
Age: 47
female
Rachel Anne McAdams (born November 17, 1978) is a Canadian actress. After graduating from a theatre degree program at York University in 2001, she worked in Canadian television and film productions, such as the drama film Perfect Pie (2002), for which she received a Genie Award nomination, the comedy film My Name Is Tanino (2002), and the comedy series Slings & Arrows (2003–2005), for which she won a Gemini Award. In 2002, she made her Hollywood film debut in the comedy The Hot Chick. She rose to fame in 2004 with the comedy Mean Girls and the romantic drama The Notebook. In 2005, she starred in the romantic comedy Wedding Crashers, the psychological thriller Red Eye, and the comedy-drama The Family Stone. She was hailed by the media as Hollywood's new "it girl" and received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Rising Star. After a hiatus, McAdams gained further prominence starring in the films The Time Traveller's Wife (2009), Sherlock Holmes (2009), Morning Glory (2010), Midnight in Paris (2011), The Vow (2012), and About Time (2013). For her portrayal of journalist Sacha Pfeiffer in the drama Spotlight (2015), she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. This was followed by roles in the superhero film Doctor Strange (2016) and its sequel Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022), the romantic drama Disobedience (2017), the comedies Game Night (2018) and Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (2020), and the comedy-drama Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. (2023). On television, she starred in the second season of the HBO anthology crime drama series True Detective (2015), earning a Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Miniseries or Movie nomination. She made her Broadway debut in the Amy Herzog play Mary Jane (2024), for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. Description above from the Wikipedia article Rachel McAdams, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Rachel McAdams

June George
for June George in Mean girls remake
Suggested by michaeljustice

Synopsis — Mean Girls (2025) When 16-year-old Cady Heron transfers from years of homeschooling abroad to the hyper-connected world of North Shore High, she discovers that navigating social media drama is far more dangerous than any wildlife she encountered in Kenya. Drawn in by the seemingly flawless “New Plastics” — Regina George, the viral trendsetter; Gretchen Wieners, the gossip queen desperate for validation; and Karen Shetty, the lovable but clueless influencer — Cady enters a world where popularity is tracked by followers, secrets are screenshotted, and reputations can be destroyed with a single post. What begins as a plan to take down Regina from the inside spirals into a whirlwind of TikTok feuds, digital pranks, romantic mix-ups, and a full-blown online meltdown that engulfs the entire school. As Cady loses herself in the chase for clout, she must confront the cost of becoming the very thing she set out to stop. In this sharp, funny, and updated retelling, Mean Girls (2025) examines friendship, identity, and the brutal pressures of modern teenage life — proving that while technology has changed the battlefield, girl world is still as savage as ever.





