
Age: 51
female
Zita Sattar (born 1975) is an English television, theatre, and film actress from Birmingham. Sattar is of mixed descent, her mother being British and her father Pakistani. At the age of eleven, as a young amateur actress, Sattar was one of the founding members of Birmingham's Central Junior Television Workshop. She then attended the Rose Bruford College of Theatre & Performance in London. Sattar is best known for playing Anna Paul in Casualty from 2001 to 2003. She has also had roles in The Bill, Gimme Gimme Gimme, According to Bex, Dalziel and Pascoe, Doctors, and Flowers. Her theatre roles include: Top Girls, Clubbed Out, Let's Go to the Fair, Hansel and Gretel, One Night, D'yer Eat with your Fingers, and Romeo and Juliet. She also played the role of Meenah Khan in the original cast of East is East by Ayub Khan-Din. It was produced by the Tamasha Theatre Company at the Royal Court Theatre, London, in 1996. Although she did not reprise the role in the film version of the play (1999), she did appear as new character Neelam Haqq in the sequel West Is West (2010).[2] She has starred in the following low-budget films: The Final Curtain, Esther Kahn, Janice Beard 45wpm, and Large.

Zita Sattar

Donna Dawson (Riley's Mother)
for Donna Dawson (Riley's Mother) in Pinned
Suggested by mr95

Hailee Steinfeld stars as Riley "The Phoenix" Dawson, a 26-year-old professional wrestler trying to make her mark in a male-dominated industry. Riley has undeniable talent, charisma, and a unique style in the ring, but she struggles with self-doubt and the emotional wounds of a traumatic past. As Riley’s career begins to take off, she faces challenges both in and out of the ring: grueling physical injuries, the politics of the wrestling world, and a complicated relationship with her estranged father, who was once a wrestling legend himself. When Riley is offered a spot in the world’s biggest wrestling promotion, she must decide whether to push herself to the breaking point or risk losing everything she’s worked for. Along the way, she finds unexpected allies and learns that true strength comes from embracing vulnerability.