
Age: 39
male
Edward Patrick Holcroft is an English film, television, and stage actor. He is best known for his roles in the Kingsman film franchise and in the television series Wolf Hall (2015), London Spy (2015), and Alias Grace (2017). Holcroft is the second of three sons born to Lt. Col. Patrick Holcroft, a soldier and Kathleen "Annie" Holcroft (née Roberts), a former publisher at Condé Nast. His elder brother, Oliver Holcroft, is a former soldier who served with the Grenadier Guards in Afghanistan. Edward was sent to boarding school at age 8, first attending prep school at Summer Fields School in Oxford and then to a Roman Catholic school, Ampleforth College, in North Yorkshire. He initially wanted to become a professional drummer, having attended music school, but switched to acting after appearing in a play at Oxford Brookes University. He then undertook post-graduate studies in acting at the Drama Centre London of Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, graduating in 2012. Holcroft is best known for his roles as Charlie Hesketh in the film Kingsman: The Secret Service and its sequel Kingsman: The Golden Circle; as George Boleyn in the British drama series Wolf Hall; and as Alex Turner in the BBC drama series London Spy. In 2017, he appeared in the historical miniseries Gunpowder on the BBC and Alias Grace on Netflix and the CBC. Holcroft acted with Dominic West and Janet McTeer in Les Liaisons Dangereuses at the Donmar Warehouse.

Edward Holcroft

Ares
for Ares in Marvel Studios: Thor: Apocalypse of Zeus
Suggested by s105042

A soft kind alien warrior Beta Ray Bill lost his child from Zeus a long time ago, Beta fought on Sakaar with weak weapon but got lucky and they let them go, he studies lightning magic and the possibility to combined Mjolnir and Stormbreaker, he teams up with Thor, Love and Sif to face the greek gods lead by Zeus and Hercules. Sometime after the encounter with the Asgardians in Omnipotence City, Hercules met with his father, who had been injured during the skirmish by Thor. His father lamented that the name and status of the gods had been squandered by Thor's interactions with humanity and that they were no longer respected. He deduced that the gods would have to show humans why they are feared as gods again and tasked Hercules with taking out Thor, in which Hercules agreed to.

