]

Sackhoff is an avid healthy eater and her YouTube channel[31] has many videos related to her physique and associated training and dietary approaches. She is not a vegetarian but depending on the role she is training for, including competing in the Hawaii Spartan Sprint Obstacle Race in 2019, will alter her diet accordingly.[32]

In 2018, Sackhoff met Robin Gadsby in Vancouver, British Columbia. The couple became engaged on Sackhoff's 40th birthday.[33]

Filmography[edit]

Film[edit]

YearTitleRoleNotes
2001My First MisterAshley
2002Halloween: ResurrectionJennifer "Jen" Danzig
2007White Noise: The LightSherry Clarke
2007The Last SentinelGirl
2011Batman: Year OneDetective Sarah EssenVoice
2012Campus KillerSuzanne
2013The Haunting in Connecticut 2: Ghosts of GeorgiaJoyce
2013Sexy Evil GeniusNikki Franklyn
2013RiddickDahl
2013OculusMarie Russell
2014TellBeverley
2015Power/RangersKimberly Scott (née Hart)Short film
2016Girl Flu.Jenny Styles
2016Don't Knock TwiceJess
20182036 Origin UnknownMackenzie 'Mack' Wilson

Television[edit]

YearTitleRoleNotes
1998Fifteen and PregnantKaren GotarusTV film
1999Locust ValleyClaire ShawTV film
1999Zoe, Duncan, Jack and JaneSusanEpisode: "Sympathy for Jack"
1999Chicken Soup for the SoulClaireEpisode: "Starlight, Star Bright"
1999Hefner: UnauthorizedMaryTV film
2000UndressedAnnie4 episodes
2000–2001The Fearing MindLenore Fearing13 episodes
2001–2002The Education of Max BickfordNell Bickford22 episodes
2002ERJason's GirlfriendEpisode: "A Hopeless Wound"
2003Battlestar GalacticaKara "Starbuck" ThraceTV miniseries
2003BoomtownHollyEpisode: "The Big Picture"
2004Cold CaseTerri Maxwell (1969)Episode: "Volunteers"
2004–2009Battlestar GalacticaKara "Starbuck" Thrace71 episodes
2007The Wedding WishSara JacobTV film
2007Bionic WomanSarah Corvus5 episodes
2007Battlestar Galactica: RazorCapt. Kara "Starbuck" ThraceTV film
2007–presentRobot ChickenVariousVoice; 14 episodes
2008Law & OrderDianne CaryEpisode: "Knock Off"
2009Lost and FoundTessa CooperTV pilot
2009Nip/TuckTheodora "Teddy" Rowe4 episodes
2009–2010The Big Bang TheoryHerself2 episodes
2010Boston's FinestJulia ScottTV film
201024Dana Walsh20 episodes
2010FuturamaGrrrlVoice; Episode: "Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences"
2010–2011CSI: Crime Scene InvestigationDet. Frankie Reed3 episodes
2011The Super Hero Squad ShowShe-HulkVoice; Episode: "So Pretty When They Explode!"
2011WorkaholicsRachelEpisode: "Karl's Wedding"
2012–2013, 2020Star Wars: The Clone WarsBo-Katan KryzeVoice; 9 episodes
2012–2017LongmireVictoria "Vic" Moretti63 episodes
2017Star Wars RebelsBo-Katan KryzeVoice; 2 episodes
2017–2020The FlashAmunet Black / BlacksmithRecurring role
2019–presentAnother LifeNiko BreckinridgeMain cast
2020The MandalorianBo-Katan Kryze2 episodes

Video games[edit]

YearTitleRoleNotes
2007Halo 3Female Marine 3Voice; Video game
2008Resistance 2Cassie AklinVoice; Video game
2011Spider-Man: Edge of TimeBlack Cat 2099Voice; Video game
2015Call of Duty: Black Ops IIISarah HallVoice role
Motion capture performance
2016Eve: ValkyrieRán KavikVoice role

Awards and nominations[edit]

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResult
2003Saturn AwardBest Supporting Actress in a Television SeriesBattlestar GalacticaNominated
2005Best Supporting Actress in a Television SeriesWon
2006Best Actress on TelevisionNominated
2008Best Supporting Actress in a Television SeriesNominated
2010Teen Choice AwardsChoice TV Actress: Action24Nominated
2015Fangoria Chainsaw AwardsBest Supporting ActressOculusWon

References