Fictional Sashas
- Sasha Barbicon, the owner of an art gallery from the game Titanic: Adventure Out of Time
- Sasha Belov, a character from the TV show Make It or Break It
- Sasha Bezmel, a character from the Australian soap opera Home and Away
- Sash Bishop, a character from the Irish soap opera Fair City
- Sasha Bordeaux, a DC Comics character, former ally of Batman
- Saša Bůčková, character from Czech sitcom Comeback
- Sasha Fierce, Beyoncé Knowles's alter ego
- Sasha La Fleur, a character from the movie All Dogs Go to Heaven 2
- Sacha Levy, AAU Registrar in the BBC TV series Holby City
- Sasha Nein, a powerful psychonaut and instructor from the game Psychonauts
- Sascha Petrosevitch, a character from the 2002 film Half Past Dead
- Sasha Thompson, leader of the Mad Dogs and a target in CHERUB book Mad Dogs
- Sasha, a character from Adult Swim's Titan Maximum
- Sasha, a character from the 2009 film The Last Station
- Sasha, a commanding officer from the game Advance Wars: Dual Strike
- Sasha, a Russian pilot in the 2009 movie 2012 (film)
- Sasha, bird character from Walt Disney's Peter and the Wolf (1946 film)
- Sasha, cat from the book series Warriors by Erin Hunter
- Sasha, character from the Bratz line of fashion dolls, see List of Bratz characters
- Sasha, character from the Japanese manga Pita-Ten
- Sasha, enigmatic female hacker from the 2003 film Cube 2: Hypercube
- Sasha, romantic interest of Ginger in Nickelodeon's As Told by Ginger
- Sasha, Ted Mundy's absolute friend in John le Carré's 2003 espionage novel Absolute Friends
- Sasha, the leader of The Reapers gang in Infamous (video game)
- Sasha, the Muscovite princess in the novel Orlando: A Biography by Virginia Woolf
- Sacha, a desman (water mole) in the animated television program Noah's Island
- Sacha, The Heavy's stock minigun in the game Team Fortress 2
Read more about this topic: Sasha (name)
Famous quotes containing the word fictional:
“One of the proud joys of the man of lettersif that man of letters is an artistis to feel within himself the power to immortalize at will anything he chooses to immortalize. Insignificant though he may be, he is conscious of possessing a creative divinity. God creates lives; the man of imagination creates fictional lives which may make a profound and as it were more living impression on the worlds memory.”
—Edmond De Goncourt (18221896)