
Age: 57
male
Peter Hayden Dinklage (born June 11, 1969) is an American actor. Portraying Tyrion Lannister on the HBO television series Game of Thrones (2011–2019), Dinklage won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series a record four times. He also received a Golden Globe Award in 2011 and a Screen Actors Guild Award in 2020 for the role. Born in the Jersey Shore region of New Jersey, Dinklage studied acting at Bennington College, performing in a number of amateur stage productions. He made his film debut in the black comedy film Living in Oblivion (1995), and had his breakthrough with a starring role in the 2003 comedy-drama The Station Agent. His other films include Elf (2003), Lassie and The Baxter (both in 2005), Find Me Guilty (2006), Penelope (2006), Death at a Funeral (2007), The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (2008), Death at a Funeral (2010), X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017), The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023), and Wicked (2024). In 2018, he appeared as Eitri in the Marvel film Avengers: Infinity War, and as Hervé Villechaize in the biopic film My Dinner with Hervé. He also provided voice-acting for the video game Destiny, and in 2023, he voiced Scourge in Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. On television, he also starred in the series Dexter: Resurrection in 2025. Dinklage has also performed in theater, with roles including the title character in Richard III (2003) at the Public Theatre, Rakitin in A Month in the Country (2015) at Classic Stage Company, and Cyrano de Bergerac in Cyrano at the Daryl Roth Theatre in 2019. Description above is from the Wikipedia article Peter Dinklage.

Peter Dinklage

Stewie Griffin
for Stewie 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.