Lili Simmons

Lili Marie Simmons (born July 23, 1993) is an American actress and model known for her role as Rebecca Bowman in the Cinemax series Banshee (2013–2016).[1]

Lili Simmons
Born
Lili Marie Simmons

(1993-07-23) July 23, 1993 (age 30)
OccupationActress/Model
Years active2010–present
RelativesCurt Simmons (grandfather)

Early life

Simmons was born and raised in Cardiff-by-the-Sea in San Diego County, California.[2][3] At age 15, Simmons was discovered by talent manager Kate Linden.[4]

Career

Simmons began her career as a Ford Model,[5] also modelling for Bebe Stores, Roxy, J.C. Penney and Saturn.[6]

She moved into acting in 2010 on the web series Hollywood Is Like High School with Money, based on the book of the same name, playing Quinn Whitaker.[7][8] She also appeared in an episode of the Disney XD sitcom Zeke and Luther and then in the 2011 Disney Channel Original Movie Geek Charming. Also that year, she had a small role in an episode of the sitcom Mr. Sunshine.

In 2012, Simmons starred in the film Fat Kid Rules the World, and guest starred in an episode of Jane by Design. In 2013, she appeared in an episode of Vegas and began playing Rebecca Bowman, a rebellious Amish girl on the Cinemax series Banshee.[9] She originally auditioned for the role of Deva Hopewell, but: "They said, 'She's too old or too sexy' or whatever". While in Philadelphia for her grandmother's funeral, the producers asked her to go back to New York to read for Rebecca, after which she won the role.[10] In March that year, she appeared in a pictorial in Maxim magazine.[11]

In 2014, Simmons began recurring roles on Hawaii Five-0, and the series True Detective.[12]In April 2016, she was cast in what had been stated would be a recurring role in another series, Westworld, though she appeared in only one episode during the first season.[13] In February 2017, Simmons was cast in a season-long arc on the fifth season of the Showtime drama series Ray Donovan, playing Natalie James, "the star of a big movie franchise".[14]

In April 2019, it was confirmed by actress Camren Bicondova that Simmons was cast to replace her in the role of the adult Selina Kyle / Catwoman for the series finale of Gotham, at her request to "give the torch to someone else for her adult self", which was respected by the Fox Broadcasting Company, Warner Bros. Television, and the series' producers. Bicondova and Simmons met beforehand and collaborated on the characterization. Showrunner John Stevens described casting Simmons as "a stroke of incredible good fortune", as well as praising her as "an incredible actress and looks like she could be Cam's sister."[15][16]

In 2022, she played a pool shark In the independent feature film Double Down South .[17] The film was released in 2024 which also saw her complete the final season of Power Book IV: Force.[18]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2012Fat Kid Rules the WorldIsabel
2015Bone TomahawkSamantha O'Dwyer
2016Dirty LiesMichelle
Robyn Hood: I Love NYRobyn HoodShort film[19]
2017Deux FaceSandShort film
Bad MatchRiley
2021Sound of ViolenceMarie Sotker
2022Double Down SouthDianaLead role

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
2010Zeke and LutherMiaEpisode: "Sludge"
2011Mr. SunshineHot Teenage GirlEpisode: "Employee of the Year"
Geek CharmingLolaTelevision film
2012Jane by DesignPiper GraceEpisode: "The Teen Model"
2013VegasFay BinderEpisode: "Road Trip"
2013–2016BansheeRebecca BowmanMain role, 32 episodes
2014True DetectiveBeth2 episodes
2014–2017Hawaii Five-0Amber Vitale / Melissa ArmstrongRecurring role, 6 episodes
2017Ray DonovanNatalie JamesRecurring role (season 5), 8 episodes
2016; 2018; 2022WestworldNew Clementine / SophiaEpisodes: "Trace Decay", "Akane no Mai", "Well Enough Alone"
2018Law & Order: Special Victims UnitGina GoodrichEpisode: "Accredo"
The PurgeLila StantonMain role
2019GothamAdult Selina KyleEpisode: "The Beginning..."
2022–presentPower Book IV: ForceClaudia FlynnMain role

Web

YearTitleRoleNotes
2010Hollywood Is Like High School with MoneyQuinn Whitaker9 episodes
2013–2016Banshee OriginsRebecca Bowman3 episodes

References