
Age: 56
male
Simon John Pegg (né Beckingham; 14 February 1970) is an English actor, comedian and screenwriter. He came to prominence in the UK as the co-creator of the Channel 4 sitcom Spaced (1999–2001), directed by Edgar Wright. He and Wright co-wrote the films Shaun of the Dead (2004), Hot Fuzz (2007), and The World's End (2013), known collectively as the Three Flavours Cornetto trilogy, all of which saw Wright directing and Pegg starring alongside Nick Frost. Pegg and Frost also wrote and starred in the sci-fi comedy film Paul (2011). Pegg is one of the few performers to have achieved what Radio Times calls the "Holy Grail of Nerd-dom", having played popular supporting characters in Doctor Who (2005), Star Trek as Montgomery "Scotty" Scott (2009–2016), and Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015). He stars as Benji Dunn in the Mission: Impossible film series (2006–present). He provided the voice of Buck in Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009), Ice Age: Collision Course(2016), and The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild (2022).

Simon Pegg

Peter Gregson
for Peter Gregson in Imhotep : Hero or Monster
Suggested by jeanpaulvalley

Nearly five thousand years ago, at the time of the pyramids, the high priest Imhotep, along with the royal court, were murdered by traitors who wanted to overthrow the crown. He, and Pharaoh Ahmanet, were cursed and mummified alive before being locked up in Hamunaptra. In 2020, Imhotep is however accidentally awakened by researchers and he realizes that his beloved Egypt is falling into Chaos because of a private army led by a rich unscrupulous criminal, so he intends to use his great powers to solve the problem. However, he will not be alone, because Ahmanet, who had already been awakening for several decades, returns to her country with some other extraordinary beings with whom she works as a team around the world and forms a family. Remembering the past, she will do anything to help her former vizier and friend, whom she is happy to find again, but the curse seems to have made him worse than before. In such a context, will Imhotep become a new figure of hope... or another face of oppression ?