Sara Dögg Ásgeirsdóttir

Sara Dögg Ásgeirsdóttir (born December 1976) is an Icelandic actress. She has had major roles in a number of Icelandic films and TV series, and in 2013 won the Edda Award for Best Leading Actress for Cover Story (Icelandic TV series).

Early life and education
Sara was born and grew up on the family farm in Skeiða- og Gnúpverjahreppur. She attended Fjölbrautaskólinn í Breiðholti from the age of 16, in the media track, and after a half year in France studying French, enrolled at the University of Iceland to study psychology. After her first film role, she returned to France, living in Paris, and then studied acting in Iceland at the Iceland University of the Arts, graduating in 2005.

Career
Her first acting role was as the female lead, Þurildur, in Hrafn Gunnlaugsson's Witchcraft (2000 film) (2000), for which she auditioned successfully in 1997 when she was 19 and in her first year of university, with no training in acting;  she later told an interviewer she had been too shy to join her school's drama club. Her performance won a Best Actress award at the Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival.

While studying acting, she had supporting roles in two further films, Kaldaljós and the short Hver er Barði? (Who is Bardi?) (both 2004). On graduation, she was offered a place in a theatre company in Akureyri, but took time off to have her first child. She resumed work with an independent theatre company, and in following years worked in a variety of acting jobs, including for the Reykjavík City Theatre, while also working as a flight attendant for Flugfélag Íslands.

In 2007 Sara had a supporting role in the TV series Næturvaktin; her breakthrough role was as the journalist Lára in the TV series Pressa,  beginning in December the same year. Pressa was very successful, and in 2013 she won the Edda Award for Best Leading Actress for the third season.

Caring for her children during her daughter's illness caused a three-year hiatus in her career. Her work since then has included, in film, leading parts in Óskar Þór Axelsson's Ég man þig (2017), based on a novel by Yrsa Sigurðardóttir, the 2019 Swedish-Icelandic co-production Pity the Lovers, and Marteinn Þórsson's Þorpið í bakgarðinum (Backyard Village, 2021), and a supporting role in Hvítur, hvítur dagur (2019). On TV, she appeared in the 2016 comedy series Borgarstjórinn (The Mayor) and had a supporting role in the 2017 series Stella Blómkvist, which became a major role in the 2021 season.

In 2024 Sara produced her first short documentary, Turninn, about the tower which her father built on his land. The documentary premiered at the Skjaldborg Documentary Festival

Personal life
Sara has a daughter and a son. She did not attend the Edda Awards ceremony when she won because her son was a newborn.

Awards

 * 2000: Best Actress Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival
 * 2013: Edda Award for Best Leading Actress, Pressa