Martial arts and stunt work Alexander began studying martial arts, specifically
judo, when she was 8 years old. At 14, she switched to
Shotokan karate. She has a third-degree black belt in karate. She won the German
point fighting championships four times and the European championships two times. At the age of 19, she retired from professional fighting and moved to the United States. Alexander had met
Chuck Norris at a kickboxing event in the United States and she had previously acted in small roles in German TV. Norris encouraged her to come to Hollywood to act and study filmmaking. He was one of her sponsors for immigration. With the assistance of martial artist
Pat Johnson, she landed the part of
Kitana in
Mortal Kombat: Live Tour, and in 1995 and 1996, spent seven months on tour. Alexander went on to work steadily as a stunt person doing fighting stunts and motorcycles, falls from high-rise buildings, going on to learn precision driving and race car driving. She also worked as an
unarmed combat instructor for the
United States Marine Corps in 1994.
Filmmaking Alexander studied acting in Los Angeles at
Joanne Baron's acting school learning
Meisner technique and with acting coach Piero Dusa. She took extension classes in filmmaking at
University of California, Los Angeles. She said that the film, about a boxer from Alabama who is charged with murder, is a fictional story that was inspired by meeting a boxer in Germany when she was 9 years old, an interaction that she remembered and was the basis of the idea for the film. In 2005, Alexander directed her first full-length feature film called
Green Street, also known as
Green Street Hooligans, or
Hooligans. and was produced by
Gigi Pritzker and
Deborah Del Prete.
Green Street Hooligans was inspired by her experience growing up watching her family's favorite German
soccer team
Waldhof Mannheim, which led to a fascination with the sport and its passionate fans. Inspired by this, Alexander co-wrote a screenplay with a former
soccer hooligan turned writer,
Dougie Brimson, and Joshua Shelov based on a story by Alexander and Brimson about the firm of
West Ham United. In 2008, Alexander directed the film
Punisher: War Zone starring
Ray Stevenson as the
Punisher. She was the first woman to direct a
Marvel adaptation and it was her first studio film. The film has since become considered a cult classic. Comedian
Patton Oswalt was an early and vocal defender of the film. Alexander has been outspoken about her experience with
Punisher. The film's budget shrank considerably, and Alexander wanted to work on a studio film so she said she was hired at a low rate. Then, during marketing, that budget was also low, and, in her opinion, the Christmas release date a mis-step. She also mentioned that due the film developing a cult following, she's since mainly been optioned scripts with extreme levels of violence, which she passes on because she's naturally "squeamish." In 2010, Alexander wrote and directed the
straight-to-video film
Lifted, shot in
Alabama, which had themes of
Christianity. The film starred
Dash Mihok,
Nicki Aycox and
Uriah Shelton.
Lifted tells the story of a son's difficulty with his father's deployment in
Afghanistan as a Marine, and features musical performances by Shelton and Mihok. In 2012, Alexander directed an episode for
Anthony Zuiker's
BlackBoxTV YouTube channel entitled "Execution Style." However, in January 2020, Benoit's son David stated that the project had been cancelled. In February 2018, it was announced that Alexander was working on a TV series for
Blumhouse Productions called
You Bury Me, intended to be a war-torn love story set in modern-day Iraq, Syria and Turkey. In June 2018, Alexander was invited to join the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Alexander has a long-term working relationship with martial artist
Pat Johnson, who she has hired as a stunt coordinator and choreographer since starting her directing her career. == Advocacy ==