Sophie Clarke

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Sophie Clarke
Born
Sophie Georgina Clarke

(1989-07-10) July 10, 1989 (age 32)
TelevisionSurvivor: South Pacific (winner)
Survivor: Winners at War
Spouse(s)
Robert Shady
(m. 2019)

Sophie Georgina Clarke (born July 10, 1989) is a reality television personality known for competing in and winning Survivor: South Pacific.[1] She later returned for the show's 40th season Survivor: Winners at War, where she finished in 10th place.

Early life[]

Clarke is a native of Willsboro, New York and a graduate of Middlebury College. She attended Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.[2] She married her husband, Robert Shady, on August 24, 2019.[3]

Survivor[]

South Pacific[]

Clarke was one of 18 contestants on Survivor: South Pacific, the 23rd season of Survivor. On the first night, she formed a final five alliance that would dominate the game with fellow contestants Benjamin "Coach" Wade, Rick Nelson, Brandon Hantz, and Albert Destrade. Wade then recruited Edna Ma as the sixth member of their alliance. After the merge, the six player alliance eliminated all of the other players from the game.

Clarke won her first immunity challenge on Day 27 of the game. After that night's tribal council vote, another immunity challenge immediately took place, which she also won. At the game's final immunity challenge, Ozzy Lusth had a significant lead in the beginning, but after he got stuck on the puzzle, Clarke came from behind to win, and Lusth was subsequently voted out and became the last jury member.

With Clarke, Wade, and Destrade as the Final Three, she began to reflect on the game and how it changed her. She felt she outplayed, outlasted and outwitted everyone by winning the most immunity challenges and by keeping her first day alliance intact. In the end, the jury rewarded her in a 6–3–0 vote over Wade and Destrade. She received votes from Hantz, Lusth, Whitney Duncan, Dawn Meehan, Jim Rice, and Keith Tollefson.[4][5]

Winners at War[]

Clarke came back and competed on the 40th season titled Winners at War.[6][7] She was a member of the Dakal tribe where she allied with the other unconnected players including Yul Kwon, Nick Wilson, and Wendell Holland. After the tribe swap, she became a member of the new Yara tribe along with fellow former Dakal member Sarah Lacina and three former Sele members ("Boston Rob" Mariano, Ben Driebergen, and Adam Klein). After losing immunity, Clarke quickly found herself in the minority along with Lacina but she was able to find the hidden immunity idol. She gave one half of it to Lacina to solidify their alliance. Lacina gave it back to Clarke before Tribal Council just in case she needed to use it. Lacina and Clarke were successfully able to convince Driebergen and Klein to flip against Mariano and he was voted out unanimously. She later became the 13th person voted off, being blindsided by Tony Vlachos while carrying her idol in her pocket. She finished in tenth place on day 35 after she did not win the opportunity to get back into the game at the final Edge of Extinction challenge.

At the final tribal council, Clarke along with eleven other jury members voted for Vlachos to win.

Filmography[]

Television[]

Year Title Role Notes
2011 Survivor: South Pacific Contestant Winner
2020 Survivor: Winners at War Contestant Eliminated; 10th place

References[]

  1. ^ Schwartz, Alison (December 18, 2011). "Survivor Winner Revealed!". People. Retrieved December 19, 2011.
  2. ^ "Mount Sinai First Year Medical Student, Sophie Clarke, Wins "Survivor" - The Mount Sinai Hospital". Mount Sinai Hospital. December 23, 2011. Archived from the original on September 8, 2015. Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  3. ^ "Sophie Clarke, Robert Shady". The New York Times. August 25, 2019. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 9, 2019.
  4. ^ Reiher, Andrea (December 19, 2011). "'Survivor: South Pacific' winner Sophie Clarke: 'I had a pretty good feeling coming out of Tribal'". Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  5. ^ Melisurgo, Len (December 18, 2011). "'Survivor South Pacific' winner revealed, and it's a big upset". Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  6. ^ Meet the cast of Survivor: Winners at War Entertainment Weekly, Retrieved April 23, 2020
  7. ^ Jeff Probst shares intel on Survivor: Winners at War Entertainment Weekly, Retrieved April 19, 2020

External links[]

Preceded by Winner of Survivor
Survivor: South Pacific
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""