
Sash Striga
Acting
Biography
Sash Striga was born on January 24 1995 in Calgary, Alberta. Her father Al Striga (a first generation Canadian) worked as an Electrical Technician, and her mother Gay Striga (Masse) worked as a Graphic Designer. They met in Calgary in 1987 and have been married for 30 years. Sash is the youngest of two; her older brother Greg Striga graduated from Queens University with honors and works as an Electrical Engineer. Sash holds a BFA from Randolph College as well as a Diploma in Broadcast Journalism. Sash was the recipient of the 2017 Triple Threat Award. Sash is best known for her work as Aly on Letterkenny. She has also appeared in American Gods, and What We Do in the Shadows and Star Trek: Discovery where she portrayed the sentient computer of the USS Discovery, Zora.
Known For

Detective Charlie Hudson teams up with what he calls his "highly trained law enforcement animal" German Shepherd dog named Rex who he prefers to team up with because he doesn't talk his ear off.
Hudson & Rex

A documentary-style look into the daily (or rather, nightly) lives of a group of vampires in Staten Island who have “lived” together for hundreds and hundreds of years.
What We Do in the Shadows

An ex-con becomes the traveling partner of a conman who turns out to be one of the older gods trying to recruit troops to battle the upstart deities. Based on Neil Gaiman's fantasy novel.
American Gods

Letterkenny follows Wayne, a good-ol’ country boy in Letterkenny, Ontario trying to protect his homegrown way of life on the farm, against a world that is constantly evolving around him. The residents of Letterkenny belong to one of three groups: Hicks, Skids, and Hockey Players. The three groups are constantly feuding with each other over seemingly trivial matters; often ending with someone getting their ass kicked.
Letterkenny

When an English professor becomes obsessed with a handsome new colleague, her already complicated marriage and career are thrown into total chaos.
Vladimir

An offbeat, irreverent musical documentary that tells the story of a group of Jewish songwriters, including Irving Berlin, Mel Tormé, Jay Livingston, Ray Evans, Gloria Shayne Baker and Johnny Marks, who wrote the soundtrack to Christianity’s most musical holiday. It’s an amazing tale of immigrant outsiders who became irreplaceable players in pop culture’s mainstream – a generation of songwriters who found in Christmas the perfect holiday in which to imagine a better world, and for at least one day a year, make us believe.
Dreaming of a Jewish Christmas
A young woman finds her dead boyfriend has come back to life in ghostly form, communicating to her via his old cellphone.