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- Bitsie Tulloch was an American actress best known for starring in the television shows "Grimm" (ABC 2011-17) and "Quarterlife" (NBC 2008), as well as for her appearance in the Academy Award-winner "The Artist" (2012). Tulloch was born in San Diego, California on January 19, 1981. Her family moved around when she was young, traveling to Spain, Uruguay, and Argentina before she settled down to attend school in the US. She double majored in American Literature and Visual and Environmental Studies from Harvard, graduating magna cum laude. Her first role was in the film "R2-D2: Beneath the Dome" (2001), a mockumentary produced by George Lucas about the famed fictional robot. In 2008, she starred in the short lived web series turned NBC show "Quarterlife." The series explored the lives of millennials growing up in the internet age, and the original website was groundbreaking in that it was created alongside a social network. She went on to appear in the Oscar Best Picture-winning silent film "The Artist." She was a series regular in the series "Grimm," playing the veterinarian girlfriend of her real-life boyfriend David Giuntoli's character, Detective Burkhardt. She and Giuntoli both appeared in the indie-film "Caroline and Jackie" (2013), which she also co-produced. In the buzzy and star-studded drama surrounding John F. Kennedy's death, "Parkland" (2013), she starred alongside Zac Efron, Paul Giamatti, and Marcia Gay Harden.
- After dancing her way into the backgrounds of many musically oriented major Hollywood features, Bree Turner picked up a yearning to enter the acting game in earnest and started out on the prowl for speaking parts. From her early jobs on the series "Undressed" (MTV 1999-2002) and in films like "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo" (1999) to a regular role on the fantasy crime series "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17), Turner proved herself just as capable an actress as she ever was a background dancer. Bree Nicole Turner was born on March 10, 1977 in Palo Alto, California. She was one of four children-the only girl-of professional football player Kevin Turner. Graduating from Monte Vista High School in 1995, Turner traveled overseas to enroll at King's College London, but returned to her home state soon enough to study dance at the University of California, Los Angeles. Turner's musical background landed her a number of dance roles in film and television, notably in "My Best Friend's Wedding" (1997), "She's All That" (1999), and "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me" (1999). One of Turner's earliest genuine acting jobs came with the anthology TV series "Undressed" (MTV 1999-2002), in which she starred opposite fellow rising stars Christina Hendricks, Max Greenfield, and Pedro Pascal. Turner made her speaking debut in a feature film in "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo" (1999). After this, Turner began filling out her résumé with an special focus on comedy. She appeared in romantic comedies like "The Wedding Planner" (2001), though dealt primarily in raunchy screwball material such as "Joe Dirt" (2001), "American Pie 2" (2001), and "Sorority Boys" (2002). Turner accumulated more television work thereafter, with recurring appearances on "Spin City" (ABC 1996-2002) and "Cold Case" (CBS 2003-2010), as well as a starring role on the short-lived sitcom "Good Girls Don't" (Oxygen 2004). She continued to take parts film comedies, notably "Just My Luck" (2006), "The Ugly Truth" (2009), and "Jewtopia" (2012). Turner's most consistent job came with the launch of the fantasy crime drama series "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17), which she joined as a recurring character midway through the first season. By Season 2, Turner was a fixture of the regular cast.
Nicholas Burkhardt
- Reggie Telmo Valdez (born October 4, 1975), known professionally as Reggie Lee, is a Filipino-American film and television actor. On television, he has played William "Bill" Kim on Prison Break and Sergeant Drew Wu on Grimm. In film, he has played Tai Huang in the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise, GCPD Officer Ross in The Dark Knight Rises and Lance Nguyen in The Fast and the Furious.
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- Sasha Roiz (born October 21, 1973) is an Israeli-born Canadian-American actor. He is best known for his portrayals of Sam Adama in the science fiction television series Caprica and Captain Sean Renard in the American dark fantasy television series Grimm.
