Who is the actress in the Oral-B commercial?
(Unveiling the star behind the smile)
(By Carmichael Phillip)
When you see a toothbrush commercial on TV or online and wonder, “Who is that actress showing off her perfect smile?” the answer is often surprisingly elusive. Oral-B, as one of the most recognizable oral care brands in the world, has aired many commercials across different markets, each with different cast members. In this article, we dig into some of the candidates and possibilities for who the actress might be in an Oral-B commercial.
Who is “Dominique,” the face in one Oral-B ad?
One known example comes from a Dutch/Belgian market commercial. In that ad, a woman credited simply as “Dominique” brushes to perfection in the commercial.
YouTube
While “Dominique” may not be a full professional stage name (or it may be a first name or alias), she is clearly the face of that particular campaign in those territories.
However, that doesn’t necessarily represent the actress in the Oral-B commercial you saw—depending on which region, which campaign, or even which product line (Oral-B Pro, Oral-B iO, etc.).
Isabella Grace — another candidate
In the Oral-B “Toothbrush” TV spot (circa 2014), a credit is given to Isabella Grace.
That suggests she was one of the faces in that version of the campaign. If the commercial you saw is a variant or re-airing or a version derived from that campaign, it could very well be her.
But again, Oral-B commercials tend to vary (in visuals, in talent) across markets and time, so the presence of Isabella Grace in one spot does not definitively prove she is your mystery actress.
Christina Baily — the “Oral-B Pro-Expert” campaign actress
One interesting lead is Christina Baily, an English actress who starred in a campaign for Oral-B Pro-Expert toothpaste.
Wikipedia
In her credits, she is listed as fronting that campaign, which makes her a credible candidate — especially if the commercial you saw was for a toothpaste or Pro-Expert product line.
If your commercial specifically mentioned “Pro-Expert,” there’s a higher chance that Christina Baily is the actress you saw.
Joanna Eliot — the voice of Oral-B
This is a twist: in many Oral-B commercials, the voiceover is just as important as the on-screen talent. The British voiceover and actress Joanna Eliot is credited as the voice of Oral-B (Saatchi & Saatchi) in global campaigns.
So even if the face you saw is someone else, the smooth announcer voice you heard might well be her.
Often, viewers conflate the voice with the on-screen actor, especially if the visuals are clean, with minimal face cuts, or when voiceover lines are memorable.
Why there’s no one definitive answer
The puzzle of “who is the actress” in an Oral-B commercial stems from multiple factors:
Regional campaigns differ. What runs in the U.S. may have entirely different talent from what runs in Europe, Asia, or Latin America.
Multiple product lines. Oral-B doesn’t run just one commercial—they run ads for electric toothbrushes, Pro lines, iO lines, toothpaste, and more.
Frequent refreshes. Brands often rotate talent, refresh visuals, and rebrand. The celebrity face you saw five years ago might not match a more recent ad.
Limited public credits. Not all commercials list full cast credits publicly, especially for commercials that are digital or local rather than major network spots.
If you tell me which version you saw (country, product, rough appearance, year if you can remember), I might be able to narrow it further.
How you can identify the actress yourself
Here are steps you can take:
Screenshot the commercial (pause at a clear face moment).
Use reverse image/video search tools (e.g. Google Images, InVid) to see if that frame appears elsewhere with cast credits.
Search the campaign name + “cast” or “credits.” For example: “Oral-B iO campaign cast.”
Check trade and advertising industry sites (e.g. iSpot, AdForum) — sometimes they list talent or production crew.
Check actor/actress reels and agencies — many actors post commercials they’ve done.
Post on forums or ad-fan communities — people sometimes recognize faces or voice patterns and help identify them.