
Age: 38
female
Mae Margaret Whitman (born June 9, 1988) is an American actress and singer. She began acting in commercials as a child, making her film debut at the age of six in the romantic drama When a Man Loves a Woman (1994). She achieved recognition as a child actress for her supporting roles in One Fine Day (1996), Independence Day (1996), Hope Floats (1998), and her television roles on Chicago Hope (1996–1999), JAG (1998–2001) and State of Grace (2001-2002). Whitman gained mainstream attention for her recurring role as Ann Veal on the Fox sitcom Arrested Development (2004–2006, 2013), as Amber Holt on the NBC drama series Parenthood (2010–2015), and as Annie Marks on the NBC crime comedy Good Girls (2018–2021). For her work on Parenthood, she was nominated for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series. Whitman ventured into mature film roles with Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010) and The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012), and made her leading role film debut in The DUFF (2015), for which she received critical praise and a Teen Choice Award nomination. Whitman established herself as a prominent voice actor in children's film and television for her voice performances as Little Suzy in Johnny Bravo (1997–2004), Shanti in The Jungle Book 2 (2003), Katara in the Nickelodeon cartoon Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005–2008), Rose/Huntsgirl on American Dragon: Jake Long (2005–2007), Tinker Bell in eponymous films, Wonder Girl / Cassie Sandsmark in Young Justice (2012–2022), April O'Neil in the 2012 incarnation of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Amity Blight in The Owl House (2020–2023).

Mae Whitman

Leafy
for Leafy in Battle for Dream Island. The Movie
Suggested by maksimzagoskin

After a mysterious cosmic event strikes the island, familiar landscapes begin to fracture—oceans bend upward, forests shift overnight, and time itself seems to stutter. What starts as a strange curiosity quickly escalates into a full-scale crisis as contestants from across Dream Island are forced to confront a reality that no longer follows the rules they know. As chaos spreads, unlikely alliances form. Old rivalries are put on hold, friendships are tested, and every contestant must decide what Dream Island truly means to them. With no host to guide them and no clear enemy to face, the group realizes that survival will depend not on competition, but cooperation. The journey takes them across warped versions of Dream Island—beautiful, haunting, and dangerous—where the island’s past, present, and possible futures collide. Along the way, one of their own becomes deeply connected to the island’s instability, holding the key to either restoring balance or losing everything they’ve ever known. In a final stand against the unraveling of their world, the contestants must face the truth: Dream Island is more than a place—it’s a fragile dream shaped by those who inhabit it.