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- After just a few short years in show business, Claire Coffee managed to become one of those performers you couldn't help but spot while channel surfing. Founding her career on brief appearances in sitcoms and crime procedurals, Coffee was a natural when it came time to enliven characters of her own on series like "The West Wing" (NBC 1999-2006) and "General Hospital" (ABC 1963-). With her turn as a central player on the fantasy series "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17), Coffee came a long way from jumping from one background appearance to the next. Claire Elizabeth Coffee was born on April 14, 1980 in San Francisco, California. Though enamored by performance from an early age, her original focus was on stage acting. At the age of five, Coffee began appearing in productions through the Mountain Play Association, and starred in a number of school plays at the private boarding institution Santa Catalina School. She went on to study theater at Northwestern University before moving to Los Angeles, California, and pursuing a career on the screen. After a handful of one-off appearances on television programs including the sitcom "The Mind of the Married Man" (HBO 2001-02) and "Yes Dear" (CBS 2000-06), Coffee landed her first recurring role, playing White House intern Cassie Tatum on three episodes of the acclaimed drama series "The West Wing" (NBC 1999-2006). Shortly afterward, Coffee made her big screen debut in the action-thriller "Leave No Trace" (2004). She continued to amount minor appearances in popular TV series, notably "Bones" (Fox 2005-), "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (CBS 2000-), and "Psych" (USA 2006-2014), before earning a regular part on the long-running daytime soap opera "General Hospital" (ABC 1963-). Coffee portrayed Nadine Crowell, a nurse at the titular establishment, for 170 episodes between 2007 and 2009. Following her leave from the series, Coffee endeavored to make her mark behind the scenes. She wrote, directed, and starred in the comedic short film "Chelsey & Kelsey Are Really Good Roommates" (2009), playing the former eponymous character opposite co-writer and director Ellie Knaus. By 2011, Coffee's visibility had substantially increased thanks to two new major roles: a recurring supporting part on the comedic law procedural "Franklin & Bash" (TNT 2011-14) and a starring position as the magically-endowed Adalind Schade on the fantastical crime drama "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17). In 2014, Coffee and Knaus began producing and starring in a "Chelsey & Kelsey" web series.
- A talented character actor often cast as crazies, Silas Weir Mitchell recurred on "The Practice" (ABC, 1997-2004) and "Nash Bridges" (CBS, 1996-2001) and made a fun cameo in "Rat Race" (2001) before breaking through as a baddie who terrorizes the wife and daughter of Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) on "24" (Fox, 2001-2010). Building on his momentum, Mitchell balanced wild-eyed intensity with comedy and heart in high-profile recurring roles as two lovably whacked-out prisoners: Haywire on "Prison Break" (Fox, 2005-09) and Donny Jones on "My Name Is Earl" (NBC, 2005-09). After recurring on "Burn Notice" (USA Network, 2007-13) and appearing in Rob Zombie's "Halloween II" (2009), the consistently employable Mitchell earned his showiest part thus far as Monroe, an urbane but quirky supernatural informant on "Grimm" (NBC, 2011-17). So popular was Mitchell as Monroe that he quickly became a thoroughly indispensable part of the series. Immensely talented and charismatic, Silas Weir Mitchell was able to make even the weirdest character lovable, leaving many critics and fans excited to see just what unpredictable characters Mitchell would embody next.
- Russell Hornsby was an actor best known for his lead roles in the popular television shows "Lincoln Heights" (ABC Family 2007-09) and "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17). Hornsby was born on May 15, 1974 in Oakland, California. The 6'1" actor played football in high school, but a turn as the Scarecrow in a school performance of "The Wiz" hooked him on theater. He continued to perform in high school theater, and he studied performance at Boston University, later refining his technique at Oxford University's British Academy of Dramatic Arts. After graduating from Oxford, he moved to New York City. There, he performed in off-Broadway productions, earning such coveted roles as Atticus Finch in "To Kill a Mockingbird" and Paul in "Six Degrees of Separation." Moving to Los Angeles, he landed a small role in "Meet The Parents" (2001), the Robert De Niro and Ben Stiller-starring hit comedy. He took on a few small roles in popular TV series like "Grey's Anatomy" (ABC 2005-) and "Law & Order" (NBC 1990-2010) before he starred in one of his best-known roles as police officer Eddie Sutton, who relocates his family to the rough titular neighborhood of "Lincoln Heights." After the show was cancelled in 2009, he played another law enforcer: the wry Detective Hank Griffin on the supernatural drama "Grimm."
- David Giuntoli was an actor best known for his starring role as Detective Nick Burkhardt on the supernatural drama "Grimm" (NBC 2011-17). Giuntoli was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on June 18, 1980. Hitting his growth spurt late, he gravitated toward the arts rather than sports, performing in school plays. He attended Indiana University in Bloomington, pursuing a career in finance. After graduating in 2002, he shortly realized that he was more interested in a career in entertainment. In 2003, MTV talent scouts discovered him and cast him on "Road Rules: South Pacific" (MTV 2003), the twelfth season of the youth-oriented network's road trip reality show. Encouraged by this success, Giuntoli moved to Los Angeles to commit to an acting career in 2007. He went on to appear in small roles on major network shows, including "Veronica Mars" (The CW 2004-07) and "Cold Case" (CBS 2003-2010). His first lead role in a TV show was in "Grimm," playing a descendent in a long line of hunters of the supernatural. He and "Grimm" co-star Bitsie Tulloch also appeared together in the art house drama "Caroline and Jackie" (2012).
Sean Renard
Sergeant Wu
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Adalind Schade
Catherine Schade
Eric Renard
Dr. Harper
Bud Wurstner
Kelly Burkhardt
Marie Kessler