
Age: 27
female
Lily-Rose Melody Depp (born 27 May 1999) is a French-American actress. Born to actors Johnny Depp and Vanessa Paradis, she began her acting career in film with a minor role in Tusk (2014). She pursued a career as a fashion model. She appeared in the period dramas The Dancer (2016) and The King (2019), as well as the romantic comedy A Faithful Man (2018). In 2023, Depp starred in the HBO television drama series The Idol and contributed to its soundtrack with her single "One of the Girls", which charted on the Billboard Hot 100and surpassed one billion streams on Spotify. She received praise for her starring role in the horror film Nosferatu (2024). Description above from the Wikipedia article Lily-Rose Depp, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Lily-Rose Depp

Annie Cresta
for Annie Cresta in Finnick Odair Prequel
Suggested by mazeflate

If Suzanne Collins continues her tradition of threes, a final Hunger Games prequel told from Finnick Odair’s perspective would be a natural, essential conclusion. With The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (Snow) and Sunrise on the Reaping (Haymitch), we’ve explored the roots of tyranny—Snow’s origin revealing how power corrupts through ambition and choice, and Sunrise showing how the Capitol enforces control through implicit submission. Though Haymitch won the second Quarter Quell in spectacular fashion, the Capitol censored his acts of rebellion, editing them from public view. Even readers, like the Capitol audience, once believed his Games were unremarkable. But rebellion existed long before Katniss. A Finnick novel could expand that truth. The youngest victor in history at just 14, Finnick was sold to Capitol elites, stripped of his family, and left with only Mags and Annie. Coming from a Career district, he likely trusted the Capitol at first—until survival taught him otherwise. His story would expose the grooming, commodification, and trauma inflicted on children in the name of entertainment—core themes rooted in Collins’s background in children’s media. Of all the victors, Finnick performs best—charming, smiling, and broken. His story would complete a trilogy not just of war, but of survival—and what it costs.
