Hannah Simone
Hannah Simone (born August 3, 1980) is a Canadian actress, television host, and former model of mixed Indian and European descent.[1][2] Born in London to a Punjabi Indian father and an English mother with Italian, German, and Greek ancestry, she spent her early childhood in Calgary, Alberta, before her family relocated frequently, including stints in Saudi Arabia and India.[2][3] After graduating from Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) with a degree in radio and television arts, Simone began her career in broadcasting as a VJ and news presenter for MuchMusic in Canada, hosting programs such as The NewMusic and contributing to HGTV's Space for Living.[2][4] She later worked briefly as a human rights and refugee officer for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Europe prior to transitioning to acting.[4] Simone achieved prominence in the United States with her breakout role as Cece Parekh, the fashion model best friend of the protagonist, in the Fox comedy series New Girl (2011–2018), appearing in all seven seasons alongside Zooey Deschanel and Jake Johnson.[5][2] Her performance earned her a 2012 Teen Choice Award for Choice TV: Female Scene Stealer.[6]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Hannah Simone was born on August 3, 1980, in London, England, to an Indian father named Narendra, originally from Mathura in Uttar Pradesh, and a British mother named Helen, who has German, Italian, and Greek Cypriot ancestry.[7][2] She has one brother, Zach Simone.[8] The family relocated to Calgary, Alberta, Canada, shortly after her birth, where Simone spent her early childhood.[9][10] At age seven, they moved to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, due to her father's work, prompting further relocations that exposed her to diverse environments including India and Greece.[11][1] During this nomadic upbringing, Simone participated in local theater productions in Saudi Arabia, India, Greece, and Canada, fostering an early interest in performance amid cultural transitions.[1] Her father's encouragement played a pivotal role in shaping her independence, as she later reflected on his influence in promoting self-reliance from a young age.[12] This multicultural family dynamic, blending South Asian paternal heritage with European maternal roots, contributed to her adaptability across international settings during formative years.[13]Academic Pursuits and Early Experiences
Simone's early experiences were marked by a peripatetic upbringing across multiple countries, including the United Kingdom, India, Canada, Saudi Arabia, and Greece, due to her family's international relocations.[1][14] Her father is of Indian origin, while her mother has British, German, Italian, and Greek heritage, contributing to a multicultural environment that exposed her to diverse cultures from a young age.[9][10] During this period, she participated in local theater productions in these locations, which sparked an initial interest in performance arts.[1] As a teenager, she also worked as a model, gaining early exposure to the entertainment industry.[15] Following high school, which included time in India, Simone enrolled at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in International Relations and Political Science.[1][16] After completing her undergraduate studies, she worked as a human rights reporter for the United Nations, focusing on global issues that aligned with her academic training.[17] Seeking to pivot toward media production, Simone pursued further education at Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) in Toronto, completing a degree in Radio and Television around 2004–2005.[18][19] Her coursework there emphasized practical skills such as lighting, shooting, editing, and producing content, which she later described as foundational to her career aspirations in documentary filmmaking and broadcasting.[20] This program represented a deliberate shift from policy-oriented studies to hands-on media training, reflecting her intent to address social justice topics through visual storytelling.[21]Professional Career
Initial Media and Hosting Roles
Simone began her media career shortly after graduating from Ryerson University in 2005, hosting the first season of HGTV Canada's interior design program Space for Living, where she presented home improvement segments and interviewed experts on living spaces.[17][9] In May 2006, she transitioned to MuchMusic, Canada's prominent music video channel, serving as a video jockey (VJ) and anchor for Much News Weekly, a program covering music industry updates, artist interviews, and event recaps; she also hosted The NewMusic, focusing on emerging artists and album reviews.[10][8] Her tenure at MuchMusic lasted until November 2008, during which she conducted on-air interviews with musicians such as Robert Pattinson and gained visibility in Canadian pop culture broadcasting.[18][22] Following her departure from MuchMusic, Simone relocated to Los Angeles in pursuit of broader opportunities and hosted the Syfy reality competition series WCG Ultimate Gamer from 2009 to 2010 across two seasons, co-hosting with Joel Gourdin to cover professional video gaming challenges, player strategies, and tournament eliminations.[5][23] This role marked her entry into U.S. television hosting, emphasizing competitive esports before her pivot to scripted acting.[1]Entry into Acting
