Kathryn Morris Fan Site
Kathryn Morris Picture

Kathryn Morris is an American actress notable for her role in the CBS television series “Cold Case.” While Kathryn’s first exposure to the entertainment industry came as early as 5 years old when her family traveled the south as a gospel-singing group, her professional acting career started when she landed a role on the TV-movie “Long Road Home” in 1991. Since then, Morris appeared with small roles on various films, including the Oscar-winning comedy drama “As Good as It Gets” starring Jack Nicholson and Helen Hunt. From 1997 to 1998, Kathryn Morris played her first major role as Lt. Annalisa Lindstrom in the series “Pensacola: Wings of Gold.”

While continuing to work on different films, Kathryn had a villain role in the series “Xena: Warrior Princess” in 1999. After Kathryn’s appearance in the Dreamworks film “The Contender”, a film that acclaimed director Steven Spielberg saw, Morris was hired for two successive Spielberg movies: “A.I.: Artificial Intelligence” and “Minority Report”, as the wife of the main character Tom Cruise.

In 2003, Kathryn Morris won the lead role in the CBS’s Series “Cold Case,” where she played a detective assigned to cases that are decades old. She also appeared in films like “Mind Hunter”, “Resurrecting the Champ” with Josh Hartnett, and “Paycheck”. Some of her other movie appearances include “Deterrence”, “The Prince”, “Sleeptalker”, “Double Cross”, “Cool As Ice”, “Screenplay”, “Role of a Lifetime” and “The Hire: Hostage”. Kathryn Morris’ prominent television appearances include “The Wright Stuff”, “The Mind of a Married man”, “Providence”, “The Magnificent Seven”, “Poltergeist: The Legacy”, “Ink” and “Silk Stalkings”.

Kathryn Morris helped charities whenever she can. In 2007, she helped Toys for Tots, a group organized by the US Marine Corps Reserve that engages in toy donations to be given to less fortunate children. Aside from her regular appearance on “Cold Case,” Kathryn Morris’ latest work is seen on the 2003 sci-fi movie “Paycheck,” the 2004 thriller flick “Mindhunters” and the 2007 drama film “Resurrecting the Champ.”