
Age: 43
female
Christine Byrd (born November 9, 1982 in Los Angeles, California) is an American-born actress specializing in dubbing and voice-overs, who began her career in Mexico from a very young age. She is known for being the voice of Helga Pataki in Hey Arnold!, Tinker Bell in the franchise of the same name, Candace Flynn in the Phineas and Ferb, Sakura Haruno in Naruto, Jenny Humphrey in the Prying Girl, the 1st voice of Elena Gilbert and Katherine Pierce in The Vampire Diaries and Zoey Brooks in Zoey 101. She is the daughter of fellow actress Rocío Prado and also actor Alejandro Byrd, as well as the granddaughter of fellow actress Edith Byrd. She began her career as a voice actress at the age of 4, although she began to dedicate herself fully to this profession from the age of 8. Since 2014, she resides in the United States, performing dubbing occasionally during her visits to Mexico until 2016. After finishing her participation in Agent Carter, she retired from dubbing.

Christine Byrd

Sandy Cheeks
for Sandy Cheeks in White Hot Kiss
Suggested by johannarivera1

One kiss could be the last. Seventeen-year-old Layla just wants to be normal. But with a kiss that kills anything with a soul, she's anything but normal. Half demon, half gargoyle, Layla has abilities no one else possesses. Raised among the Wardens—a race of gargoyles tasked with hunting demons and keeping humanity safe—Layla tries to fit in, but that means hiding her own dark side from those she loves the most. Especially Zayne, the swoon-worthy, incredibly gorgeous and completely off-limits Warden she's crushed on since forever. Then she meets Roth—a tattooed, sinfully hot demon who claims to know all her secrets. Layla knows she should stay away, but she's not sure she wants to—especially when that whole no-kissing thing isn't an issue, considering Roth has no soul. But when Layla discovers she's the reason for the violent demon uprising, trusting Roth could not only ruin her chances with Zayne…it could brand her a traitor to her family. Worse yet, it could become a one-way ticket to the end of the world.

