
Age: 48
male
Matthew Staton Bomer (born October 11, 1977) is an American actor. He is the recipient of accolades such as a Golden Globe Award, a Critics' Choice Television Award, and a Primetime Emmy Award nomination. In 2000, he made his television debut on the long-running soap opera All My Children. Bomer graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. Soon after, he had a contract role on Guiding Light, as well as appearing on primetime shows, including Tru Calling. In 2005, Bomer made his film debut in the mystery-thriller Flightplan, then in 2007 gained recognition with his recurring role in the NBC television series Chuck. 2009 saw Bomer then land the lead role of con-artist and thief Neal Caffrey in the USA Network series White Collar with the series lasting to 2014. He has featured in supporting roles in the 2011 science fiction thriller In Time, the 2012 comedy-drama Magic Mike and its 2015 sequel, the 2014 supernatural-drama Winter's Tale, and the 2016 neo-noir film The Nice Guys. In 2015, he won a Golden Globe Award and received a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for playing a closeted writer of The New York Times in the drama television film The Normal Heart about the rise of the HIV-AIDS crisis in New York City. Bomer made a guest appearance on the fourth season of FX's horror anthology series American Horror Story. He was later upgraded to the main cast during the fifth season. In 2017 he received praise for his performances in the drama films Walking Out, Anything, and the 2018 comedy-drama Papi Chulo. He portrays Larry Trainor in the DC Universe series Doom Patrol, which premiered in 2019. On stage, Bomer starred in the Dustin Lance Black play 8 on Broadway, and at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre in Los Angeles as Jeff Zarrillo, a plaintiff in the federal case that overturned California's Proposition 8. In 2018 he starred in revival of the Mart Crowley play The Boys in the Band on Broadway playing Donald; he reprised his role for the 2020 film of the same name.

We join the bigger world of superheroism as we find ourselves with a series of individuals who have been regularly teaming up to fight crime for some time now, but they're not a team. Not yet. They barely even know each other. They team up simply because it's easier. Less of an actual team-up, and more just fighting the same criminals at the same time. Then several super-powered individuals (The Crime Syndicate), eerily seemingly alike several of our heroes, are transported to Earth from another universe, and as each one of them are confronted by Earth's heroes, battles ensue. After the "Crime Syndicate" members get away, the heroes group and recollect themselves. As they struggle to stop the "Crime Syndicate's" havoc on Earth, they realize that they have to fight together, actually together, to stop the threat. They need to cooperate; they need to trust each other. And they eventually do. The heroes eventually learn that the transported meta-humans' Earth was invaded by an evil entity who killed all the other heroes of their world, which made the "Crime Syndicate" decide to travel to another Earth, and claim that one as their own, inadvertently becoming the very thing they were trying to escape, and our heroes help the Syndicate reclaim their Earth from the evil entity Amazo. The heroes return to their Earth a team, hailed by the public. Before the credits roll, we see the officially formed Justice League ready to defend the Earth from the intergalactic conqueror, Starro.



