Tricia Helfer


Actress

About

Also Known As
Tricia Janine Helfer
Birth Place
Donalda, Alberta, CA
Born
April 11, 1974

Biography

Statuesque Tricia Helfer parlayed her popularity as a print and runway model into an acting career in the early 2000s. After a string of roles on television and in independent features, she earned her big break as the lovely but duplicitous Cylon, Number Six (and its countless duplicates), on "Battlestar Galactica" (The Sci Fi Channel, 2004-09). She quickly became a popular pin-up for sc...

Biography

Statuesque Tricia Helfer parlayed her popularity as a print and runway model into an acting career in the early 2000s. After a string of roles on television and in independent features, she earned her big break as the lovely but duplicitous Cylon, Number Six (and its countless duplicates), on "Battlestar Galactica" (The Sci Fi Channel, 2004-09). She quickly became a popular pin-up for science fiction fans, and graced the covers and layouts of countless men's magazines, including Playboy. Her increased profile eventually allowed her to explore other on-camera possibilities as well, including a brief stint as the host of the reality series "Canada's Next Top Model" (CityTV/A-Channel, 2006-09). Born Tricia Janine Helfer on Apr. 11, 1974, she was raised on her family's grain farm in Donalda, British Columbia, Canada. At 17, she was discovered by a modeling talent scout while waiting in line for a movie, and was soon dispatched to New York City to make her way in the industry. In 1992, she won the coveted Ford Models' Supermodel of the World contest, which gave her a contract with the agency and a substantial cash prize. She was subsequently signed to the Elite Modeling Agency, and began appearing on the covers of fashion magazines like ELLE and Cosmopolitan, as well as modeling the fashions of designers such as Versace and Christian Dior on catwalks around the world. Developing an interest in acting while serving as a correspondent for the Canadian television series "Ooh La La Fashion Television" in 1994, Helfer began increasing her on-camera appearances. Cameos as herself in the fashion-oriented documentaries "Unzipped" (1995) and "Catwalk" (1996) preceded a bit part as one of several prospective dates for a single guy on the make in the comedy short, "Eventual Wife" (2000). In 2002, Helfer moved to Los Angeles to pursue acting fulltime, quickly landing a role in the two-part premiere of Showtime's short-lived science fiction series "Jeremiah" (2002-04). This was soon followed by a grisly turn as a self-mutilating model on a 2002 episode of "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (CBS, 2000-15) and the female lead in a low-budget thriller about drug dealing called "White Rush" (2003) opposite Judd Nelson and Louis Mandylor. Helfer also found time to marry her longtime boyfriend, entertainment lawyer Jonathan Marshall. (Helfer filed for divorce in January 2018.) The year 2003 marked a turn in fortune for Helfer - she was cast as Number Six in the two-part miniseries "Battlestar Galactica," which reimagined the original space adventure series of the same name (ABC, 1978-79), as well as landing the plum role of Farrah Fawcett in the NBC TV movie, "Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Charlie's Angels" (2004). The exposure helped place Helfer in several notable men's magazines in the U.S., especially Maxim, which frequently ran photo spreads of Helfer and named her their calendar girl for 2005. In 2004, "Battlestar Galactica" was picked up as a series by the Sci Fi Channel, giving Helfer the opportunity to reprise her role as Number Six. As movie and television robots went, Helfer's Number Six was among the most emotionally complex ever created. The popularity of "Galactica" increased Helfer's profile considerably, and from 2005 on, she was involved in a myriad of projects outside of her work on the series. She starred in a string of independent thrillers and science fiction pictures that were largely released directly to DVD, though one of them - the psychological thriller "Spiral" (2007) - enjoyed a limited theatrical release and positive reviews. Helfer also began hosting the reality series "Canada's Next Top Model," though her commitment to "Galactica" prevented her from repeating her hosting duties for its 2007 sophomore season. She also continued to model for several major publications; most notably a 2006 layout for Playboy in which she appeared topless. In 2007, Helfer had major roles in two independent features, "The Green Chain" (about logging protestors) and "Walk All Over Me" (with Leelee Sobieski as a small town girl who takes over her roommate's dominatrix business). Continuing to make her presence known, she contributed a voice to the video game "Command and Conquer 3" for the Xbox 360 system. The following year, "Galactica" producer Ronald D. Moore announced that Helfer would be returning as Six in the show's fourth and final season. Meanwhile, Helfer branched out and joined the cast of "Burn Notice" (USA, 2006-13) for the second season, playing the recurring role of Carla, a mysterious woman who is the only link between former covert operative Michael Westen (Jeffrey Donovan) and the people in the intelligence agency who blacklisted him. Helfer joined the cast of action drama "Dark Blue" (TNT 2009-10) for its second and final season, followed by a recurring role on legal drama "The Firm" (NBC 2012) and a voice role on the animated series "Tron: Uprising" (Disney XD 2012-13). Helfer starred in crime drama "Killer Women" (ABC 2014) before joining the cast of supernatural crime series "Lucifer" (Fox 2016- ) in its second season.

Life Events

1992

Won the coveted Ford Models' Supermodel of the World contest

1994

Served as a correspondent for the Canadian television series "Ooh La La Fashion Television"

1995

Appeared as herself in the fashion-oriented documentary "Unzipped"

2000

Had a bit part as one of several prospective dates for a single guy in the comedy short "Eventual Wife"

2002

Landed a role in the two-part premiere of Showtime's short-lived sci-fi series "Jeremiah"

2002

Relocated to Los Angeles to pursue a full-time film career

2003

Played the female lead in a low-budget thriller, "White Rush" opposite Judd Nelson

2003

Was cast in her breakout role as Number Six in the two-part miniseries "Battlestar Galactica" (Sci-fi), based on the original series from the late 70s

2004

Portrayed Farrah Fawcett in the NBC TV-movie, "Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Charlie's Angels

2004

Reprised role of Number Six in the Sci-fi series, "Battlestar Galactica"

2006

Hosted the first season of the reality series "Canada's Next Top Model"

2007

Appeared as a small town girl who takes over her roommate's dominatrix business in "Walk All Over Me"

2007

Posed for the February issue of <i>Playboy</i> magazine

2007

Reprised role of Number Six in the direct-to-video movie "Battlestar Galactica: Razor"

2007

Had the recurring role of Carla on "Burn Notice"

2010

Had a recurring role on crime drama "Dark Blue"

2010

Voiced the ship AI "EDI" in the epic sci-fi game "Mass Effect 2"

2012

Played Alex Clark on "The Firm"

2012

Returned as EDI, now transferred into a humanoid body, in "Mass Effect 3"

2014

Co-starred on short-lived western series "Killer Women"

2014

Appeared on an episode of Noah Wylie adventure series "The Librarians"

2016

Was featured on the second season of PlayStation's superhero adventure series "Powers"

2016

Began co-starring on fantasy crime drama "Lucifer"

Bibliography