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Mackenzie Davis
Mackenzie Davis
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Mackenzie Rio Davis (born April 1, 1987)[1] is a Canadian actress. She made her feature film debut in the drama film Smashed (2012). In 2013, she appeared in the film The F Word, for which she received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. From 2014 to 2017, she starred as computer programmer Cameron Howe in the AMC period drama series Halt and Catch Fire.[2]

Key Information

Davis starred in the two-time Emmy award winning Black Mirror episode "San Junipero" in 2016, for which she received critical acclaim. She appeared in the films The Martian (2015), Blade Runner 2049 (2017), and portrayed the title character in the comedy-drama film Tully (2018). She then starred as an augmented super-soldier in Terminator: Dark Fate (2019), and co-starred in the romantic comedy film Happiest Season (2020). In 2021, she had a lead role in the miniseries Station Eleven, which earned her a Critics' Choice Super Award.

Early life

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Davis was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, to Lotte, a graphic designer, and John Davis, a hairdresser from Liverpool, England.[3] Her parents own AG Hair. She graduated from Collingwood School in West Vancouver in 2005 and then attended McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. She went on to study acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York City.[4][5]

Career

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Davis at TIFF 2015

Davis's first feature film was Smashed. In 2015, she appeared in The Martian as NASA satellite communications engineer Mindy Park.

From 2014 to 2017, she played programming prodigy Cameron Howe in Halt and Catch Fire for the duration of its four-season run.[6][7]

In 2016, she co-starred as Yorkie in "San Junipero", an episode of the anthology series Black Mirror, which received two Emmy Awards.[8] She was also cast as Mariette in Blade Runner 2049.[9]

In 2019, she appeared in Terminator: Dark Fate as an augmented super soldier who is sent from the future to protect Dani Ramos. In October 2019, she was cast in the lead role in the HBO Max miniseries Station Eleven.[10]

In 2020, Davis starred as Kate in The Turning, opposite Finn Wolfhard and Brooklynn Prince. The film is a modern adaptation of the 1898 horror novella The Turn of the Screw by Henry James. She also starred as Diana Hastings in Irresistible, a film by Jon Stewart about the outsized influence of money on the American electoral system. She also starred in the 2020 romantic comedy Happiest Season co-starring Kristen Stewart.[11][12][13]

In June 2020, it was announced that Davis would be part of the ensemble cast of Zellner Brothers' science-fiction comedy Alpha Gang, which includes Jon Hamm, Andrea Riseborough, Nicholas Hoult, Sofia Boutella and Steven Yeun.[14]

In February to April 2023 she played the role of Isolde in Phaedra in an updated version of the play by Simon Stone at the National Theatre in London.

Her short film WOACA, her directorial debut, screened in the Short Cuts program at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival.[15]

In May 2022, she signed to star in Justin Anderson’s directorial debut Swimming Home, an adaptation of the Booker Prize-nominated novel of the same name by Deborah Levy, alongside Christopher Abbott and Ariane Labed.[16]

Acting credits

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Key
Denotes works that have not yet been released

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2011 Alex Terri Short film
2012 Smashed Millie
The Hat Goes Wild Cathy Credited as Mackenzie Rio Davis
2013 Breathe In Lauren Reynolds
The F Word Nicole Alternative title: What If?
Bad Turn Worse Sue
Plato's Reality Machine Sophia
Moontown Shayna Short film
2014 That Awkward Moment Chelsea
Emptied Charlotte Laurence Short film
2015 Freaks of Nature Petra Lane
A Country Called Home Reno
Memory Box Isabelle Short film
The Martian Mindy Park
2016 Always Shine Anna
2017 Izzy Gets the F*ck Across Town Izzy Also producer
Blade Runner 2049 Mariette
2018 Boomerang Jenifer Short film
Tully Tully
2019 Terminator: Dark Fate Grace Harper
2020 The Turning Kate Mandell
Irresistible Diana Hastings
Happiest Season Harper Caldwell
2023 WOACA Short film; writer, director, producer
2024 Swimming Home Isabel [17]
Speak No Evil Louise Dalton
TBA My Notes on Mars Margot Filming[18]

