
Age: 71
male
Denzel Hayes Washington Jr. (born December 28, 1954) is an American actor, producer, and director. Known for his dramatic roles on stage and screen, he is widely regarded as one of the best actors of his generation, with The New York Times declaring him the greatest actor of the 21st century in 2020. Over his career, he has received several accolades, including two Academy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Tony Award, as well as nominations for two Emmy Awards and a Grammy Award. Washington has been honoured with the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2016, the AFI Life Achievement Award in 2019, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2022. After training at the American Conservatory Theatre, Washington began his career in theatre, acting in performances off-Broadway. He first came to prominence in the NBC medical drama series St. Elsewhere (1982–1988) and in the war film A Soldier's Story (1984). He won two Academy Awards, his first for Best Supporting Actor for playing an American Civil War soldier in the war drama Glory (1989) and his second for Best Actor for playing a corrupt police officer in the crime thriller Training Day (2001). He was Oscar-nominated for his performances in Cry Freedom (1987), Malcolm X (1992), The Hurricane (1999), Flight (2012), Fences (2016), Roman J. Israel, Esq. (2017), and The Tragedy of Macbeth (2021). A prominent leading man, Washington also acted in Mo' Better Blues (1990), Mississippi Masala (1991), Philadelphia (1993), Courage Under Fire (1996), Remember the Titans (2000), Man on Fire (2004), Inside Man (2006), American Gangster (2007), and The Equalizer trilogy (2014–2023). Washington directed and starred in the films Antwone Fisher (2002), The Great Debaters (2007), and Fences (2016). On stage, he has acted in productions of both Coriolanus (1979) and The Tragedy of Richard III (1990) at the Public Theater. He made his Broadway debut in the Ron Milner play Checkmates (1988). He won the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for his role as a disillusioned working-class father in the Broadway revival of August Wilson's play Fences (2010). He has also acted in the Broadway revivals of William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar (2005), Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun (2014), and Eugene O'Neill's play The Iceman Cometh (2018).

Denzel Washington

Osiris
for Osiris in Echidna and Offspring: The Shadow covering the Land of Sunshine
Suggested by jeanpaulvalley

A year after having prevented the Rägnarok from destroying the Earth and the various worlds connected to the Nordic Pantheon, Echidna and her offspring are more than ever seen as heroes throughout this world which is called to change. However, the peace is only relative, because the particular family receives the visit of Anubis, the God of the Dead for the Egyptians, who warns them of the coming of a catastrophic threat against which his lord, Ra, God of the sun of this pantheon, fight. Apophis, the gigantic snake wanting to destroy the World, gains ground against the Falcon God and Anubis humbly asks for help from the family of "monsters", against the advice of his family. However, once in Egypt, our heroes realize two important things. First, the monster is controlled by Seth, the god of evil of the Egyptians, who wants to take the place of Ra, his own father. And, above all, Apophis is actually Typhon, the father of the children of Echidna, who was brainwashed by Seth ! Faced with this horrible discovery, our heroes will do everything to save this world... while also hoping to be able to save their father, whose absence in their lives has weighed heavily on them for millennia, especially for the youngest, Echidnaness, who never known him...