
Age: 47
male
Jordan Haworth Peele (born February 21, 1979) is an American actor, comedian, and filmmaker. He is known for his film and television work in the comedy and horror genres. Peele started his career in sketch comedy before transitioning his career as a writer and director of psychological horror and satirical films. In 2017, Peele was included on the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world. Peele's breakout role came in 2003, when he was hired as a cast member on the Fox sketch comedy series Mad TV, where he spent five seasons, leaving the show in 2008. In the following years, he and his frequent Mad TV collaborator, Keegan-Michael Key, created and starred in their own Comedy Central sketch comedy series Key & Peele (2012–2015). The series was critically acclaimed, winning two Primetime Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award. The two wrote, produced, and starred in the comedy film Keanu (2016) and appeared in various projects since. His 2017 directorial debut, the horror film Get Out, was a critical and box office success, for which he received numerous accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, along with nominations for Best Picture and Best Director. Critics have frequently named Get Out as one of the best films of the 21st century. He received another Academy Award nomination for Best Picture for producing Spike Lee's drama BlacKkKlansman (2018). He directed, wrote, and produced the acclaimed films Us (2019) and Nope (2022). He founded the film and television production company Monkeypaw Productions in 2012. He wrote and produced Candyman (2021), and Wendell and Wild (2022). Peele has also voice acted in the animated films Storks (2016), Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (2017) and Toy Story 4 (2019), as well as in the adult animated sitcom Big Mouth (2017–present). He co-created the TBS comedy series The Last O.G. (2018–2022) and the YouTube Premium comedy series Weird City (2019). He also served as the host and producer of the CBS All Access revival of the anthology series The Twilight Zone (2019–2020).

Jordan Peele

Bill Foster
for Bill Foster in MCU´s Ant-Man and the Wasp (Avengers 1980s)
Suggested by quasar99

This prequel to the MCU's Ant-Man trilogy is set in 1987, when Janet van Dyne disappears into the Quantum Realm. It tells of a conflict deliberately provoked by a newly awakened version of HYDRA during the Cold War. In a SHIELD lab, Howard Stark asks Hank Pym to give him the shrinking Pym particles to stop a group of radicals who have replicated HYDRA technology. Pym tells Stark that he will only use the particles himself. Peggy Carter supports Pym in this idea and trains him for the mission. He then sets off for Berlin to stop the radicals. Two days later, Pym learns about the Winter Soldier at a research centre in Berlin and attends a test of the Winter Soldier unnoticed, where he is to receive an attack order. Pym causes an explosion in the lab and believes he has incapacitated everyone present. Back at SHIELD, Pym learns from Stark who the Winter Soldier is and that Pym probably can't do anything against him because of the Super Soldier serum. Aware of the delicate situation, Stark and Carter assemble a team of Captain Britain, Wasp, Ant-Men, Black Goliath and the missing Isaiah Bradley (former Captain America) with the Black Panther's connection. The film ends with Wasp disappearing into the Quantum Realm after her sacrifice saved many lives and prevented a major conflict.