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2012 I Just Want My Pants Back Lucie Episode: "Safety Nets"
2014–2017 Halt and Catch Fire Cameron Howe Main role (40 episodes)
2016 Black Mirror Yorkie Episode: "San Junipero"
2017 No Activity Patricia / "Pat the Rat" Episode: "The Witness"
2020 Home Movie: The Princess Bride Princess Buttercup Episode: "Chapter Two: The Shrieking Eels"[19]
2021–2022 Station Eleven Kirsten Raymonde Main role (10 episodes)
2022 Love, Death & Robots Martha Kivelson (voice) Episode: "The Very Pulse of the Machine"
2025 The Undertow Nicola [20]

Theatre

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2023 Phaedra Isolde National Theatre, London

Accolades

[edit]
Year Award Category Nominated work Result
2014 Canadian Screen Awards Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role The F Word Nominated
2016 Monster Fest Best Performance in a Feature Film (Female) Always Shine Won[21]
Tribeca Film Festival Best Actress in a U.S. Narrative Feature Won[22]
2017 Napa Valley Film Festival Special Jury Award – Best Breakout Performance Izzy Gets the F*ck Across Town Won
Tacoma Film Festival Best Performance (shared with Jun Zhao) Won
International Online Cinema Awards Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie "San Junipero" Nominated
2018 Best Supporting Actress Tully Nominated
Indiana Film Journalists Association Nominated
2019 Women's Image Network Awards Supporting Actress Feature Film Nominated
CinemaCon Ensemble Award (shared with Linda Hamilton, Natalia Reyes and Gabriel Luna) Terminator: Dark Fate Won
2022 Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series Station Eleven Won

References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mackenzie Rio Davis (born April 1, 1987) is a Canadian actress born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia. She debuted in the 2012 independent film Smashed and rose to prominence with her portrayal of the ambitious coder Cameron Howe in the AMC period drama Halt and Catch Fire (2014–2017), a role that showcased her ability to depict complex, driven characters in the tech industry's formative years. Davis has since starred in high-profile films including Mindy Park in The Martian (2015), the replicant Mariette in Blade Runner 2049 (2017), the exhausted mother Marlo in Tully (2018), and the augmented soldier Grace in Terminator: Dark Fate (2019), demonstrating versatility across science fiction, drama, and action genres. Her performance as Yorkie in the Black Mirror episode "San Junipero" (2016) received widespread praise for its emotional depth, contributing to the anthology's Emmy wins, though Davis herself earned nominations including for the Canadian Screen Award for Best Supporting Actress in The F Word (2013).

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Mackenzie Davis was born on April 1, 1987, in , , , to John Davis, a from , , and Lotte Davis, a from . Her parents co-founded , a professional brand, in 1989, initially producing products in the basement of their home by combining John's expertise in hairdressing with Lotte's design skills. Raised in , Davis grew up immersed in her family's entrepreneurial environment within the beauty industry, though specific details of her childhood activities beyond this context remain limited in . Her parents emphasized practical career paths, later encouraging her to pursue higher education as a foundation before entering the unpredictable field of .

Academic background and early influences

Davis attended in , , earning a in English literature in 2010, with a minor in . During her undergraduate years, she supplemented her academic pursuits with acting training under Montreal-based instructor Jacqueline McClintock and participated in university productions, marking her initial foray into performance. Her parents, owners of a Vancouver hair care company, insisted she pursue higher education before committing to acting professionally, a decision that delayed her full entry into the industry until after graduation. This academic detour aligned with her longstanding interest in stage and screen work, which she had nurtured since youth and began actively developing through extracurricular theater at McGill rather than forgoing university altogether. Following her degree, Davis relocated to to train intensively at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theater, building on her foundational experiences in .