Simone's initial foray into acting occurred in 2005, concurrent with her early hosting work, when she secured guest roles on American television series. Her screen debut was as Larissa in the episode "Only Sixteen" of the legal drama Kevin Hill, starring Taye Diggs.[9] [24] That same year, she appeared as a "sexy girl" in two episodes of the crime series Kojak. She also had a role in the Lifetime series Beautiful People. These minor parts followed her participation in local theater productions during childhood across countries including Saudi Arabia, India, Greece, and Canada, where she had performed onstage since age nine.[22] After building a profile as a television host on MuchMusic from 2006 to 2008, Simone shifted focus toward acting by relocating to Los Angeles in 2008, armed solely with an agent and no guaranteed prospects.[22] This move marked a deliberate pivot from Canadian media hosting to U.S. acting pursuits, involving intensive auditions and training, including classes at the Second City improv theater.[22] During this period, she supplemented her transition with hosting duties, notably serving as the presenter for two seasons of Syfy's WCG Ultimate Gamer starting in 2009, which provided her first significant U.S. television exposure.[22] She also took on a role in a digital series filmed in Santiago, Chile, portraying a barefoot, pregnant, impoverished Indian woman, though specific project details remain limited in available records.[22] This phase of sporadic auditions and classes persisted until opportunities aligned for more substantial roles, reflecting the competitive realities of breaking into Hollywood from a hosting background.[5] Her persistence during these years laid the groundwork for later casting considerations, emphasizing self-driven relocation over established networks.[22]Breakthrough with New Girl
Hannah Simone secured the role of Cecilia "Cece" Parekh in the Fox sitcom New Girl after casting directors, having previously cast her in the unaired pilot Nevermind Nirvana, selected her for the part of the protagonist's best friend and professional model.[25] This opportunity followed her relocation to Los Angeles in 2008, where she pursued acting with limited resources beyond an agent, having left her hosting position at MuchMusic in Canada.[22] New Girl, created by Elizabeth Meriwether, premiered on September 20, 2011, with Simone portraying Cece as a poised, street-smart fashion model whose friendship with quirky teacher Jessica Day (Zooey Deschanel) anchors much of the ensemble dynamic.[26] Cece's character arc begins as a glamorous, no-nonsense counterpart to Jess's eccentricity, leveraging her modeling career and sharp wit in interpersonal conflicts, particularly her on-again-off-again romance with roommate Schmidt (Max Greenfield).[27] Over the series' seven seasons (2011–2018), Cece transitions from transient modeling gigs to entrepreneurial pursuits, including managing a bridal shop, and eventually motherhood, reflecting themes of personal growth amid loft-mate chaos.[28] The pilot episode garnered 10.28 million viewers and a 4.8 rating in the adults 18–49 demographic, Fox's strongest scripted fall debut since 2001, signaling immediate commercial viability.[29] The show's sustained success, bolstered by strong ensemble chemistry including Simone's chemistry reads during casting, contributed to its 7.8/10 IMDb user rating and critical acclaim, with Rotten Tomatoes aggregating a 95% approval score across seasons.[26][30] Simone's performance as Cece provided rare visibility for a South Asian lead in mainstream U.S. comedy, portraying a character defined by confidence and cultural pride rather than stereotypes, which resonated with audiences and advanced her from peripheral media roles to sustained acting prominence.[31] This breakthrough elevated her career trajectory, enabling subsequent opportunities in film, television, and podcasting while establishing her as a key figure in the series' enduring popularity.[32]Post-New Girl Projects and Developments
