
Age: 37
male
Daniel Kaluuya (/kəˈluːjə/; born 24 February 1989) is a British actor and filmmaker. His work encompasses both screen and stage, and his accolades include an Academy Award, two British Academy Film Awards, and a Golden Globe Award. In 2021, he was named among the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine. Kaluuya began his acting career as a teenager in improvisational theatre. He played Posh Kenneth in the first two seasons of the television series Skins (2007–2009); he also co-wrote some of the episodes. Kaluuya drew praise for his leading performance in Sucker Punch at the Royal Court Theatre in 2010. He went on to gain attention for his television roles in Psychoville (2009–2011), The Fades (2011), and the Black Mirror episode "Fifteen Million Merits" (2011). He also had supporting roles in the films Johnny English Reborn (2011), Kick-Ass 2 (2013), and Sicario (2015). In 2017, Kaluuya had his breakthrough starring in Jordan Peele's horror film Get Out, which garnered him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor. This was followed by roles in Ryan Coogler's superhero film Black Panther (2018), Steve McQueen's crime drama Widows (2018), Peele's horror film Nope (2022), and Sony Pictures Animation's animated superhero film Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023). For his portrayal of Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton in the biopic Judas and the Black Messiah (2021), he won the BAFTA and Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. He has since co-directed the drama The Kitchen (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Daniel Kaluuya, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Daniel Kaluuya

dick haloran
for dick haloran in it welcome to derry (2015)
Suggested by comicboy

We all know It, and we all know Welcome to Derry. All the work that the Argentinian Andy Muschietti has done with the franchise will be forever etched in the memory of future generations, and that's why today, after a long break, I'm returning with a new version of this story. This time, the cast I'm presenting is a hypothetical scenario: what would have happened if the Welcome to Derry series had been a prequel to my version of It, released a decade before the one directed by Muschietti? Unlike the other cast, here the timeline remains the same, with 27 years of gaps, and I will respect the chronology of the films, only a decade earlier. That is, the Losers defeated It in 2014, their first encounter would be in 1987, placing this version of Welcome to Derry in 1960.