Career

Breakthrough in film and early television (2012-2014)

Davis made her debut in the independent drama Smashed (2012), in which she portrayed Millie, a supportive friend to the struggling with . The role marked her entry into acting after limited prior experience, earning early notice for her naturalistic performance in the film's ensemble. In 2013, Davis appeared in two additional independent films that expanded her visibility. She played Lauren Reynolds, the resentful teenage daughter in a suburban family, in Drake Doremus's Breathe In, a role that highlighted her ability to convey emotional complexity amid familial tension. She also starred as Nicole in the Canadian romantic comedy The F Word (released internationally as What If), portraying a confident friend in a ; for this performance, she received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. These roles in festival-circuit films positioned her as an emerging talent in indie cinema. The year 2014 brought Davis's first mainstream studio film, , where she played Chelsea, a sharp-witted ally to the male leads navigating post-breakup dating dynamics; the comedy premiered on January 31, 2014. Concurrently, she transitioned to television with her starring role as Cameron Howe, a brilliant but volatile computer , in AMC's Halt and Catch Fire, which premiered on June 1, 2014. Davis later described the series as a breakthrough, noting it was among her earliest major jobs and required overcoming significant audition nerves to secure the part. The show's focus on the 1980s personal revolution provided a platform for her to demonstrate range in a lead dramatic role, contributing to her rising profile.

Television stardom and critical acclaim (2014-2017)

In 2014, Davis achieved prominence in television through her lead role as Cameron Howe in the AMC series Halt and Catch Fire, which premiered on June 1 and depicted the personal and professional struggles of innovators in the personal computing revolution of the and 1990s. Portraying a gifted but anarchic and coder, Davis's character evolved from a rebellious outsider to a key figure in and early ventures across the show's four seasons, which concluded on October 14, 2017. Despite modest viewership that declined over time, the series garnered strong critical praise, earning a 90% approval rating on from 121 reviews, with commentators highlighting its thematic depth on technological ambition and failure. Critics frequently lauded Davis's performance for capturing Cameron's complexity—combining intellectual brilliance, emotional volatility, and defiance of industry norms—contributing to the show's reputation as an underappreciated drama comparable to in its exploration of reinvention. In season 4 reviews, outlets such as emphasized how Davis "tore up" the narrative with a portrayal that infused the series' final arcs with intensity and authenticity, amid broader acclaim for the ensemble's handling of themes like and human connection in tech evolution. aggregated a score reflecting positive reception, underscoring the program's steady improvement and Davis's role in elevating its dramatic tension despite commercial underperformance. Davis's television profile peaked further in 2016 with her starring role as Yorkie in the Black Mirror episode "," a standalone story of and romance set in a simulated , which aired as part of the anthology's third season on . The episode received widespread acclaim for its optimistic tone atypical of the series, winning Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Television Movie and Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special in 2017. Davis earned a nomination for Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or TV Movie at the 2017 INOCA TV Awards for her depiction of a shy, terminally ill woman finding love in the virtual realm, though she did not win. This role solidified her versatility, transitioning from the gritty realism of Halt and Catch Fire to , and contributed to the episode's two BAFTA Television Awards in 2017.

Major film roles and recent projects (2018-present)

In 2018, Davis took the lead role of Tully in the comedy-drama film Tully, directed by , portraying a unconventional night nanny hired to assist an exhausted mother of three, played by ; the film explored themes of postpartum challenges and earned Davis praise for her empathetic and quirky performance, contributing to its 87% approval rating on from critics who noted her chemistry with Theron. Davis's action-heroine turn came in 2019 with Terminator: Dark Fate, directed by Tim Miller, where she played Grace, a cybernetically enhanced soldier from the future tasked with protecting Dani Ramos (Natalia Reyes) from a new Terminator model while allying with Sarah Connor (); the film, a direct sequel to ignoring prior entries, grossed $261 million worldwide against a $185 million budget but received mixed reviews, with Davis's physicality and vulnerability in the role highlighted as strengths amid criticisms of formulaic plotting. The year 2020 saw Davis in three films: she portrayed governess Kate Mandigan in the horror adaptation The Turning, a modern retelling of Henry James's set in a haunted estate, which underperformed critically and commercially with a 12% score due to perceived lack of scares; in Jon Stewart's Irresistible, she played Diana, a campaign aiding a Democratic consultant () in a small-town mayoral race, earning modest reviews for the ensemble's timing; and in the holiday romantic comedy , directed by , Davis starred as Harper, a woman whose girlfriend () faces family outing pressures during Christmas, marking one of the first major studio LGBTQ+ holiday films and receiving a 84% approval for its heartfelt humor despite box office limitations from releases. In 2024, Davis appeared as Louise Dalton in the American remake of the Danish horror film Speak No Evil, directed by James Watkins and produced by Blumhouse, depicting a family's vacation turning nightmarish after visiting unsettling hosts played by James McAvoy and Aisling Franciosi; the film premiered at Sundance, garnered positive buzz for its tense psychological dread, and achieved a 84% Rotten Tomatoes score, with Davis's portrayal of mounting parental anxiety cited as a key element in its unsettling tone. Among recent projects, Davis starred as Isabel in the drama Swimming Home, an adaptation of Deborah Levy's novel directed by Justin Anderson, focusing on familial tensions during a vacation in ; the film screened at the 2024 . She also joined the cast of Netflix's untitled Newfoundland-set limited series opposite in June 2025, created by , though production details remain forthcoming as of October 2025.

