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Sylvia De Fanti Main: Recurring: Main: Sister Beatrice: Kristina Tonteri-Young: Main: Adriel: William Miller: Recurring: ... Just before his and his wife's death ...
The series marks Baptista's English-language debut. The cast also features Toya Turner, Thekla Reuten, Lorena Andrea, Kristina Tonteri-Young, Sylvia De Fanti and Tristán Ulloa. The series premiered on July 2, 2020, to generally positive reviews. It ran for two seasons but was cancelled by Netflix in December 2022. [2]
On April 1, 2019, it was announced that Sylvia De Fanti had joined the cast as a series regular. [25] On October 18, 2021, Meena Rayann, Jack Mullarkey and Richard Clothier joined the cast as recurring roles for the second season.
Emilia Fox was born in Hammersmith, London. [1] She comes from a thespian family – her mother is actress Joanna David (née Joanna Elizabeth Hacking) and her father is actor Edward Fox; her uncle James Fox and her cousins Jack, Laurence and Lydia are also actors. [3]
The first appearance of the character Sister Shannon Masters was in Warrior Nun Areala Vol. 1, #1. Beginning in December 1994 and ending in April 1995, a three-issue limited series established the fictional world of Areala, several key characters, and her origin story.
Sylvia Margaret Sackville, Countess De La Warr, DBE (née Harrison; 16 July 1903 – 10 June 1992) was a public servant and a former Vice Chairman of the Conservative Party (1951–54). She was the second daughter of William Reginald Harrison, a cotton broker, [ 1 ] and his wife, Edith, of Liverpool .
Tonteri-Young was born in Finland to a Finnish mother and Chinese New Zealander father from Hong Kong. [1] Her family moved to New York City when she was 6 years old. [2] From 2009 to 2012, she attended The Bolshoi Ballet Academy in Moscow, where she learned Russian.
Sylvia Fine was born in Brooklyn, New York, the youngest of three children of a Jewish dentist, and raised in East New York.She attended Thomas Jefferson High School and studied music at Brooklyn College, where she wrote the music for the school's alma mater, with lyrics from the poet Robert Friend.