The Cast: Lindy Booth - "Sophie"
Lucid marks the latest big screen project in Lindy Booth's busy film career, coming after Cry Wolf (Focus Features/Universal) in which she plays "Dodger," and the hit re-make of the classic cult film Dawn of the Dead (Universal) .
Lindy has enjoyed high profile appearances at three consecutive Toronto International Film Festivals; featured in 2003 in Hollywood North (First Look), in 2002 with Rub & Tug (Seville Pictures), and in the 2001 release The Century Hotel . Lindy won Best Supporting Actress in the 2002 DVD-Premiere Awards for her work in Skulls II (Universal). Other film roles include "Lea" in Wrong Turn, "Lara" in Fairytales & Pornography, and "Cassandra" in American Psycho 2 .
On television, Lindy starred in the CBS pilot Cooking Lessons, and has recently appeared on the UPN series Platinum and Twilight Zone . She had recurring roles on Showtime Network's sci-fi series Odyssey 5, and A&E's Nero Wolfe . Lindy is well known for her work in the popular Disney Channel series The Famous Jett Jackson where she starred in dual roles of "Hawk" and "Riley," and the series Relic Hunter where she played "Claudia."
Television movies include Her Best Friends Husband (Lifetime) opposite Cheryl Ladd, Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows (ABC) where she played "Lana Turner," and Strange Justice (Showtime).
Filmography
View Lindy Booth's filmography at IMDb (this link will open in a new browser window).
Character Profile: Sophie Winters
Sophie Winters (Lindy Booth) is a disenchanted, sarcastic, unaffected young woman with a consuming addiction to prescription medication. Detesting her job at a local coffee shop, and without any visible friends or family, Sophie lives her life apathetically - except for her aggressive search for her next source of drugs. Sophie struggles with an inability to differentiate between dream and reality, often flitting in and out of both without any warning or indication. This complicated and isolating psychological state eventually leads Sophie towards suicidal tendencies, through which she concludes that she is, in fact, immortal.