Filmography and notable performances

Film

Mackenzie Davis debuted in feature films with the independent drama Smashed (2012), portraying the protagonist's supportive but enabling sister, Millie. Her early roles often featured in smaller ensemble casts, transitioning to higher-profile supporting parts in science fiction blockbusters like The Martian (2015), where she played systems analyst Mindy Park, a character involved in monitoring the mission's data anomalies. This exposure led to further genre work, including the Mariette in (2017). Davis took on lead roles starting with Tully (2018), starring as the titular night nanny who aids a sleep-deprived mother, a performance noted for capturing the complexities of postpartum recovery and interpersonal dynamics without romanticizing exhaustion. She continued with action-oriented leads, such as the augmented soldier Grace in Terminator: Dark Fate (2019), emphasizing physicality and resilience in a franchise reboot that underperformed commercially despite her committed portrayal. In recent years, her films have included holiday comedies like Happiest Season (2020) and horror remakes like Speak No Evil (2024), alongside the surreal drama Swimming Home (2024), where she played Isabel, a war correspondent grappling with family tensions and an enigmatic intruder. The following table lists her feature film credits chronologically:
YearTitleRole
2012SmashedMillie
2013Breathe InLauren Reynolds
2013We Gotta Get Out of This PlaceSue
2013What IfNicole
2014Chelsea
2015Freaks of NaturePetra
2015The MartianMindy Park
2016Anna
2017Izzy Gets the F*ck Across TownIzzy (also producer)
2017Mariette
2018TullyTully
2019Terminator: Dark FateGrace
2020The TurningKate Mandell
2020IrresistibleDiana Hastings
2020Harper
2024Speak No EvilLouise Dalton
2024Isabel

Television

Mackenzie Davis's television career features a range of roles from guest appearances to leads in series, often portraying complex, tech-savvy or resilient characters. Her portrayal of Cameron Howe, a rebellious coder in the AMC drama Halt and Catch Fire (2014–2017), spanned 40 episodes and depicted the character's evolution amid the 1980s–1990s tech boom, earning praise for Davis's depiction of Howe's intellectual intensity and emotional volatility. In the HBO Max miniseries Station Eleven (2021–2022), Davis led as Kirsten Raymonde, a survivor and actress in a Traveling preserving culture after a , sharing the role with as the younger version; the performance highlighted themes of and in collapse. Davis voiced Martha Kivelson in the Love, Death & Robots anthology episode "The Very Pulse of the Machine" (2022), an astronaut grappling with isolation and hallucination on Jupiter's moon Io, adapted from a story and noted for its philosophical sci-fi exploration. Her other television credits include:
  • I Just Want My Pants Back (2012): Lucie, in the episode "Safety Nets."
  • Black Mirror (2016): Yorkie, in the episode "San Junipero," a virtual reality romance that won multiple Emmys.
  • No Activity (2017): Patricia (also known as "Pat the Rat"), in one episode.

Theatre

Davis trained in acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York City. She made her professional stage debut in 2023 as Isolde, the daughter of the central characters, in Simon Stone's contemporary adaptation of Phaedra at the National Theatre's Lyttelton Theatre in . The production, which reimagined the Greek tragedy in a modern familial and political context, starred as Phaedra and ran from February 9 to April 8, 2023. Davis received positive notices for her performance in this, her first stage role following a screen career.

