co-stars, Jamie Hector (middle'') and
Michael K. Williams Williams became professionally known as Sonja Sohn. Before she was an actress, Sohn was a
slam poet. While performing her work on stage, she was spotted by
Marc Levin who offered her a role in his film
Slam. She also wrote lyrics and co-wrote the script for the film. It went on to win the Grand Jury Prize for Dramatic Film at the
Sundance Film Festival. After debuting in
Slam, Sohn appeared in minor roles in films such as
Shaft and
Bringing Out the Dead. She also starred in independent films
Perfume,
G and
The Killing Zone. Through the five seasons of the HBO series
The Wire, she held a starring role as Detective Kima Greggs. She also guest-starred on many episodes of
Cold Case as "Toni Halstead". She won the supporting television actress award at the 2008
Asian Excellence Awards for her character on
The Wire. She had a supporting role in the Hollywood film
Step Up 2: The Streets. In 2008-09, she was a guest star in the ABC series
Brothers & Sisters, and in 2010 she appeared in an episode of CBS series
The Good Wife. In 2011, she was a guest star on the show
Bar Karma. She played
Detective Samantha Baker in the first two seasons of the
medical drama television series
Body of Proof with
Dana Delany and
Jeri Ryan, which premiered on
ABC on March 29, 2011. Sohn joined season 2 of
The Originals in a recurring role as the witch Lenore a.k.a. Esther Mikaelson. Sohn made her directorial debut with the 2017
HBO documentary
Baltimore Rising about the
2015 Baltimore protests and community organizing that arose in response to police violence. In 2021, Sohn directed
The Slow Hustle, a documentary about the death of Baltimore Homicide Detective Sean Suiter, which was fictionally portrayed in the HBO miniseries
We Own This City. Sohn was cast as a series regular in ABC's police drama
Will Trent. Sohn plays Amanda, the head of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation and Trent's (Ramón Rodríguez) boss. The pilot episode aired January 3, 2023. ==Activism==