
Age: 50
female
Judith Therese Evans (born July 20, 1975), known professionally as Judy Greer, is an American actress. She is primarily known as a character actress who has appeared in various films. She rose to prominence for her supporting roles in the films Jawbreaker (1999), What Women Want (2000), 13 Going on 30 (2004), Elizabethtown (2005), 27 Dresses (2008), and Love & Other Drugs (2010). Greer expanded into multiple genres with roles in films, such as The Wedding Planner (2001), Adaptation (2002), The Village (2004), The Descendants (2011), Jeff, Who Lives at Home (2011), Carrie (2013), Men, Women & Children (2014), Grandma (2015), Lemon (2017), Where'd You Go, Bernadette (2019), Uncle Frank (2020), and Hollywood Stargirl (2022). She appeared in numerous blockbusters, such as Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014) and its sequel War for the Planet of the Apes (2017), Jurassic World (2015), Halloween (2018) and its sequel Halloween Kills (2021), and the Marvel Cinematic Universe films Ant-Man (2015), Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018), and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023). She made her directorial debut with the comedy-drama film A Happening of Monumental Proportions (2017). Greer is best known on television for her starring voice role as Cheryl Tunt in the FXX animated comedy series Archer (2009–2023) and Lina Bowman in the FX sitcom Married (2014–2015). She also appeared in the comedy series The Big Bang Theory (2007–2019), Arrested Development (2003–2006, 2013–2019), Two and a Half Men (2003–2015), It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2007–2011), Kidding (2018–2020), Let's Go Luna! (2018–2022), and Reboot (2022). Description above from the Wikipedia article Judy Greer, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Judy Greer

Lois Griffin
for Lois Griffin 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.