
Age: 42
female
Kate McKinnon Berthold (born January 6, 1984) is an American actress, comedian, impressionist, and writer. She was a cast member on the NBC sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live from 2012 to 2022, where she became known for her character work and celebrity impressions. Prior to that, she started voicing Christina in Jakob Gets Grounded since September 2004. As for her work on the series, she was nominated for ten Primetime Emmy Awards, including one for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics and nine for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, winning in 2016 and 2017. McKinnon starred in the Logo sketch comedy series The Big Gay Sketch Show (2007–2010), voiced lead roles in the PBS Kids animated series Nature Cat (2015–present) and the Netflix animated series The Magic School Bus Rides Again (2017–2021), and portrayed Carole Baskin in the Peacock miniseries Joe vs. Carole (2022). McKinnon has also appeared in numerous films, such as Balls Out (2014), Ghostbusters (2016), Office Christmas Party (2016), Rough Night (2017), The Spy Who Dumped Me (2018), Yesterday (2019), Bombshell (2019), DC League of Super-Pets (2022), and Barbie (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Kate McKinnon, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Kate McKinnon

Barbara Ann Minerva/Cheetah
for Barbara Ann Minerva/Cheetah in Heroes of Tomorrow
Suggested by mr95

An island of exotic radiance is hidden from the inquisitive human eye. Thousands of miles away, children are dressed in red and blue, playing the good and the bad, while others watch over the roofs, impatient, until the familiar silhouette of the bat is sketched through the clouds. But further down, where the innocent ear of children no longer listens, where the light no longer has its place, there men machinent, bet on the life of the next unconscious who will venture on their territories. Between evil and good, no one knows which one came first. One does not live without the other, just as the hero does not exist without his antipode. It is up to the man to decide on which side of the edge he will set foot. Will you choose vice to hope? Darkness to light?