
Age: 61
male
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Adrian Kayvan Pasdar (Persian: آدریان کیوان پاسدار; April 30, 1965) is an American film, television, and voice actor. He is known for his roles in Profit, Near Dark, Carlito's Way, Mysterious Ways, Desperate Housewives, Burn Notice, Heroes and as Glenn Talbot / Graviton on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.. Additionally, he directed the feature film Cement. He is also known as the voice of Tony Stark / Iron Man in Marvel Anime, as well as in the animated series Ultimate Spider-Man, Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H., Phineas and Ferb: Mission Marvel, and Avengers Assemble, and in the Lego Marvel Superheroes and Disney Infinity videogames. He also played district attorney Alec Rybak on The Lying Game. He has appeared on the American TV drama Grand Hotel as Felix. At the age of 19, he auditioned for a role in Top Gun. Director Tony Scott was so impressed that he wrote the part of "Chipper" just for him. This led to bigger roles in Solarbabies (1986), Streets of Gold (1986), and Kathryn Bigelow's cult vampire movie Near Dark (1987), with Pasdar in the lead role of Caleb Colton. His other major roles include Vital Signs (1990). Pasdar got his biggest break in movies, when he starred as a beautiful woman opposite Julie Walters in the British movie Just Like a Woman. In 1992, he left Hollywood and returned to New York, working as a cashier for room and board, while taking the occasional small part, such as Frankie in Brian De Palma's Carlito's Way (1993). Adrian Pasdar wrote and directed the short film Beyond Belief and directed his first feature film, the art-house neo-noir Cement, a contemporary retelling of Othello, in 1999. The $1.7 million independent feature, which won Best Picture awards on the festival circuit, starred Chris Penn, Jeffrey Wright, Sherilyn Fenn, and Henry Czerny, and was written by Farscape screenwriter Justin Monjo. "I've used every ounce of energy and every drop of money I had to make Cement," Pasdar said.

Adrian Pasdar

Scott Miller
for Scott Miller in 13 Reasons Why (80's Genderswap)
Suggested by chris83

A high school student discovers a box of cassette tapes recorded by her classmate Harry, who recently took his own life. Each tape reveals a different person who played a role in his devastating decision. As she listens through the night, she becomes obsessed with uncovering the truth—navigating a maze of betrayal, bullying, and dark secrets hidden behind the polished facades of her small town. Set against neon-soaked hallways and the analog intimacy of cassette culture, the story unfolds through her eyes as she confronts former friends, crushes, and enemies. The mystery deepens with each tape, forcing her to question everything she thought she knew about her community. Themes of accountability, teenage isolation, and the irreversible consequences of cruelty pulse through this gripping drama, where one person's voice—even after death—demands to be heard and cannot be silenced.





