
Age: 38
female
Janine Harouni is a UK-based American stand-up comedian and actress. Harouni was raised in Staten Island, New York City by a Lebanese-American father and a mother of Irish and Italian ancestry. In 2009, Harouni was grievously injured when a car crashed into a parked vehicle she was in, breaking her pelvis, femur, legs, and wrists. She moved to London in 2012. In 2018, Harouni won the Laughing Horse New Act of the Year. She won the BBC New Comedy Award in 2019 In 2019, Harouni performed a well received debut show, Stand Up with Janine Harouni (Please Remain Seated) at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. She was nominated for the Best Newcomer Award at that year's Edinburgh Comedy Awards. She returned to the Fringe in 2023, performing Man'oushe while heavily pregnant, and was nominated for the main Edinburgh Comedy Award. Harouni played Thalia in the ITV show Buffering from 2021–2023, and appeared as Carla Diaz in The Batman (2022).

Seperate from the MCU, Plunges into the eerie origins of Bruce Banner, a brilliant yet tormented scientist working on a classified Gamma Bomb project for the military. When a fateful test goes awry, Bruce heroically saves young Rick Jones, but at a horrifying cost—exposing himself to lethal gamma radiation. The accident triggers his transformation into a monstrous, grey-skinned Hulk with glowing green eyes, a creature of immense strength and unrelenting rage. Haunted by his actions and hunted by the military, Bruce struggles to control the savage force within him. As General Ross views the Hulk as a weapon to be exploited or eliminated, Bruce seeks solace in his former love, Betty Ross, who is determined to help him find redemption despite the growing horrors surrounding them. Meanwhile, a rogue scientific team, later known as the U-Foes, attempts to replicate Banner's experiments. But their twisted ambitions spiral out of control, leaving them grotesquely disfigured and transformed into horrifying abominations. They set their sights on revenge, believing Banner and the Hulk to be the cause of their suffering.
