Kristen Cloke


Kristen Ann Cloke is an American actress. She appeared in , and has acted in several small parts of other TV series. She is known for her role as Valerie Lewton in Final Destination and as Leigh Colvin in the slasher film Black Christmas.

Personal life

Cloke was born in Van Nuys, California and attended California State University, Northridge. She is married to producer, writer, and director Glen Morgan, and has four children.

Career

Her first feature film role was the female lead in Megaville, alongside Billy Zane.
Cloke's other credits include lead parts in Caged Fear and A Part of the Family. She has also had featured roles in Stay Tuned, Mistress, and The Marrying Man. Cloke's previous television credits include: Winnetka Road as Maybeth, Silk Stalkings as Annie Overstreet, and guest appearances on One West Waikiki, Cheers, Mad About You, Dear John, Murder She Wrote, Quantum Leap, Doogie Howser, MD, and Vengeance Unlimited.
In 1995, Cloke's breakout role came as Captain Shane Autumn Vansen on . As a result of her work as Vansen, a guest role in The X-Files episode "The Field Where I Died" was written for her. Cloke played Melissa Ephesian, a wife of a cult leader and soulmate of FBI Special Agent Fox Mulder; Melissa is thought to have Dissociative Identity Disorder, though it is later revealed that her different personalities correspond to her past lives. She later described the episode as a love letter between herself and producer Glen Morgan, her then fiancé.
In 1996, she won a Daytime Emmy Award nomination for her performance in the ABC Afterschool Special The Long Road Home, in which she played a young wife who has difficulty relating to her husband's son. In 1997-98, she had recurring role as Dr. Lara Means of the Millennium Group on Millennium.
On March 17, 2000, Cloke starred as Valerie Lewton in the film, Final Destination.
In addition to her acting, she is the artistic director of The Alliance Repertory Company in Burbank, California, where she writes, produces and directs.
Cloke was named #9 of Sci-Fi's Sexy 50, by Femme Fatales magazine in 1997.

Filmography

Film

Television

Writer