Andrea Deck (born February 5, 1994) is an American film, television, and theatre actress whose career has a distinctly transatlantic shape: raised in Michigan, trained in London, and best known internationally for a role inside one of pop culture’s most intimidating shadow-boxes—the Alien universe. She’s recognized by many fans as the voice (and emotional spine) of Amanda Ripley in Alien: Isolation, and by TV audiences for her work as CIA officer Jenna Braggon Showtime’s Homeland.
Early life and education
Deck grew up in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, and found her way into performance early, attending the Interlochen Center for the Arts summer program as a teenager. After graduating from Grosse Pointe South High School, she moved to London to study at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), earning an honors degree in professional acting. That path—American adolescence, British conservatory—tends to produce performers with a particular kind of precision: grounded, technical, and ready for camera intimacy.
Early screen work and period-world versatility
Deck’s earliest screen credit arrived young: a short film (In Love With a Nun) that screened at Cannes’ Short Film Corner. From there, she stacked a mix of studio-adjacent appearances and prestige period work—sometimes in brief roles that still place her inside major productions.
She appeared in Ridley Scott’s The Counselor (a notable “you were there” credit even in a small part), and in The Devil’s Violinist, where she played Charlotte Watson, an opera singer—work that also highlighted her classical vocal ability. That ability becomes part of her calling card: she’s not just “castable,” she’s trained, musical, and credible in heightened material.
On television, she stepped into a different kind of spotlight by portraying silent-film star Mabel Normand in Mr Selfridge, a role that asks for period texture—how someone moves, holds attention, and belongs to a past era without winking at it.
Building her own lane
In 2013, Deck also co-founded the London-based production company Tough Dance Ltd., signaling a second track beyond acting: helping shape projects rather than only entering them after the fact.
Alien: Isolation and becoming Amanda Ripley
Deck’s most defining credit to date is voicing Amanda Ripley in the video game Alien: Isolation. The role is a high-wire act: you’re carrying a story with your voice alone, and you’re doing it under the weight of a franchise where atmosphere is everything. Amanda Ripley isn’t played as a superhero—she’s played as a person surviving minute by minute, which is exactly why the performance stuck.
She later reprised the role in Alien: Blackout, further cementing her connection to the character. There’s also been periodic fan speculation about an Alien: Isolation 2 and whether Amanda would return; until officially announced by the relevant studios, it’s best treated as rumor rather than a confirmed next chapter.
Later television: The City & The City and Homeland
Deck continued moving between genre and grounded drama. She appeared in the BBC adaptation of China Miéville’sThe City & The City as Mahalia Geary, and later joined the final season of Homeland as CIA agent Jenna Bragg, placing her inside a very different machine: tense, procedural realism where every glance feels like evidence.
Recent work
Her more recent credits include All the Light We Cannot See, reflecting a continued pattern: she threads between prestige drama, genre worlds, and period projects without getting stuck in only one.
Selected filmography
Film / TV
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In Love With a Nun (2009) — Jill (short)
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Les Misérables (2012) — Turning Woman 6
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The Counselor (2013) — Watching Girl
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The Devil’s Violinist (2013) — Charlotte Watson
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Mr Selfridge (2014) — Mabel Normand
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The Lovers — Allie
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Creditors (2016) — Chloe Fleury
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The Crown (2016) — Jean Wallop
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Instrument of War (2017) — Anne Cline
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Homeland (2020) — Jenna Bragg
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All the Light We Cannot See (2022) — Sandrina
Video games
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Alien: Isolation — Amanda Ripley
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Alien: Blackout — Amanda Ripley
