
Age: 47
female
Rachel Anne McAdams (born November 17, 1978) is a Canadian actress. After graduating from a theatre degree program at York University in 2001, she worked in Canadian television and film productions, such as the drama film Perfect Pie (2002), for which she received a Genie Award nomination, the comedy film My Name Is Tanino (2002), and the comedy series Slings & Arrows (2003–2005), for which she won a Gemini Award. In 2002, she made her Hollywood film debut in the comedy The Hot Chick. She rose to fame in 2004 with the comedy Mean Girls and the romantic drama The Notebook. In 2005, she starred in the romantic comedy Wedding Crashers, the psychological thriller Red Eye, and the comedy-drama The Family Stone. She was hailed by the media as Hollywood's new "it girl" and received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Rising Star. After a hiatus, McAdams gained further prominence starring in the films The Time Traveller's Wife (2009), Sherlock Holmes (2009), Morning Glory (2010), Midnight in Paris (2011), The Vow (2012), and About Time (2013). For her portrayal of journalist Sacha Pfeiffer in the drama Spotlight (2015), she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. This was followed by roles in the superhero film Doctor Strange (2016) and its sequel Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022), the romantic drama Disobedience (2017), the comedies Game Night (2018) and Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (2020), and the comedy-drama Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. (2023). On television, she starred in the second season of the HBO anthology crime drama series True Detective (2015), earning a Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Miniseries or Movie nomination. She made her Broadway debut in the Amy Herzog play Mary Jane (2024), for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. Description above from the Wikipedia article Rachel McAdams, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Rachel McAdams

Janet van Dyne
for Janet van Dyne 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.





