20 Muslim Actresses Bringing Grace to Hollywood and Beyond

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Hollywood’s screen landscape has grown more layered as more Muslim actresses build careers across blockbusters, prestige television, international cinema, and streaming hits. Some arrived through theater or dance, others through independent film, and several have become closely associated with characters who widened what audiences expect to see on screen.

This group stands out not only for visibility, but for range. Their credits stretch from superhero franchises and science fiction to historical dramas, comedies, and festival favorites.

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1. Sofia Boutella

Sofia Boutella turned a dance background into a distinctive screen career built on movement, precision, and physical performance. After drawing attention in “Kingsman: The Secret Service” and “Star Trek Beyond,” she moved into leading roles including “The Mummy” and “Rebel Moon.” Her action work often relies on choreography as much as dialogue, which has helped set her apart in large-scale genre films.

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2. Shohreh Aghdashloo

Shohreh Aghdashloo remains one of the most recognizable voices and presences in contemporary film and television. Her Academy Award-nominated work in “House of Sand and Fog” introduced many viewers to her dramatic range, while “The Expanse” gave her a major science-fiction role with lasting fan loyalty. She has also worked steadily in voice acting, stage productions, and film projects that move between Hollywood and international cinema.

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3. Nazanin Boniadi

Nazanin Boniadi has built a career that combines mainstream television visibility with a strong sense of purpose. She appeared in “How I Met Your Mother,” “Homeland,” and “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power,” while also bringing an academic background that included a biology degree and undergraduate research involving cancer treatment and heart-transplant rejection. Her role as Fara Sherazi on “Homeland” carried particular weight. As Boniadi said, “How often do we see a hijab-wearing, career-driven, intelligent, independent Muslim woman on television with a voice of her own?

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4. Golshifteh Farahani

Golshifteh Farahani has sustained one of the most international careers on this list. Her work in “Body of Lies,” “Paterson,” and “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales” shows how comfortably she moves between intimate dramas and major studio productions. With multilingual fluency and music training, she has brought unusual flexibility to projects across several film industries.

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5. Iman Vellani

Iman Vellani entered Hollywood in highly visible fashion with “Ms. Marvel,” then carried the role of Kamala Khan into “The Marvels.” The performance introduced a young Muslim superhero lead to Marvel audiences and quickly made Vellani part of one of the industry’s biggest franchises. Her connection to comic-book lore has also helped shape the character’s reception among longtime fans.

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6. May Calamawy

May Calamawy gained broad attention through “Moon Knight,” where her performance as Layla El-Faouly gave emotional force to a large franchise series. She also earned praise for “Ramy,” a show closely tied to Muslim identity, family tension, and modern adulthood. Her work in English- and Arabic-language settings has made her a strong bridge between regional storytelling and global audiences.

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7. Dina Shihabi

Dina Shihabi has become a familiar face in streaming-era thrillers and genre series. Credits such as “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” “Altered Carbon,” and “Archive 81” show her comfort with suspense-heavy material, while her international upbringing adds depth to multilingual and cross-cultural roles. She has frequently been cast in stories shaped by movement between worlds.

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8. Yasmine Al Massri

Yasmine Al Massri brought unusual versatility to “Quantico,” where she played twin sisters with sharply different identities. Before acting, she worked as a dancer and artist, and that multidisciplinary background still informs her screen presence. Her command of Arabic, French, and English has supported a career that resists narrow casting.

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9. Lyna Khoudri

Lyna Khoudri developed early momentum through acclaimed European work before entering English-language projects including “The French Dispatch.” Her career reflects the growing overlap between festival cinema and mainstream global visibility. She is often associated with roles that require careful period detail, accent work, and emotional restraint.

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10. Zuleikha Robinson

Zuleikha Robinson has long worked in television series that depend on mystery, tension, and moral ambiguity. Viewers know her from “Lost,” “Homeland,” and “The Exorcist,” where she brought intensity to investigator and insider roles alike. Her training in dramatic performance has supported a career built on layered supporting characters rather than simple archetypes.

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11. Noureen DeWulf

Noureen DeWulf carved out space in comedy with appearances in “Anger Management” and “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past.” While many names on this list are tied to drama or action, her career shows the breadth of Muslim actresses working in lighter formats, including sitcoms and romantic comedies. Improvisational training has also been central to her screen style.

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12. Azita Ghanizada

Azita Ghanizada has balanced acting with industry advocacy for more inclusive casting. Known for roles in “Alphas,” “Ballers,” and network television, she has also spoken publicly about raising standards for representation of Middle Eastern and North African performers. That work has made her notable both on screen and behind the scenes.

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13. Sheila Vand

Sheila Vand’s career has moved in two compelling directions at once: prestige studio projects like “Argo” and artful independent work such as “A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night.” She often gravitates toward visually bold material and collaborations with filmmakers interested in atmosphere and form. That has made her one of the more distinctive performers in modern genre cinema.

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14. Mozhan Navabi

Mozhan Navabi is known not only for acting roles in “House of Cards” and “The Blacklist,” but also for writing and directing. Her stage training and multilingual ability have helped her move across political thrillers, dramas, and festival work. She represents a version of Hollywood visibility shaped by authorship as well as performance.

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15. Zar Amir Ebrahimi

Zar Amir Ebrahimi gained major international attention through “Holy Spider,” then continued expanding her work in development and production. Her career reflects a broader trend in which performers also serve as creative advocates for displaced or underrepresented filmmakers. That dual role has given her influence beyond any single performance.

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16. Sibel Kekilli

Sibel Kekilli reached a worldwide television audience as Shae on “Game of Thrones,” a role that placed her in one of the decade’s biggest series. Before that, she had already established serious credentials in European cinema. Her work often leans toward psychologically grounded characters rather than broad spectacle, even in large productions.

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17. Leem Lubany

Leem Lubany introduced herself to many viewers through “Rock the Kasbah” and later strengthened her profile with the espionage series “Condor.” She has worked in English and Arabic and has taken on physically demanding parts that require action training. Her career points to the growing demand for performers who can move naturally between geopolitical thrillers and independent drama.

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18. Hiam Abbass

Hiam Abbass brings authority to nearly every project she enters. Her appearances in “Succession,” “Blade Runner 2049,” and “Munich” show a performer equally at home in intimate family dynamics and expansive studio worlds. She has also directed and served as a cultural consultant, adding another layer to a career already marked by longevity and global reach.

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19. Yasmine Al-Bustami

Yasmine Al-Bustami has become a familiar television presence through “NCIS: Hawaiʻi,” along with earlier work in “The Originals” and “S.W.A.T.” Her career reflects the durability of network TV careers that often demand fast schedules, location shoots, and tonal flexibility. She has maintained a steady connection with audiences through fan events and behind-the-scenes engagement.

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20. Nimra Bucha

Nimra Bucha reached many new viewers through “Ms. Marvel” and “Polite Society,” though her background in theater and television long predates those titles. She often plays authority figures, mentors, or sharp-edged antagonists, bringing gravity and intelligence to supporting roles. Her recent work highlights how global streaming has expanded recognition for performers with established careers outside Hollywood’s traditional path.

Together, these actresses reflect more than one version of success. Some anchor franchises, some dominate character roles, and others move between languages, countries, and creative disciplines with unusual ease. The result is a fuller picture of Muslim visibility on screen: not one lane, one genre, or one story, but 20 careers that continue to reshape what Hollywood audiences see.

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