Awards and nominations

Major awards won

Mackenzie Davis received the in a U.S. Narrative Feature award at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival for her performance as Anna in . In 2017, she was awarded the Special Jury Award for Best Breakout Performance at the Napa Valley Film Festival for her lead role as Izzy in Izzy Gets the Fck Across Town*. Davis won the Critics Choice Super Award for Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series in 2022 for portraying Kirsten Raymonde in the HBO Max miniseries Station Eleven. She shared in the Ensemble Award at the 2019 CinemaCon Big Screen Achievement Awards for her role in Terminator: Dark Fate.

Notable nominations and recognitions

Davis received a for the Canadian Screen Award for Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role for her work in the 2013 film The F Word. She was also nominated in the same category at the preceding in 2014, which transitioned into the Canadian Screen Awards format. In 2017, Davis earned a nomination for Best Lead Performance at the American Independent Film Awards for Always Shine. That year, she was additionally nominated for Best Supporting Actress in a Television Program at the International Online Cinema Awards (INOCA TV) for her role in the Black Mirror episode "San Junipero." For her 2018 performance in Tully, Davis received a nomination for Best Supporting Actress at the Halfway Awards. She was further nominated for Supporting Actress in a Feature Film at the 2019 Women's Image Network (WIN) Awards.
YearAwardCategoryWork
2014Canadian Screen AwardsPerformance by an Actress in a Supporting RoleThe F Word
2017American Independent Film AwardsBest Lead PerformanceAlways Shine
2017INOCA TV AwardsBest Supporting Actress in a Television ProgramBlack Mirror ("San Junipero")
2018Halfway AwardsBest Supporting ActressTully
2019WIN AwardsSupporting Actress Feature FilmTully

Personal life

Relationships and privacy

Davis has consistently prioritized privacy in her personal life, rarely disclosing details about romantic relationships in public forums or interviews. Speculation about her dating history includes unconfirmed rumors of a long-term relationship with model Gus Thompson, reportedly ongoing for several years as of 2024, though Davis has neither confirmed nor denied this association. Earlier rumors linked her romantically to co-star following their work on the television series Halt and Catch Fire (2014–2017), but no evidence substantiates these claims, which appear rooted in on-screen chemistry rather than verified personal involvement. In a 2014 interview, Davis described her longest past relationship as approximately two years, marked by intermittent breakups, but provided no further specifics or names. She has not publicly confirmed marriage, a current partner beyond rumors, or children, aligning with her broader approach of shielding intimate matters from media scrutiny. Davis has occasionally touched on relational dynamics in promotional contexts, such as discussing compromises during interviews for the 2024 film Speak No Evil, but these remarks remain general and untethered to her own experiences.

Public statements and perspectives

Davis has expressed support for feminism, describing it in a 2014 interview as "rooted in racial rights and gender rights, and all of those things intersect," and argued that the term should be used repeatedly to normalize it and overcome its perceived confrontational image. She has characterized feminism through her Halt and Catch Fire roles as pragmatic and unentitled in one character, contrasting with another less aware of gender constraints, reflecting generational differences in feminist approaches. In industry matters, Davis advocated for equal pay, noting in 2017 that she and co-star Kerry Bishé received salaries matching their male counterparts for the final season of Halt and Catch Fire, stating, "Carrie and I deserve to get paid the same as the boys." Regarding representation, she acknowledged criticism of whitewashing in The Martian (2015), where her role of Mindy Park deviated from the character's Korean background in the source novel, admitting she was unaware of the original ethnicity and expressing regret for any complicity. Davis has emphasized actors' responsibility to use influence for underrepresented groups, observing that "everybody writing scripts is white" and that racial neutrality is often a white perspective. On broader politics, following the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Davis attended protests to demonstrate solidarity with affected groups. In a 2020 interview promoting Irresistible, she described the American election system as "corrupt and driven by money and greed and very old-fashioned ideas," while affirming her affection for the country but desire for improvement as a non-voting Canadian resident. Regarding role selection, she has stated that it is "important to me to politically and ethically stand behind the things and the images that I contribute to the world," as in her involvement with the LGBTQ-themed Happiest Season (2020). Davis has also highlighted the value of strong female characters, as in her Terminator: Dark Fate (2019) role, where she portrayed a resistance fighter protecting others from machine threats.

References

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