
Age: 48
female
Jaime Murray (born 21 July 1977, height 5' 7" (1,70 m)) is an English actress, best known for playing Stacie Monroe in the BBC television series Hustle (2004–2007; 2012) and Lila West in season two of the Showtime television series Dexter (2007). She is also known for her recurring roles as Grace Valentine in The CW's Valentine (2008–2009), as Gaia in Starz' Spartacus: Gods of the Arena (2011) and as Olivia Charles in The CW's Ringer (2011–2012). She is currently appearing as Stahma Tarr in the Syfy series Defiance and Helena G. Wells in Warehouse 13. Murray was born to English parents in London, England. Her father is the English actor Billy Murray. She was named after Lindsay Wagner's character Jaime Sommers in The Bionic Woman. Just before taking her A Levels, Murray was diagnosed with dyslexia. She briefly studied philosophy and psychology at the London School of Economics, but dropped out to train at the Drama Centre London, graduating in 2000.

BLOOD & ROSES is a modern prestige crime drama set in the sprawling fictional coastal metropolis of Verona City — a place of gleaming high-rises looming over crumbling neighbourhoods, where old money and street power share the same dark handshake. Two criminal organisations — the Montano family and the Capello family — have divided the city's underworld for thirty years, bound by a feud born of betrayal, territory, and blood. The series follows their children: Romeo Montano, a sensitive 19-year-old poet of the streets desperate to break free from his family's violence, and Julietta Capello, a fierce 17-year-old prodigy torn between loyalty to her name and the woman she is becoming. Their collision at a rooftop gala sets off a chain of events — secret vows, duels, murders, banishments, and betrayals — that will reduce two dynasties to rubble and cost the city a price it cannot afford to pay. Tonally, Blood & Roses blends the raw street authenticity of The Wire with the tragic romanticism of classic Italian opera. Every episode mirrors a key event in Shakespeare's original play, recast through the lens of organized crime, political corruption, and the inescapable gravity of inherited hate.
