Dasha Nekrasova

Actress

Birthday February 19, 1991

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Minsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union

Age 33 years old

Nationality Belarus

#8026 Most Popular

1971

The film premiered at the 71st Berlin International Film Festival and won the prize for Best First Feature.

1991

Daria Dmitrievna "Dasha" Nekrasova (Дар’я Дзмітрыеўна Някрасава; Дарья Дмитриевна Некрасова; born February 19, 1991) is an American actress, filmmaker, and co-host of the Red Scare podcast with Anna Khachiyan, based in New York City.

2008

She attended high school at Las Vegas Academy of the Arts, graduating in 2008, before attending Mills College, where she studied sociology and philosophy.

Nekrasova first appeared in music videos for alternative artists such as Yumi Zouma, before making her feature film debut in Wobble Palace, which she co-wrote with director Eugene Kotlyarenko.

The New York Times described the film as "a sendup of broke-artist types that shimmers with abashed affection", while RogerEbert.com commented that "while your comedic milage with its loose goofiness may vary, this movie succeeds in contributing a filmic time capsule" for millennials.

She appeared as the leading character in the dark comedy The Softness of Bodies, with The Hollywood Reporter saying she inhabited the role "effortlessly".

2018

In 2018, she became known as "Sailor Socialism" after her interview with an InfoWars reporter, in which she was dressed in a sailor fuku, went viral.

In 2021, she made her directorial debut with the horror film The Scary of Sixty-First, for which she won the Best First Feature Award at the Berlin International Film Festival, and appeared in a recurring role on the TV series Succession for which she won a Screen Actors Guild award, along with the cast.

Nekrasova was born in Minsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union (now Belarus), to parents who worked as acrobats.

She emigrated to the United States with her parents when she was four, settling in Las Vegas, Nevada.

While promoting Wobble Palace at the 2018 South by Southwest Festival, her interview with right-wing media outlet InfoWars went viral.

She was nicknamed "Sailor Socialism" for expressing her support for Bernie Sanders while dressed in a Japanese schoolgirl outfit resembling Sailor Moon.

The clip was featured in a segment on Venezuela in an episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

On March 29, 2018, Nekrasova started the podcast Red Scare with co-host Anna Khachiyan.

The show has been associated with the dirtbag left.

It was described in The Cut as "a critique of feminism, and capitalism, from deep inside the culture they’ve spawned."

Daily Dot said the show's "schtick" had been summed up by former congressional staffer Simone Norman, as "when hot mean girls become public leftists."

2019

In February 2019, Nekrasova appeared – alongside Khachiyan – as a runway model at the Marlborough art gallery in Manhattan showcasing the Fall 2019 collection designed by Rachel Comey.

2020

In 2020, Nekrasova made her directorial debut with The Scary of Sixty-First, a thriller co-written with Madeline Quinn, and inspired by the death of Jeffrey Epstein.

Later that year, Nekrasova co-wrote the short film, Spectacular Reality, inspired by conspiracies surrounding crisis actors and featuring models from No Agency New York, and directed the November 6, 2020 video performance of Oneohtrix Point Never's "I Don't Love Me Anymore" on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.

In November 2021, Nekrasova posted to Instagram a photo of herself with Alex Jones, the host of Infowars, and subsequently praised Jones on her podcast Red Scare as "an incredible entertainer".

Nekrasova appears in a supporting role in season three of the HBO drama Succession as Comfrey, a crisis PR rep.

Nekrasova has dated musician Daniel Lopatin, better known as Oneohtrix Point Never.

She is a friend and former fiancée of comedian and internet talk-show host Adam Friedland.

Nekrasova is a self-described "Slovak Ruthenian Carpatho-Rusyn Greek" Eastern Catholic.

In a 2020 interview, Nekrasova stated:

"Catholicism is nice because it involves a whole body of work outside of the Bible—it's a very aesthetic, literary religion. My faith is just something that's improved the quality of my life, my thoughts, and my relationships [...] What's so great about faith is that it doesn't have to be grounded in rational thought. We are seeing a lot of people return to religion because everything feels so senseless and pointless, so why not be a Catholic?"

Nekrasova is highly critical of Pope Francis, and has referred to him as a "layperson", "heretic", and "antipope".