
Age: 48
male
William Thomas Hader Jr. (born June 7, 1978) is an American actor, voice actor, comedian, writer and producer. He is the creator, producer, writer, director, and star of the HBO dark comedy series Barry (2018–2023), for which he has been nominated for eight Emmy Awards, winning two. Hader's initial success was for his eight-year stint (2005–2013) as a cast member on the long-running NBC variety series Saturday Night Live, for which he received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations and a Peabody Award. He became known for his impressions and especially for his work on the Weekend Update segments, in which he played Stefon Meyers, a flamboyant New York tour guide who recommends unusual nightclubs and parties with bizarre characters with unusual tastes. He is also the star and producer of the IFC mockumentary comedy series Documentary Now! (2015–present) which he co-created along with Fred Armisen and Seth Meyers. Hader has had supporting roles in the films You, Me and Dupree (2006), Hot Rod (2007), Superbad (2007), Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008), Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, (2009), Paul (2011), This Is 40 (2012), and 22 Jump Street (2014), as well as leading roles in The Skeleton Twins (2014), Trainwreck (2015), and as an adult Richie Tozier in It Chapter Two (2019). He also is known for his extensive work in voice-over, portraying both leading and supporting characters in films such as the Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs franchise (2009–2013), Turbo (2013), Inside Out (2015), The BFG (2016), Power Rangers (2017), Toy Story 4 (2019) and Lightyear (2022).

Bill Hader

Glenn Quagmire
for Glenn Quagmire in Family Guy: The Movie (Live-Action)
Suggested by kaueoliveira

"Family Guy: The Movie" is a meta-satirical disaster film. The premise is that the "cartoon reality" of Quahog is collapsing because the Fox Network (now Disney) wants to cancel them for being too offensive. Peter Griffin, realizing his universe is becoming "real" (flesh and blood), must lead his family on a road trip across a terrifyingly realistic United States to Los Angeles to save their show. The humor translates the cartoon violence into shocking live-action realism. The Chicken Fight is a 10-minute, John Wick-style brutal action sequence. Stewie’s weapons are terrifyingly high-tech. Peter’s stupidity has real-world consequences. The film balances the gross-out humor with a surprisingly high-stakes plot about a family of dysfunctional sociopaths learning to love their three-dimensional forms.