
Age: 45
male
Benjamin John Whishaw (born 14 October 1980) is an English actor. He has received various accolades, including three British Academy Television Awards, two Emmy Awards, and a Golden Globe. Beginning his career in the 2000s, he played the title role in a 2004 production of the play Hamlet. Television roles followed this in Nathan Barley (2005), Criminal Justice (2008) and The Hour (2011–12); and film roles in Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006), I'm Not There (2007), Brideshead Revisited (2008), and Bright Star (2009). In 2012, Whishaw played the title role in a BBC Two adaptation of Richard II, for which he won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor. The same year, he appeared as Q in the James Bond film Skyfall (2012), going on to reprise the role in Spectre (2015) and No Time to Die (2021). He has voiced Paddington Bear in several projects since Paddington (2014). His other film roles in the 2010s include Cloud Atlas (2012), The Lobster (2015), Suffragette (2015), The Danish Girl (2015), and Mary Poppins Returns (2018). Whishaw had a leading role in London Spy (2015). For his portrayal of Norman Scott in the miniseries A Very English Scandal (2018), he won a BAFTA, a Golden Globe Award and a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor. In 2020, he had a leading role in the fourth season of the black comedy drama Fargo. He has since starred in the BBC medical drama series This Is Going to Hurt (2022), the short film Good Boy (2023), and the Netflix spy thriller series Black Doves (2024). Description above from the Wikipedia article Ben Whishaw, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Ben Whishaw

Mist
for Mist in The Justice Society of America: Part II
Suggested by SasakiGold

Six years after Baron Blitzkrieg's defeat, the JSA is an institution. They've gone from a secret unit to national celebrities, but fame comes at a price. In the United States of 1976, the JSA is bound by government contracts, ethics committees, and a bureaucracy that prevents them from acting with the same speed as before. As the nation prepares for the Bicentennial, an ancient evil that science cannot explain begins to fester: Mordru. The "Lord of Chaos" doesn't attack with armies, but by corrupting the country's mystical infrastructure. His target is the Helm of Nabu, the source of Fate's power, which Mordru sees as the only lock preventing him from devouring reality. The JSA must decide whether to follow the rules of a government that uses them for propaganda or break their oaths to confront an entity that is erasing the population's sanity. The series explores the fall of idols: how the glare of the public spotlight ultimately burns out heroes.