
Age: 68
female
Michelle Marie Pfeiffer (/ˈfaɪfər/ FY-fər; born April 29, 1958) is an American actress. One of Hollywood's most bankable stars during the 1980s and 1990s, her performances have earned her numerous accolades including a Golden Globe Award and a British Academy Film Award, as well as nominations for three Academy Awards and a Primetime Emmy Award. Pfeiffer began her acting career with minor television and film appearances and secured her first lead role in Grease 2 (1982). Her breakthrough role as Elvira Hancock in Scarface (1983) propelled her into mainstream success, which continued with performances in The Witches of Eastwick (1987) and Tequila Sunrise (1988). Pfeiffer received her first of six consecutive Golden Globe Award nominations for Married to the Mob (1988). Her roles in Dangerous Liaisons (1988) and The Fabulous Baker Boys (1989) garnered her two consecutive Academy Award nominations, for Best Supporting Actress and Best Actress, respectively, and she won a Golden Globe Award for the latter. Cemented as one of the highest-paid actresses of the 1990s, Pfeiffer starred in The Russia House (1990) and Frankie and Johnny (1991). In 1992, she played Catwoman in Batman Returns and received her third Academy Award nomination for Love Field, which she followed up with performances in The Age of Innocence (1993) and Wolf (1994). She also produced several of her own features through her company, Via Rosa Productions, including Dangerous Minds (1995). Reducing her workload to prioritise her family, Pfeiffer acted sporadically throughout the 2000s, starring in What Lies Beneath (2000), White Oleander (2002), Hairspray, and Stardust (both 2007). Following another hiatus, Pfeiffer returned to prominence in 2017 with performances in Where Is Kyra?, Mother!, and Murder on the Orient Express, and received her first Primetime Emmy Award nomination for playing Ruth Madoff in The Wizard of Lies. In 2020, she received her eighth Golden Globe Award nomination for French Exit. Pfeiffer has played Janet van Dyne in the Marvel Cinematic Universe since 2018, beginning with Ant-Man and the Wasp. Description above from the Wikipedia article Michael Douglas, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Michelle Pfeiffer

Hedda Hopper
for Hedda Hopper in JAMES BYRON DEAN
Suggested by nickienicks

In 1955, a young man drives into legend - and leaves behind a life no one fully understood. James Byron Dean is a haunting, nonlinear portrait of James Dean, tracing his meteoric rise and unraveling identity across the final years of his life. Moving between his fractured Indiana childhood, his restless search for meaning in New York, and his volatile ascent in Hollywood, the series explores how a quiet, searching actor became the defining symbol of rebellion for a generation. Through intimate and often conflicting relationships - with confidant William Bast, tragic love Pier Angeli, and the powerful forces of the studio system - Dean is shaped, challenged, and ultimately consumed by the very image that makes him famous. Directors like Elia Kazan and Nicholas Ray see brilliance in his unpredictability, while Hollywood executives and gossip columnists begin crafting a myth that grows beyond his control. As Dean delivers raw, era-defining performances in East of Eden, Rebel Without a Cause, and Giant, the line between actor and role dissolves. Off-screen, his life becomes a patchwork of longing, reinvention, and contradiction - romanticized by the media, misunderstood by those closest to him, and driven by a need for connection he can never quite satisfy. Told through shifting perspectives and memory fragments, James Byron Dean reveals not just the man, but the making of an icon. By the time his life ends at just 24, the world has already begun rewriting him - transforming a restless young actor into an enduring symbol of youth, defiance, and the beauty of burning out too soon.