Lisa Ann Beley is a Canadian actress and voice teacher from Edmonton, Alberta. She has worked extensively in animation, often voicing regal characters and authority figures. Some of her better known characters are Cammy White in "Street Fighter", Madame Hydra/Ophelia Sarkissian in "X-Men: Evolution", Teela in "He-Man and the Masters of the Universe", Medusa/Medusalith Amaquelin in "Inhumans", Scarlett/Shana M. O'Hara in both "G.I. Joe: Spy Troops" and "G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom", and Thena in "Eternals". Beley grew up in Edmonton, but moved to Vancouver to pursue a college education. She attended the University of British Columbia's acting program. She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1990. She went back to school in 1995, graduating from York University with a Master of Fine Arts in 1997. She also earned a diploma in voice teaching. Beley voiced Chi-Chi in Ocean Group's English dub of the animated films "Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone" (1989) and "Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest" (1990). She resumed the role in the Ocean Group's dub of the series "Dragon Ball Z" (1989-1996). The character was the wife of the protagonist Goku. Chi-Chi was typically depicted as tough and feisty, but her superhuman abilities were less advanced than those of her husband and she lacked Goku's taste for adventures. In the space opera series "Exosquad" (1993-1994), Beley voiced the young lieutenant Nara Burns. Nara was the least experienced member of an elite unit of exoframe pilots, fighting in an 22nd-century interplanetary war which had already cost the lives of both her parents. Nara eventually became her unit's leader, replacing her predecessor J.T. Marsh. In "Fatal Fury: The Motion Picture" (1994), Beley voiced the female ninja (Kunoichi) Mai Shiranui. The film was based on the then-popular fighting game series "Fatal Fury" (1991-1999), where Mai was one of the main characters. Mai was typically depicted as having a fascination for traditional Japanese arts and rituals, combined with an enthusiasm for heavy metal music. In the short-lived fantasy series "Darkstalkers" (1995), Beley voiced two of the main characters. She voiced both the American werecat Felicia and the Chinese jiangshi girl (hopping vampire or revenant) Hsien-Ko. The series was an adaptation of the video game series "Darkstalkers" (1994-1997). The original series took inspiration from the gothic horror genre, and most of the featured characters were sentient monsters. Character types in this series included bigfoots, demons, dhampirs (vampire-human hybrid offspring), ghosts, golems resembling Frankenstein's monster, jianghshi-type revenants, mermen, mummies, succubi, vampires, werecats, werewolves, witches, and zombies.