Nicola Correia-Damude

Actress

Birthday June 21, 1981

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Age 42 years old

Nationality Toronto, Ontario

#48313 Most Popular

1975

Her father, Brian Damude, is a photographer and film director most noted for the 1975 film Sudden Fury.

She is bisexual.

1981

Nicola Correia-Damude (born 21 June 1981) is a Canadian actress based in Toronto.

2013

She has been married to actor Carlos Gonzalez-Vio since 2013, with whom she has a son.

2015

Her credits include The Strain (2015), Shadowhunters (2016–2019), Burden of Truth (2018–2021), The Boys (2019-2024), Coroner (2019-2024), Nurses (2020), October Faction (2020), and Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent (2024).

Correia-Damude has had recurring roles on Shadowhunters, Annedroids, The Boys and The Strain.

Additional television credits include Haven, Degrassi: The Next Generation, and Stargate SG-1.

Film credits include Margarita, Havana 57, and Memory.

Correia-Damude has been nominated for Canadian Screen Awards for her guest performances on Remedy in 2015 and Coroner in 2020.

She was also nominated for a Canadian Screen Award for her ensemble work in Pillow Talk in 2023.

Correia-Damude received the Best Actress in a Feature Film award at the San Diego FilmOut Festival for her work in Margarita.

2017

She also had a recurring role (33 episodes from 2017 to 2019) as the mother in the Canadian children's show, Dino Dana.

Correia-Damude is a graduate of Etobicoke School of the Arts, Studio 58, and the Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre.

Her theatre credits include Coriolanus and Much Ado About Nothing at the Stratford Festival, Serious Money and The Women and Albertine in Five Times at the Shaw Festival, as well as premieres of new Canadian works The Madonna Painter (Factory Theatre), Within the Glass (Tarragon Theatre) and Botticelli in the Fire & Sunday in Sodom (Canadian Stage).

Correia-Damude has supplied voice overs for CBC's The Passionate Eye, Afghanada, The Fifth Estate, Starlink: Battle for Atlas, and David Suzuki Explores.

An actress of mixed heritage (her mother is from Guyana and her father is Canadian), Correia-Damude is "an advocate of increased cultural diversity in film, television and theatre; expanding roles for women; and improving conditions for mothers and families in the film and television industry."

As well as an actress, she is also a singer-songwriter, plays piano and guitar, and has a dance background in modern, classical, jazz, step and tap.