
Age: 47
female
Morena Baccarin (born June 2, 1979) is a Brazilian-born American actress most widely known for roles in several American science fiction television shows: as Inara Serra in the series Firefly; as Adria in the series Stargate SG-1; and as Anna in the 2009 version of the series V. Baccarin was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Her mother is Brazilian stage and TV actress Vera Setta, and her father is Italian journalist Fernando Baccarin. When she was 7, Baccarin moved with her family to Greenwich Village, New York, as her father was transferred to Globo TV's headquarters in the United States, working as editor. Baccarin attended Public School 41 and New York City Lab School for Collaborative Studies, where she and Claire Danes were classmates. She later attended the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts before she entered the theater program at Juilliard. Baccarin landed her first movie role in the improvised fashion world comedy Perfume (2001).

Morena Baccarin

Catwoman
for Catwoman in Gotham Knights [Season 1]
Suggested by user_54837
![Gotham Knights [Season 1]](https://assets.mycast.io/posters/gotham-knights-season-1-fan-casting-poster-87310-large.jpg)
Bruce Wayne has been expertly framed for murder of his former lover,Vesper Fairchild. He and his bodyguard Sasha Bordeaux are arrested and held without bail in prison. His new Robin, Tim Drake, Nightwing and Oracle decide to investigate in parallel to prove his innocence. With all evidence missing or framed against Bruce Wayne, his former allies except Nightwing begin to suspect that he must've done it to protect his dual identity out of desperation. Meanwhile, Bruce Wayne breaks out of prison to leave behind his civilian identity and dedicate himself completely to being Batman, putting his allies investigation at jeopardy. The investigation later shows that there might be more than what meets the eye in this case. 10 episode mini-series based on the story lines Bruce Wayne: Murderer? and Bruce Wayne: Fugitive? by DC Comics.