American actress Mackenzie Davis rose to fame in 2013 after playing the role of Nicole in the romantic comedy ‘The F Word,’ directed by Michael Dowse. She is famous for working in films such as The F World (2013), The Martian (2015), Tully (2018), Blade Runner 2049 (2017), and Terminator: Dark Fate(2019). With this content, the reader will be able to know more about Mackenzie Davis’s age, body statistics, family, birthday, biography, net worth, affair, TV, films, etc.
Mackenzie Davis age, birthday, debut, biography
Real Name – Mackenzie Davis (Nickname – Mackenzie)
Date of Birth – April 1, 1987
Age – 33 years
Birthday – April
Birth Place – Vancouver, Canada
Debut – Smashed (2012)
Known for – The F World (2013) and Blade Runner 2049 (2017)
Ethnicity – White (Welsh ancestry)
Education – Graduation from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec
Nationality – Canadian
Profession – Actress, model, and musician
Religion – N/A
Sun sign – Aries
Website – N/A
Mackenzie Davis height, weight, and body measurement
Height – 178 cm in centimeters, 1.78 m in meter and 5’10” inches in feet
Weight – 55 kg in kilograms and 121 lbs in pounds
Bra Size – 32 inches
Cup Size – B
Body Measurements – 34-24-34
Breast Size – 34 inches (86cm)
Waist Size – 24 inches (61cm)
Hip Size – 34 inches (86cm)
Shoe Size – 8 (US)
Dress Size – 4 (US)
Hair Color – Blonde
Eye Color – Blue
Body Type – Hourglass
Build – Slim
Sexuality – Straight
Tattoo – Yes
Distinctive Features – Height, face, and eyes
Mackenzie Davis family and relationship status
Father – John Davis
Mother – Lotte Davis
Siblings – N/A
Marital Status – Unmarried
Affair (dating) – N/A
Mackenzie Davis Instagram pictures
Followers – 52k
Mackenzie Davis latest news
Jon Stewart’s Irresistible starring Davis to be released on OTT
Mackenzie Davis net worth
$3 million (US dollars)
Income source: Films and television
Mackenzie Davis movies/television shows/filmography
Films
2011 – Alex
2012 – Smashed and The Hat Goes Wild
2013 – Breathe In, The F Word, Bad Turn Worse, and Plato’s Reality Machine
2013 Moontown
2014 – That Awkward Moment and Emptied
2015 – Freaks of Nature, A Country Called Home, Memory Box, and The Martian
2016 – Always Shine
2017 – Izzy Gets the F*ck Across Town and Blade Runner 2049
2018 – Boomerang and Tully
2019 – Terminator: Dark Fate
2020 – The Turning, Irresistible as Diana Hastings, and Happiest Season as Harper
Television
2012 – I Just Want My Pants Back
2014 – Halt and Catch Fire
2016 – Black Mirror
2017 – No Activity
2020 – Station Eleven as Kirsten
Davis awards and accolades
2013 Canadian Screen Award nomination
2016 Monster Fest Award for Best Performance in a Feature Film (Female)
2017 Special Jury Award – Best Breakout Performance Napa Valley Film Festival
2017 Tacoma Film Festival Jury Prize for Best Performance
Davis quotes/interviews
On getting and searching for intimate female relationship roles
“I guess both. The first thing I thought when you were speaking was of a point when I was auditioning in Montreal before I moved to New York when I was still in college and just trying to see if I could get jobs. There was a role on Blue Mountain High. It was a show about football and there was an audition for, like, a cheerleader who one of the football players loses his ring inside when he finger-bangs her. When I received that audition I was like, you know what? I never want to play someone’s fucking joke. I never really wanna play someone’s girlfriend, and I never really want to play somebody that’s observing somebody else have a story. I don’t need to be the leader of the story, but I know that I don’t just want to be an actress. I want a particular version of a career, and I wouldn’t be happy if I made a career as the girl who gets jewelry lost inside her womb. But that’s just me!”
On girls’ education during a pandemic
“Their education has been completely halted for the moment. Obviously, there’s a fire going on in the house and we all are paying attention to Covid-19, but there are other less immediate consequences from the crisis that we’re going through right now. And as always, I think girls and women in the global South are the ones that pay the fine for whatever the crisis is—they get the most disenfranchised from whatever local or global trauma exists. There was supposed to be a fundraiser on April 23rd that had to be canceled because of the times we’re living in. But that fundraiser provides over half a million dollars for the support for the program, which is all of the scholarships, all of the materials to build schools.”