


"July 18th happens to be my birthday so this is just perfect 💙 #TheExpanse" (Tweet). "I married my sweet love Richard de Klerk." (Tweet). For this role, she also won a Special Jury Award at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival as well as an award for Best Actress at the American Indian Film Festival. Gee garnered a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Actress at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards for her performance in Empire of Dirt. Recurring role (seasons 2–3) main role (seasons 4–6) Gee was eight months pregnant while filming the fifth season of The Expanse. She was born in Calgary, Alberta, and raised in Aurora, Ontario. Gee is Ojibwe, one of the largest indigenous populations in Canada. Her indigenous origin has attracted media attention repeatedly around matters of representation of minorities, especially with narratives in The Expanse regarding cultural assimilation.
#Cara gee the expanse series
Since 2017 she has played the role of Camina Drummer on the Syfy/ Amazon television series The Expanse. Īs of 2016, Gee stars in the 33-episode web series Inhuman Condition, which airs on the KindaTV YouTube channel. In 2014, she starred as one of the lead characters in the Western drama series Strange Empire on CBC Television, for one season until it was cancelled in 2015. Gee also worked in television, playing guest roles in the television series King and Republic of Doyle. In 2013, at TIFF, Gee was named one of the festival's annual Rising Stars. For this role, she also won a Special Jury award at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival as well as an award for Best Actress at the American Indian Film Festival.

She made her feature film debut in Empire of Dirt for which she was nominated for a Canadian Screen Award. Gee is primarily known as a stage actress in Toronto, Ontario, where her acting credits have included productions of Margaret Atwood's The Penelopiad, Daniel MacIvor's Arigato, Tokyo, Tomson Highway's The Rez Sisters Cliff Cardinal's Stitch, Birdtown and Swanville's 36 Little Plays About Hopeless Girls and Louise Dupré's Tout comme elle.
