Jill Lover (born 16 July 1971; age 54) is an actress who filmed a role for Star Trek. She played a Vulcan midwife in the deleted scene of Spock's birth along with Fran Bennett. [1](X)
Lover was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin and graduated from Green Bay East High School in 1989. She earned a BA in Theater from Lawrence University and studied professional acting partly in London. As a trained stage actress, Lover has performed in several stage plays, including several Shakespeare plays.
Lover made her first on-screen acting performances in Dear God (1996, with Jack Sheldon, Stephanie Niznik, Sunny Hawks, Joanna Heimbold, Toby Huss and Valerie Wildman) and the drama The Twilight of the Golds (1997, with Stephanie Niznik). She had guest appearances in the television series Nash Bridges (1998), The Pretender (1999, starring Patrick Bauchau, with Harve Presnell), John Doe (2002, starring Jayne Brook, with Rekha Sharma), American Dreams (2003, with Ethan Dampf, Alicia Coppola, and Mark Kiely), All About the Andersons (2003 and 2004), My Wife and Kids (2004), Half & Half (2005), Sex, Love & Secrets (2005), and Close to Home (2007, starring Cress Williams, with Richard McGonagle, Carlos LaCamara, John Cothran, Jr., and Bruce Davison). Lover was also among the cast of Duck (2005, with Amy Hill, Bill Cobbs, Larry Cedar, Gary Kasper, and Kelvin Yu) and Re-Animated (2006, with Tom Kenny, Brian Posehn and Irene Roseen).
She later appeared in J.J. Abrams' television pilot Anatomy of Hope alongside Mark Rolston, Bruce Gray, and Tony Guma.