
Age: 33
female
Miley Ray Cyrus (born Destiny Hope Cyrus, November 23, 1992) is an American singer, songwriter, and actress. Dubbed the "Pop Chameleon", she has been recognized for her musical versatility and continual artistic reinventions. Cyrus has been referred to as the "Teen Queen" of the 2000s pop culture and regarded as one of the few examples of a child star who went on to have a successful career as an adult. One of six siblings, Cyrus is the second daughter of country singer Billy Ray Cyrus. She emerged as a teen idol while portraying the titular character of the Disney Channel television series Hannah Montana (2006–2011). As Hannah Montana, she attained two number-one and three top-five soundtracks on the Billboard 200, and the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 top-ten single "He Could Be the One". Cyrus's initial solo career consisted of the teen-friendly pop rock U.S. number-one albums Meet Miley Cyrus (2007) and Breakout (2008); these releases contained the US top-ten singles "See You Again" and "7 Things". The extended play The Time of Our Lives (2009), peaked at number two in the U.S; its lead single "Party in the U.S.A." became one of the best-selling singles in the United States and was certified diamond by the RIAA. Cyrus also released the country pop ballad "The Climb", which peaked at number four. Trying to reinvent her image, she explored dance-pop in her third album, Can't Be Tamed (2010). The record received mixed reviews; however, its title track reached the top ten in the U.S. Following a hiatus, she underwent a mature and provocative musical shift with the R&B and hip hop-infused Bangerz (2013). Featuring the top-five single "We Can't Stop" and Cyrus's first U.S. number-one "Wrecking Ball", it became her fifth number-one album and earned Cyrus her first Grammy Award nomination. She experimented with psychedelic music on her follow-up, the free album Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz (2015), embraced country pop on Younger Now (2017), which yielded the U.S. top-ten single "Malibu", and incorporated trap on the EP She Is Coming (2019). Cyrus explored rock on Plastic Hearts (2020), which topped the Billboard Top Rock Albums chart. Her next, Endless Summer Vacation (2023), was preceded by the lead single "Flowers", which set several streaming records and became her second U.S. number-one single. Outside of her music, Cyrus starred in the films Bolt (2008), Hannah Montana: The Movie (2009), The Last Song (2010), LOL (2012), and So Undercover (2013), and appeared in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017). On television, she led and produced the documentary, Miley: The Movement (2013), served as a coach on the singing competition series The Voice (2016–2017), starred in the "Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too" episode from the Netflix series Black Mirror (2019), hosts the yearly NBC holiday special Miley's New Year's Eve Party (2021–present), and starred in and executive produced the Disney+ documentary concert special, Endless Summer Vacation (Backyard Sessions) (2023). In 2014, she founded the non-profit organization Happy Hippie Foundation, which was supported by the web video series Backyard Sessions (2012–2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Miley Cyrus, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Miley Cyrus

Ursula Andress
for Ursula Andress 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.