Nazanin Boniadi
Nazanin Boniadi | |
---|---|
Born | Tehran, Iran |
22 May 1980
Occupation | Actress, activist |
Years active | 2006–present |
Website | nazaninboniadi |
Nazanin Boniadi (English /ˈnɑːzəniːn ˈboʊnjɑːˌdiː/ Persian: نازنین بنیادی, IPA: [nɑzæˈniːn ɛ bonjɑˈdiː]; born 22 May 1980) is an Iranian-born British American actress.
Contents
Early life
Boniadi was born in Tehran at the height of the Iranian Revolution; her parents relocated to London shortly thereafter. She performed violin and ballet as a young girl.[1][2]
She attended a private high school and later moved to the United States where she earned a bachelor's degree, with Honors, in Biological Sciences from the University of California, Irvine. At UCI, she won the Chang Pin-Chun Undergraduate Research Award for molecular research involving cancer treatment and heart transplant rejection. She was also Assistant Editor-in-Chief of MedTimes, UCI's undergraduate medical newspaper.[3]
Career
Boniadi changed her career path from medicine and started pursuing acting in 2006.[4] Her first major acting role was as Leyla Mir on the Emmy Award-winning daytime drama General Hospital and its SOAPnet spin-off series General Hospital: Night Shift, making her the first contract actor to play a Middle Eastern character in American daytime television history.[citation needed] She is also the first Iranian-born actress to ever be on contract on an American soap opera.[5]
She was nominated for an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Daytime Drama Series in 2008 for her role in General Hospital.[6]
Boniadi has also played supporting roles in several major Hollywood film productions, such as Charlie Wilson's War (directed by Mike Nichols), Iron Man (directed by Jon Favreau), and The Next Three Days (directed by Paul Haggis).[7]
She played Nora, a love interest for Neil Patrick Harris' character Barney Stinson, on the sixth season of the hit CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother.[8] She reprised this role during the show's seventh and ninth seasons.
In May 2013, Boniadi joined the cast of Homeland season 3, as CIA analyst, Fara Sherazi.[9] She was promoted to series regular for the show's fourth season.[10]
Boniadi also appeared in an eight-episode arc on season 3 of Scandal as antagonist Adnan Salif.[11] She will portray Esther in the 2016 remake of Ben-Hur.[12]
Activism
Boniadi is a spokeswoman for Amnesty International USA (AIUSA), with a focus on the unjust conviction and treatment of Iranian youth, women and prisoners of conscience.[13][14] She has her own official blog page on the Amnesty International USA website[15] and has written op-eds for media outlets such as CNN[16] and The Huffington Post[17]
Boniadi provided a voiceover to AIUSA's "Power of Words" public service announcement with Morgan Freeman, which won a Webby Award;[18] campaigned with the organization for the International Violence Against Women Act (I-VAWA);[19] has served as a panellist and emcee for events related to Iranian rights, and spearheaded The Neda Project with AIUSA in May/June 2010.[20]
In December 2010, she initiated an Amnesty International petition for Iranian film directors Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof, who had been convicted of "propaganda against the state". The petition was co-signed by prominent Hollywood directors and industry leaders such as Paul Haggis, Martin Scorsese, Sean Penn, Harvey Weinstein, Ron Howard and others, and generated more than 21,000 signatures.[21] On 8 June 2011, she joined a delegation, led by Haggis and AIUSA Executive Director Larry Cox, to deliver the petition to the Iran Mission to the United Nations in New York.[22][23]
On 3 June 2011, Boniadi joined Sarah Shourd in a rolling hunger strike in solidarity with Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal and wrote an article in support of the Free The Hikers campaign.[24]
Boniadi received the 2011 Social Cinema Award at the Ischia Global Film & Music Festival for her human rights work with Amnesty International.[25][26]
On 9 April 2012, Boniadi returned to her alma mater, UC-Irvine, in support of the Education Under Fire campaign, calling for an end to discrimination against and persecution of Baha'is in Iran.[27]
Boniadi delivered the keynote closing remarks at the 2012 XX Factor, Amnesty International USA's annual town hall meeting on women's rights, in Washington, D.C.[28]
