Jessica Szohr

Szohr in 2011, DFree / Shutterstock.com

Place of Birth: Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, U.S.

Date of Birth: March 31, 1985

Ethnicity:
*father – African-American, European
*mother – Hungarian, German, as well as Irish and English

Jessica Szohr, full name Jessica Karen Szohr, is an American actress and model. Her roles include the films Uncle Nino, Fired Up!, Piranha 3D, Love, Wedding, Marriage; I Don’t Know How She Does It, Tower Heist, Art Machine, Love Bite, The Internship, Brightest Star, 10 Cent Pistol, Two Night Stand, Club Life, Ted 2, and Clover, and the shows My Wife and Kids, Joan of Arcadia, What About Brian, CSI: Miami, Gossip Girl, Complications, Kingdom, Twin Peaks, Shameless, and The Orville.

She has said, “I’m Hungarian and a quarter Black, so I’m a mutt.” Jessica’s father is of African-American and European descent. Jessica’s mother, whose surname is Szohr, has Hungarian and German, from her own father, and Irish and English, from her own mother, ancestry.

Jessica is married to Canadian professional ice hockey player Brad Richardson, with whom she has a daughter.

Jessica’s maternal grandfather is Ronald Szohr (the son of Philip S. Szohr and Marie C. Bayer). Ronald’s ancestry appears to be a mix of ethnic Germans and Hungarians. Philip was the son of Hungarian-born parents, Simon Szóhr/Sohr, from Tevel, and Erzsebeth/Elizabeth Grabenar, from Nagyvejke. Marie C. was also the daughter of Hungarian-born parents, Joseph Bayer and Clara, who was from Bács-Bodrog County.

Jessica’s maternal grandmother is Karen Bishop (the daughter of Arthur E. Bishop and Dorothy J. Hagan). Dorothy was the daughter of Donald Patrick Hagan and Ruth H. Bigelow.

Sources: Jessica’s maternal great-grandfather, Philip S. Szohr, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Baptismal record of Jessica’s maternal great-great-grandfather, Simon Szóhr/Sohr – https://www.familysearch.org

Passenger record of the Szóhr family – https://www.libertyellisfoundation.org

Baptismal record of Jessica’s maternal great-great-grandmother, Erzsebeth/Elizabeth Grabenar – https://www.familysearch.org

Jessica’s maternal great-grandmother, Marie C. Bayer, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Obituary of Jessica’s maternal great-grandmother, Marie C. (Bayer) Szohr – http://www.krausefuneralhome.com

Passenger record of Jessica’s maternal great-great-grandfather, Joseph Bayer – https://www.libertyellisfoundation.org

Jessica’s maternal great-grandmother, Dorothy J. Hagan, on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Obituary of Jessica’s maternal great-grandmother, Dorothy J. (Hagan) Bishop – http://www.legacy.com

ethnic

Curious about ethnicity

224 Responses

  1. HelloKitty says:

    I still don’t understand why I see all this crap on ppl’s boards who are black or mixed with black…why doesn’t this argument occur on white celeb boards?

  2. HelloKitty says:

    Black people can tell she is black, first, by her hair. And if you hung around more black people, you would come to understand how diverse we are and how much pictures and lighting affect how we look. Take Beyonce for example; sometimes she looks fair and sometimes she looks medium brown. Not a big deal. The girl is black and some of us can tell. Learn to love our differences instead of analyzing who is what and why and criticizing. She is a gorgeous mix of races. Get used to it. Soon this country will be over-taken by mixed race ppl.

  3. Fuzzybear says:

    meant to say use the term(BLACKS)

  4. Fuzzybear says:

    you guys crack me up,when you use the (BLACKS)

  5. Emma says:

    She doesn’t look black, but I kind of sensed that she was. Kind of like how I could tell someone who is part filipino (like vanessa hudgens or Nicole Scherzinger) but doesn’t look like it. I think it’s, because I was raised by filipinos, that I kind of developed a radar for it. Maybe it’s the same for people who were around alot of blacks.

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