Katerina Moutsatsou or Moutsatsos, is a Los Angeles-based Greek actress, producer, writer, and activist. She is the author and producer of experimental films, videos, and animation series, which focus mainly on subjects related to her country of origin, Greece. She is vocal on the area of politics, and cultural identity. Her political animation series Sara and Mara italic=yes was published by the Greek newspaper Eleftherotypia.
Early life
The daughter of a Greek naval officer, Moutsatsou was born in Monterey, California while her father was on foreign duty in California at the Naval Postgraduate School, yet grew up in Athens, Greece. Her parents come from the island of Aegina. She has an older brother Konstantinos, an electronic engineer.
A native speaker of French, Moutsatsou’s first acting job was a guest starring role on the fourth season of the sitcom Salut Les Musclés which aired on the French channel TF1, in 1994. In Greece, she became instantly known to the Greek public in 1996 thanks to her breakthrough comedic role in the main cast of Nico Mastorakis’s parody sitcom, Divorced with Children for Antenna TV. Throughout the late 1990s and 2000s, Moutsatsou found her popularity on the rise at home obtaining starring recurring roles in popular Greek TV shows, for major television channels, Mega Channel, Antenna TV, and Alpha TV, as well as feature films. She played the title role in Nikos Perakis’s feature film, Liza and All the Others. Though usually cast as the ingenue or “the daughter”, she displayed a wide range of acting ability when she was cast as the mean character in Mega Channel’s mystery series, "Me Thea Sto Pelago". Besides her acting, Moutsatsou became a singing sensation when she performed the duet Mia Fora with composer and singer Dimitris Korgialas. The song became an instant hit, and she and Korgialas shared two awards, "Best Duet/Collaboration", and "Best Rock Video" in 2004 MAD Video Music Awards. Mia Fora remained in the top 30 of the Greek top charts for over 3 years, and hit the charts in other European countries as well. In 1998, Moutsatsou traveled to Turkey to play the female lead in Biket Ilhan’s Kayıkçı, the first Turkish-Greek film co-production ever made, alongside Memet Ali Alabora. In 2001, she joined Alabora once again when she replaced the female lead in the third season of the hit Turkish television dramaYılan Hikayesi, establishing herself as a popular figure for the Turkish public. In late 2004, she played a short recurring role in Show TV’s Hayat Bilgisi, and two years later joined the main cast for over 40 episodes of the third season of Yabancı Damat , one of the first Turkish television drama to be exported outside of Turkey, which aired in Turkey and Greece, between 2005 and 2008. In Los Angeles, after a bit part in Todd Phillips's smash-hit The Hangover in 2009, Moutsatsou went on to produce two short-films, Loverly which she also directed and in which she starred alongside French actor and model Andy Gillet, and 3 1/2, a dark comedy set in Paris, where she played multiple characters, speaking multiple languages.
Producer and writer
In April 2012, Moutsatsou's first uploaded video on YouTube I am Hellene, which she produced, became popular within hours of going live on YouTube, making Hellene a trending hashtag on Twitter. It was parodied all over YouTube reaching over 2 million views that week. The discussion and controversy it sparked, attracted the attention of the Greek and the international media, The video was featured in all major Greek television channels and media outlets, making it the central topic of news, morning shows, and talk shows for over two weeks. After I am Hellene, she produced a series of experimental yet highly political videos which usually focus on Greece, the Greek crisis, and the European Union. In 2013, she created a political animation series Sara and Mara, Η Σάρα και η Μάρα in both English and Greek, published by the newspaper Eleftherotypia.
Personal life
Moutsatsou is a polyglot: she is fluent in Greek, French, English, Italian, Turkish, German. In 2012, she married American producer Charles Como in a civil ceremony in Beverly Hills, followed by a religious wedding in a Greek Orthodox Church in 2017. On January 8, 2017 Moutsatsou gave birth to their son, Hylas.