Sólveig Eva grew up in Reykjavik, Iceland, from where she moved to London to study acting at LAMDA and Rose Bruford College. Accepting the advice of her acting teachers she felt the need to assimilate once she began working in Britain and America and acquired the name Eva Solveig with SAG and Actor's Equity. In 2020 she dropped her stage name and embraced her birth name. She trained physical theatre with Gardzienice in Poland, Physical Lab and Song of the Goat Theatre in London and at the International School of Theatrical Biomechanics in Italy. She studied acting at Stella Adler and with T.Schreiber in New York, did an acting Erasmus exchange with the Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre in Tallinn, and studied improv and sketch writing with the Upright Citizen's Brigade in New York. In 2012 she launched the theatre company Spindrift with her classmates Bergdís Júlía Jóhannsdóttir, Henriette Kristensen and Anna Korolainen Crevier. The company focuses on curiosity about human behavior, devising and experimental storytelling, and playing with identity and autonomy through voice and movement. Tinna Þorvalds Önnudóttir formally joined the company in 2019. Sólveig is an illustrator with her work focusing on murals, nature, portraiture, femininity and female experiences.
Sólveig Guðmundsdóttir is an actress and producer, known for Mannasiðir (2018), Ófærð (2015) and Pabbahelgar (2019).
Sónia Balacó rose to fame in her native Portugal at age 15 by landing a main role in the prime-time TV series "Jornalistas", and has built herself a career spanning from award winning films and TV series to theatre. Born in Peniche, Portugal, Sónia soon developed a love for poetry, theatre and acting, deciding at 12 that she was going to be an actress and enrolling in a local theatre group. Due to her striking looks, she started working as a runway, editorial and commercial model at 14, and was shot by Mario Testino for the cover of L'Uomo Vogue. Around the same time, she landed her first TV role. Later, she enrolled a BA in Performing Arts at the University of Lisbon. From 2008 to 2012 she lived in London where she studied acting, mastered her accents and worked in fringe theatre and independent films. In 2011, she starred in the award winning comedy series 'Último a Sair', a mock reality show where she played a caricature of herself. Both the show and her performance were hailed by audiences and critics. She went on to play one of the leads in 'E Depois Matei-o', TV movie that won the Prix Italia prize for best TV Fiction in 2013, and was a regular on the cult TV series 'Os Filhos do Rock'. From 2014 to 2015 she played the main role in the TV series 'Água de Mar' and played the lead in the short 'Freud und Friends', directed by award-winning director Gabriel Abrantes. The short was in competition at the Berlin Film Festival 2016. Some of the features Sónia has since been in are 'Moral Order' (2020), directed by Mário Barroso and starring Maria de Medeiros, and 'Amelia's Children' (2023), directed by Gabriel Abrantes. Sónia Balacó's upcoming work includes the feature films 'Prisma', which she also directs, writes and produces, 'Amo-te Imenso', which is co-produced and distributed by Paramount Pictures, and the third season of 'Vikings: Valhalla' (Netflix).
Sô Hirosawa was born on December 25, 1979 in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan. She is an actress, known for Ghost Mask: Scar (2018), Ai no mukidashi (2008) and Kanfû-kun (2007).
Sôichi Abe is an actor, known for Guilty Gear: Strive (2021), Judge Eyes: Shinigami no Yuigon (2018) and Gintama (2005).
It looks like we don't have any Biography for Sôichi Masui yet.
Sôichi Nakaoka is known for Eiga Doraemon: Nobita No Getsumen Tansaki (2019), Oshaie Sommelier Oshako! (2020) and Gou-Gou datte Neko de aru (2014).
Sôichirô Hoshi was born on 30 May 1972 in Aizuwakamatsu, Japan. He is an actor, known for Enjin sentai Gôonjâ (2008), Kidô senshi Gundam Seed (2002) and Kidô senshi Gundam Seed Destiny (2004).
Sôichirô Kitamura was born on September 25, 1937 in Kochi, Japan. He is an actor, known for Autoreiji (2010), Odoru daisosasen (1998) and Hikaru umi (1965).