She helped launch an Amnesty International petition and campaign with Roxana Saberi in December 2012, to free wrongfully imprisoned filmmaker Behrouz Ghobadi, brother of acclaimed filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi, in Iran.[citation needed] The petition was signed by prominent Hollywood directors such as Martin Scorsese and Paul Haggis, actors such as Liam Neeson, Mila Kunis, James Franco and Adrien Brody, as well as major film industry organizations and festivals.[29][30][31][32]
On 22 January 2013, Amnesty International announced that Behrouz Ghobadi had been released on bail from prison in Iran.[33]
She was a keynote speaker at Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson's 13th annual 'A World of Women for World Peace' conference in Dallas, Texas.[34]
Personal life
Boniadi is fluent in English and Persian.[35] In the mid 2000s she was a dedicated Scientologist. Her mother had also been a Scientologist.[36] In 2005 she was commended for setting a record in selling scientology books. In 2004, she had a brief relationship with Tom Cruise. According to claims of the documentary Going Clear, her acquaintance with Cruise was not accidental and the Church of Scientology prepared and planted her for this role.[37] The church also vetted her along with dozens of other women as a potential wife for Cruise, but she was not selected.[38][39]
Boniadi later left the Church of Scientology and now calls herself a "non-practising Muslim".[40]
Filmography
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2007 | The Game | Josie | 2 Episodes |
General Hospital: Night Shift | Leyla Mir | 13 Episodes | |
2007–2009 | General Hospital | Leyla Mir | 119 Episodes |
2010 | The Deep End | Heather Mosson | Episode: "To Have and to Hold" |
24 | Blonde Woman | 2 Episodes | |
Hawthorne | Aneesa Amara | Episode: "Final Curtain" | |
2011 | Suits | Lauren Pearl | Episode: "Errors and Omissions" |
2011, 2014 | How I Met Your Mother | Nora | Season 6–7 (recurring; 9 episodes) Season 9 (guest; 1 episode) |
2012 | CSI | Nurse Lauren | Episode: "Seeing Red" |
Best Friends Forever | Naya | 2 Episodes | |
2013 | Go On | Hannah | 1 episode |
Grey's Anatomy | Amrita | 1 episode | |
2013–2014 | Homeland | Fara Sherazi | Season 3 (recurring; 6 episodes) Season 4 (series regular; 6 episodes) |
2014 | Scandal | Adnan Salif | Season 3 (recurring; 7 episodes) |
Film
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Kal: Yesterday & Tomorrow | Simmi | Short Film |
2007 | Gameface | Taylor | |
2008 | Charlie Wilson's War | Afghan Refugee Woman | Uncredited |
Iron Man | Amira Ahmed | ||
2009 | Diplomacy | Persian Interpreter | Short Film |
2010 | The Next Three Days | Elaine | |
2012 | Shirin in Love | Shirin | |
2015 | Desert Dancer | Parisa Ghaffarian | |
2016 | Ben-Hur | Esther | Filming |
References
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- ↑ Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Nazanin Boniadi at IMDb
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- ↑ "Nazanin Boniadi to play Esther in remake of Ben Hur", deadline.com; accessed 28 February 2015.
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- ↑ Nazanin Boniadi on Women's Rights at Amnesty's XX Factor Event on YouTube
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Boniadi's Amnesty International petition, amnestyusa.org; accessed 28 February 2015.
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- ↑ Official website of Nazanin Boniadi - Biography
- ↑ Profile, vanityfair.com; accessed 28 February 2015.
- ↑ Going Clear (film), time code ca 1:27:50
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links
- Pages using YouTube with unknown parameters
- EngvarB from August 2014
- Use dmy dates from August 2014
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles containing Persian-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from December 2014
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 1980 births
- Living people
- Actresses from London
- People from Tehran
- English emigrants to the United States
- English people of Iranian descent
- English film actresses
- English television actresses
- Former Scientologists
- Iranian emigrants to the United Kingdom
- Iranian emigrants to the United States
- University of California, Irvine alumni
- 21st-century American actresses
- British Muslims