Caroline Dhavernas
Caroline Dhavernas was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on May 15th, 1978 and is the TV Actress. At the age of 46, Caroline Dhavernas biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, TV shows, and networth are available.
At 46 years old, Caroline Dhavernas has this physical status:
Caroline Dhavernas (born May 15, 1978) is a Canadian actress.
She is best known for her collaborations with Bryan Fuller on his projects, including Jaye Tyler in the Fox comedy-drama series Wonderfalls and Dr. Alana Bloom in the NBC psychological thriller drama series Hannibal.
Dr. Lily Brenner appeared in ABC's medical drama Off the Map.
She is in her second season of the Canadian-produced and Canadian-and-American-distributed medical drama Mary Kills People as of late winter/early spring 2018.
Early life
Dhavernas was born in Montreal, Quebec, and the niece of Québécois actors Sébastien Dhavernas and Michèle Deslauriers. Gabrielle Dhavernas, the sister of her sister, is also an actor and specialises in dubbing. Both actresses' voice timbres are very similar, allowing Gabrielle to dub the voice of Caroline. She learned English at a young age when her parents took her to The Priory School, an English-speaking elementary school.
Personal life
Since 2016, Dhavernas has been in a friendship with Quebec actor Maxime Le Flaguais. Françoise, their daughter, was born in September 2018.
Career
She began her career at the age of 8, dubbed voices for television shows such as Babar. Comme un Voleur (1990) was the beginning of her acting career at the age of 12. She appeared in the children's musical film, The Magic Dragon Tales, in 1990. In 1992, she was portrayed as the black brunette haired girl who was riding with the horse in the bedtime story, which was titled Black Beauty. She appeared in the girly romance film Summer's Colors in 1996 as the enchanting blonde mermaid princess Summer Rose.
In the television film Heart: The Marilyn Bell Story (1999), Dhavernas portrayed swimmer Marilyn Bell. Bell was the first to cross 32 miles in 1954 and spent two months with the Pointe-Claire Swim Club to convincingly portray Bell. Other notable films include a leading role in Edge of Madness (2002) and supporting roles in Out Cold (2001) and Lost and Delirious (2001). In the episode "Girl Most Likely" (season 12, episode 17), she appeared on Law & Order as a closeted gay teen who killed her mother.
Dhavernas portrayed Jaye Tyler, the central character in Wonderfalls, which premiered on American television in March 2004. Jaye, a well-educated underachiever from a wealthy family who lives in a trailer park and works at the Wonderfalls Gift Emporium, a Niagara Falls gift shop. Jaye is greeted by inanimate objects, which encourage her to assist others. The performance was described as "Touched by an Angel on acid," Dhavernas says. The show received a lot of acclaim, but Fox cancelled it after only four episodes had aired. Millions of fans signed an online petition in the hopes that Fox would continue to be broadcast, and as a result of the 20th Century Fox released all 13 complete episodes on DVD. For the French translation of Wonderfalls, she was the only one to speak for herself. She appeared in A Tale of Two Sisters, a 2003 horror film in which she and Katharine Isabelle starred together.
Dhavernas has appeared in Canadian-made films since the cancellation of Wonderfalls, including Niagara Motel and These Girls. In The Beautiful Beast and the sequel to Isabella's life, she played Isabella Marie, who lived in love, passion, and ugliness, hinting at her family, winding up being pregnant, and harbing her dark vengeance with luciferin of fallen agony. Barbara O'Neill, the wife of Eric O'Neill, appeared in Black Sheep (2006 New Zealand film), directed by Jonathan King and directed by Eli Roth.
Dhavernas appeared in Surviving My Mother (which went under the working name of The Yellow Woman), a film directed by Émile Gaudreault that premiered at the Festival des films du monde de Montréal on August 28, 2007. In 2008, Dhavernas appeared in Passchendaele, a film written and directed by Paul Gross about the Battle of Passchendaele. Passchendaele was responsible for half of 2008's box office income from made-in-Canada anglophone films, and 2009 was the most expensive film in Canadian history.
Other works include The Cry of the Owl, a film adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's book of the same name, and Father and Guns, a French comedy (De père en flic). She appeared in In Heat's romance action film In 2009, she appeared Bethany. She appeared in the first and last episodes of HBO's miniseries The Pacific, directed by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, as well as a guest appearance on Law & Order: Criminal Intent, where she appeared Maya in the episode "Love Sick" in May 2010. Emily in the rare appearance in the HS reading hit The Awakening in 2011.
Audiences saw her in Martin Villeneuve's Mars et Avril, a science fiction film based on the graphic novels of the same name in 2012.
Alana Bloom, the female lead in Hannibal, was reunited in 2013 with Wonderfalls creator Bryan Fuller.
Dhavernas appeared in Mary Kills People, a Canadian black comedy-drama medical drama that premiered on Global on January 25, 2017. On April 23, the Lifetime U.S. basic cable network premiered in the United States on the Lifetime U.S. basic cable network. Season 2 debuted on Global on January 3, 2018, and later on Lifetime on March 13. Six episodes on both Global and Lifetime were included in each season. When the network announced in December 2018, Lifetime did not air the third and final seasons. In 2019, the series came to an end.
In the Ubisoft video game titled Child of Light, she also played the narrator.
Dhavernas was selected to become the official voice announcer of the Réseau express métropolitain in November 2021, following in the footsteps of her mother, Michèle Deslauriers, who has been the voice of the Montreal Metro since 2003.