
Age: 42
female
Katia Winter (born 13 October 1983) is a Swedish-born actress. She moved to England at an early age and pursued a career in acting after studying film, screen acting and editing in London and Stockholm. She's best known for her roles as Katrina Crane in the FOX series Sleepy Hollow and Milla in the film The Killing Game. She has gone on to star in a range of television and independent film roles including the British drama Unmade Beds (2009), directed by award-winning Alexis Dos Santos and Everywhere and Nowhere (2011) directed by Mejhad Huda. She relocated to New York in March 2010 and was booked soon after as the lead role of 'Milla' in The Killing Game opposite Samuel L. Jackson and Kellan Lutz. The role that made Katia's face most well-known was playing Nadia in Dexter, in the seventh season in 2012. Her personality within the series was a Ukrainian stripper who had connections with transnational stripper bars, in locations such as Los Angeles, USA or also in Africa run by Saudi countries. His personality is influential in the redemption of policeman Joey Quinn. In which they have a case. According to a TikTok profile (Delicate_Natalie), Katia Winter is an actress who almost graduated from the criminal investigation academy, and this only didn't happen because an opportunity to become a model loomed, which was an unpromising start and path, ended up triggering an opportunity to become an actress, after which she never let go. And according to the same profile with a very suggestive title that reads “Underrated Swedish beauty”, Katia is classified as a beauty representative of her country who is not recognized for her real value. The profile's claims also state in a comments section that the actress has a fascination for tools in handcrafted constructions. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Katia Winter

Morgause
for Morgause in King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
Suggested by ckent52

King Arthur was a legendary British leader who, according to medieval histories and romances, led the defence of Britain against Saxon invaders in the late 5th and early 6th centuries. The details of Arthur's story are mainly composed of folklore and literary invention, and modern historians generally agree that he is unhistorical. The sparse historical background of Arthur is gleaned from various sources, including the Annales Cambriae, the Historia Brittonum, and the writings of Gildas. Arthur's name also occurs in early poetic sources such as Y Gododdin. Arthur is a central figure in the legends making up the Matter of Britain. The legendary Arthur developed as a figure of international interest largely through the popularity of Geoffrey of Monmouth's fanciful and imaginative 12th-century Historia Regum Britanniae (History of the Kings of Britain). In some Welsh and Breton tales and poems that date from before this work, Arthur appears either as a great warrior defending Britain from human and supernatural enemies or as a magical figure of folklore, sometimes associated with the Welsh otherworld Annwn.[6] How much of Geoffrey's Historia (completed in 1138) was adapted from such earlier sources, rather than invented by Geoffrey himself, is unknown.





