
Age: 34
female
Gracie Gillam (born May 4, 1992) is an American actress, best known for her roles as "Lela" in the Disney Channel's feminist, early-1960s-Beach-Party-Movie musical franchise "Teen Beach Movie" (2013) and "Teen Beach movie 2" (2015), as well as spunky BFF "Amy Martin" in ABC Family's "The Nine Lives of Chloe King" (2011). She can also be seen on television as tortured preacher's daughter "April Young" on "The Vampire Diaries" (2012-13), fallen angel "Hael" on "Supernatural" (2013), daycare employee/love interest "Megan" on "Baby Daddy" (2013) movie star diva "Brady Braxton" on "Austin and Ally" (2014) put-upon tennis star "Erica Young" on "Hawaii 5-0" (2015), murderous Stockholm Syndrome victim on "CSI-Cyber" (2015) and murder complacent sorority girl on "Scream Queens" (2015). She can be seen in films like "Some Kind of Hate" (2015), "Dark Summer" (2015), "Tales of Halloween" (2015) and Dreamworks' "Fright Night" (2011), which the actress booked directly after graduating high school from The North East School of the Arts in San Antonio, Texas, with a degree in Musical Theatre. In 2016 the actress moved to New York to attend Columbia University's school of general studies where she studies Film and Art History and stars as apocalyptic marine chick "Sarge" in SyFy's "Z Nation" (2017-18) during her summer breaks.

Twenty-two teenagers from across Canada are dropped off at the rundown and hazardous Camp Wawanakwa to compete in a reality TV show like no other. Hosted by the sadistic and sarcastic Chris McLean, the contestants are split into two teams — the Screaming Gophers and the Killer Bass — and must face outrageous, dangerous, and often humiliating challenges ranging from cliff diving and wilderness survival to gross food eating contests and horror movie reenactments. As the competition heats up, alliances form, betrayals unfold, and personalities clash. From the laid-back slacker Geoff and goth girl Gwen to scheming Heather and lovable goof Owen, each camper brings something wild to the table. One by one, contestants are voted off and sent home in the infamous "Dock of Shame" boat, often after shocking twists and drama-filled tribal councils. In the end, it all comes down to the final showdown, where only one contestant can win the grand prize: $100,000 (and serious bragging rights). But with manipulative tactics, romantic entanglements, and increasingly unhinged challenges, nothing goes as expected.