Simone guest-starred as Stacy in an episode of the ABC sitcom Single Parents on October 10, 2018.[33] She later appeared as Risa in the Netflix animated basketball comedy Hoops in 2020 and provided a voice role in the Paramount+ series No Activity in 2021.[33] These roles marked a transition to supporting parts in ensemble comedies following the end of New Girl.[15] In early 2018, prior to New Girl's finale, Simone was cast as the lead in ABC's pilot reboot of The Greatest American Hero, portraying a modernized version of the original protagonist, but the network declined to order it to series.[34] Later that year, ABC issued a put pilot commitment to a single-camera comedy co-written and executive-produced by Simone, described as semi-autobiographical and centering on a father-daughter dynamic, though it did not advance to production.[13] Simone returned to a regular series role in the ABC supernatural comedy Not Dead Yet, which premiered on February 8, 2023, playing Sam, the life-and-style editor at a newspaper and best friend to lead character Nell Serrano, portrayed as a busy working mother who offers grounded support amid supernatural elements.[35] The series, based on the book Not Dead Yet: On Wine and Writing and Realizing You Know What You Know by Alexandra Potter, ran for two seasons, concluding in 2024 after 23 episodes, with Simone's character evolving to face marital challenges in the second season.[36] [15] A significant development has been Simone's launch of the New Girl rewatch podcast The Mess Around, co-hosted with fellow cast member Lamorne Morris, which debuted in 2022 and features episode breakdowns, cast interviews, and behind-the-scenes anecdotes from the series' production.[37] The podcast returned for a second season and, as of October 2025, partnered with Headgum for expanded distribution, highlighting ongoing fan interest in New Girl's legacy five years after its finale.[38][39] This venture represents a pivot toward content creation leveraging her established role, amid a reported slowdown in scripted acting opportunities post-New Girl.[40][27]Personal Life
Relationships and Family
Simone married Canadian musician and former MuchMusic VJ Jesse Giddings in July 2016, after dating for approximately four years.[41] Giddings, born in 1985, is also a photographer and multi-disciplinary artist.[42] The couple welcomed their first child, a son, in early August 2017.[43] [44] Simone was born in London on August 3, 1980, to an Indian father and an English mother of German, Italian, and Greek Cypriot descent.[1] Her mother worked as a fashion designer, while her father held feminist views and supported international living arrangements for the family.[45] She has a younger brother named Zach.[46]Philanthropy and Public Engagements
Prior to her acting career, Simone served as a human rights and refugee officer for the United Nations in London and Switzerland.[47] She has expressed passion for human rights work, including volunteering as a Human Rights Refugee Officer at the UN in England.[48] Simone has supported WE Charity (formerly Free the Children), participating in humanitarian trips to India and Kenya. At age 16, she worked on HIV/AIDS awareness efforts in India amid the epidemic's impact on underserved communities there.[49] She later returned to India as a celebrity ambassador, interacting with students facing water scarcity challenges that hinder education, and emphasized the role of education in empowerment drawing from her heritage.[49] In Kenya, she attended the first graduation at Kisaruni All Girls Secondary School, presented awards, and joined a Water Walk to highlight access barriers for girls' schooling; these experiences reinforced her advocacy for purpose-driven travel to address global issues like water and education.[49] In 2015, she appeared at WE Day in Illinois, and in 2017, contributed to building schools in Kenya and rural India.[15] In November 2013, Simone launched a Prizeo fundraising campaign for the Pink Daisy Project, which provides practical support—such as bill payments and child care—to young families coping with breast cancer diagnoses, allowing mothers to prioritize treatment.[50] Donors entered to win a Los Angeles trip featuring a New Girl set tour and lunch with her and a castmate, aiming to leverage fan engagement for broader aid.[50] She has used her platform to support UNICEF and the Children's Defense Fund, focusing on child welfare and rights.[15] Simone also aids animal welfare through the Adopt a Shelter Cat movement, which intensifies adoption drives in June, and shares her home with two shelter cats.[47] In May 2023, she curated a Mother's Day gift box for Good+Foundation, with proceeds directed to low-income families to combat generational poverty.[15]Filmography
Film
Simone's film credits consist primarily of supporting roles in independent comedies and action films following her television breakthrough.| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Oldboy | Stephanie Lee |
| 2015 | Miss India America | Sonia Nielson |
| 2015 | Lemonade | Tasha |
| 2016 | Flock of Dudes | Beth |
| 2016 | Odd Squad: The Movie | Weird Emily |
| 2016 | Folk Hero & Funny Guy | Emily |
| 2017 | Band Aid | Grace |
| 2017 | Killing Gunther | Sanaa |
Television
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Unknown | Space for Living | Host[17] |
| 2009–2010 | WCG Ultimate Gamer | Host[51] |
| 2011–2018 | New Girl | Cece Parekh[26] |
| 2020–present | Mira, Royal Detective | Pinky / Fatima (voice)[52] |
| 2023–2024 | Not Dead Yet | Sam[53] |
| 2023–present | Clone High | Lady Godiva (voice)[53] |