Mía Maestro
- Actress
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Beautiful and talented actress Mia Maestro was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
She moved to Berlin when she was 18 years old to train as a classical
music vocalist. Along the way, she also trained in dance and acting.
She returned to her homeland Argentina two years later, made her film debut with the
film Tango. This was followed by four other films:
The Venice Project (1999),
Timecode (2000),
Picking Up the Pieces (2000)
and El astillero (2000).
Maestro made her television debut in 2000, when she starred in the
television movie
For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story (2000).
She starred in two major films during the time: she played Cristina
Kahlo in the film Frida, and the acclaimed film
The Motorcycle Diaries (2004),
based on the biography of Che Guevara when he was still young. She also
appeared in the film Poseidon.
In 2004, Maestro was cast in the spy drama Alias. She originally met
with the show's producer, J.J. Abrams,
intending to get a role on another one of his projects, Lost.
Introduced late into the third season, she plays Nadia Santos, the
daughter resulting from the affair between Arvin Sloane
(Ron Rifkin) and Irina Derevko
(Lena Olin); thus, she is the half-sister of
Sydney Bristow
(Jennifer Garner). She later
works as an Argentinean intelligence agent as well as a special agent
for the CIA, which marked her character being turned into a regular one
starting from the fourth season. She won an Imagen Award-given out to
honor Latino members of the entertainment industry-for Best Supporting
Actress in 2004. After her stint on Alias, Maestro starred in the films
The Box and Visioners.
Maestro played "Nora Martinez" in the first two seasons of the FX series
The Strain (2014).
She moved to Berlin when she was 18 years old to train as a classical
music vocalist. Along the way, she also trained in dance and acting.
She returned to her homeland Argentina two years later, made her film debut with the
film Tango. This was followed by four other films:
The Venice Project (1999),
Timecode (2000),
Picking Up the Pieces (2000)
and El astillero (2000).
Maestro made her television debut in 2000, when she starred in the
television movie
For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story (2000).
She starred in two major films during the time: she played Cristina
Kahlo in the film Frida, and the acclaimed film
The Motorcycle Diaries (2004),
based on the biography of Che Guevara when he was still young. She also
appeared in the film Poseidon.
In 2004, Maestro was cast in the spy drama Alias. She originally met
with the show's producer, J.J. Abrams,
intending to get a role on another one of his projects, Lost.
Introduced late into the third season, she plays Nadia Santos, the
daughter resulting from the affair between Arvin Sloane
(Ron Rifkin) and Irina Derevko
(Lena Olin); thus, she is the half-sister of
Sydney Bristow
(Jennifer Garner). She later
works as an Argentinean intelligence agent as well as a special agent
for the CIA, which marked her character being turned into a regular one
starting from the fourth season. She won an Imagen Award-given out to
honor Latino members of the entertainment industry-for Best Supporting
Actress in 2004. After her stint on Alias, Maestro starred in the films
The Box and Visioners.
Maestro played "Nora Martinez" in the first two seasons of the FX series
The Strain (2014).