
Age: 36
female
Phoebe Jane Elizabeth Tonkin (born 12 July 1989) is an Australian actress and model. She is best known for portraying Cleo Sertori in H2O: Just Add Water, Fiona Maxwell in Tomorrow, When the War Began and Faye Chamberlain in The Secret Circle. Tonkin's first television appearance was on the Australian teen show H2O: Just Add Water, where she played one of the main characters, Cleo Sertori. While not a strong swimmer, she worked to improve her abilities during pre-production of the show. On 20 October 2007, Tonkin appeared on the Nickelodeon UK Kids' Choice Awards, where she presented the award for best band alongside H2O co-stars Claire Holt and Cariba Heine. Her other credits include appearances on the Australian series Packed to the Rafters and the film Tomorrow, When the War Began, and guest starred on Home and Away in 2010. She has appeared in various commercials, including ones for Vauxhall Motors and Chic Management. Tonkin stars as Faye Chamberlain in the CW series The Secret Circle, which premiered on 15 September 2011. She also models, and has been in various photo shoots for catalogues and magazines such as Girlfriend, Teen Vogue, and Dolly.

Phoebe Tonkin

Blanche Barrow
for Blanche Barrow in Bonnie and Clyde
Suggested by tonyaroper

In the shadow of the Great Depression, two restless souls collide on the backroads of Texas — Bonnie Parker, a sharp-tongued waitress with poetry in her heart and fire in her veins, and Clyde Barrow, a small-time thief with big-time dreams and a growing hunger for infamy. Together, they spark a crime spree that captures the imagination of a weary nation and the wrath of the law. As the young lovers tear through the South robbing banks, evading police, and living on the edge of desperation, they become unlikely folk heroes to some — and public enemy number one to others. But with every bullet fired and every headline earned, the price of freedom rises. "Bonnie & Clyde, Love & Death" is a raw, romantic, and tragic portrait of two people chasing the American dream at the end of a gun barrel — and the inevitable crash that follows.
