
Age: 34
female
Kaya Rose Scodelario-Davis (née Humphrey; born 13 March 1992) is an English actress best known for her roles as Effy Stonem on the E4 teen drama Skins (2007–2010, 2013), and Teresa in the Maze Runner film series (2014–2018). Other roles include Catherine Earnshaw in Andrea Arnold's Wuthering Heights (2011), Carina Smyth in Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017), Carole Ann Boone in Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile (2019), Haley Keller in Crawl (2019), Katarina Baker in the Netflix original series Spinning Out (2020) and Claire Redfield in Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City (2021).

Kaya Scodelario

Detective Laura Stewart
for Detective Laura Stewart in GHOSTFACE
Suggested by colorvision

“GHOSTFACE” is a prestige horror anthology set within the Scream universe, expanding the mythology of the Woodsboro murders. Each season features a new group of characters in a different American city, haunted by a masked killer inspired by Ghostface. The series masterfully blends meta-commentary, layered mystery, and brutal suspense, exploring how true-crime culture and internet virality have transformed Ghostface into a cultural phenomenon. Created by Davyd Grayson for his streaming platform Showtube, the series honors the legacies of Kevin Williamson and Wes Craven while staying rooted in canon continuity, delving deeper into the franchise’s lore. Season 1 takes place in Ridgewood, Pennsylvania, in 2024—twenty-five years after a devastating Ghostface massacre. Sixteen-year-old Ethan Bennett grapples with the trauma of his father Jonathan’s near-fatal stabbing during the original spree. When a new murder mimics the past, it's evident that Ghostface has returned, fixating on Ethan. As cryptic messages and staged crime scenes emerge, buried truths from 1999 resurface, challenging Ridgewood's official narrative. With paranoia growing and the patterns of history repeating, Ethan must navigate a perilous game where survival hinges on confronting a legacy that refuses to die. Ghostface is no longer just a killer; it's an idea—one that proves resilient across generations.