
Actor, Writer
Georgia Goodman's ethnic ambiguity is thanks to her Vietnamese mother and mixed-race French-African father - and from there, the world just kept moving. A childhood spent across Lebanon, the Philippines, Japan, and Africa gave her something no drama school could: an instinct for reading people, cultures, and rooms. The acting bug bit in Vancouver, where shows like 21 Jump Street and MacGyver were filming and her start as a background actor turned into a quiet obsession. But Georgia being Georgia, she pleased her parents first - graduating with a BA in Economics in France - before heading to London to train at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art. What followed was the kind of career that doesn't arrive with a single breakout moment but builds through persistence, range, and showing up prepared. From Alfonso Cuarón's Children of Men to Paul Greengrass's Captain Phillips, from Tim Burton's Wednesday to Apple TV's Silo, from Marvel's Loki to Showtime's Homeland - Georgia carved out space across studios, streamers, and continents. Not always the lead. Not always the biggest name on the call sheet. But always working, always delivering, and always in rooms with directors who don't cast lightly. 2026 has been the year it all converged. Gore Verbinski cast her as Marie in Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die alongside Sam Rockwell, Juno Temple, and Zazie Beetz. Frank & Louis premiered at Sundance. She wrapped a co-lead in action feature Last Resort opposite Mason Gooding. She's recurring in We Might Regret This Season 2 and appears in The Witcher Season 5. Edgar Wright put her in The Running Man. The volume and caliber of the work speaks for itself. But Georgia's story isn't just about the credits. She founded Eagle & Beaver Ensemble with co-producer Lance C. Fuller, producing 2 short play festivals at The Union Theatre, highlighting new writing from across the pond. She won Best Actress for the short film Gloria, depicting the struggles of Latin American workers in London. She's a vocal advocate for ethnic and gender diversity on screen - particularly in the UK and Europe, where she's blunt about the industry being roughly a decade behind Hollywood on representation. She's also starred alongside Brett Goldstein in Informed Consent at the Jermyn Street Theatre and played Louise in Private Lives in the West End, because the stage keeps her honest. Georgia doesn't frame her trajectory as overnight success, and she'd be the first to tell you she's not done. "I don't think I'm there yet," she's said. But with a CV that now spans over 20 years, three continents, and every format from blockbuster to fringe, the work has done its own talking - and the industry is finally listening at the volume she's been performing at all along.