
Age: 54
female
Christina Applegate (born November 25, 1971) is an American actress and dancer. As a child actress, she started playing the role of Kelly Bundy on the Fox sitcom Married...with Children (1987–1997). In her adult years, Applegate established a film and television career, winning an Emmy Award (for her guest role in the sitcom Friends) and earning Tony and Golden Globe nominations. Applegate has had major roles in several films, including Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead (1991), The Big Hit (1998), The Sweetest Thing (2002), Grand Theft Parsons (2003), Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) and its sequel Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (2013), Hall Pass (2011), Vacation (2015), and Bad Moms (2016). She has also starred in the 2005 Broadway revival of the musical Sweet Charity, for which she received a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical. Applegate has played the lead role in the television sitcoms Jesse (1998–2000), Samantha Who? (2007–2009) and Up All Night (2011–12), and in the Netflix dark tragicomedy series Dead to Me (2019–2022).

Christina Applegate

Kate Charles
for Kate Charles in On Scene Again
Suggested by jakubduda

Fizzy Brains were not just a band — they were a phenomenon. At their peak, they sold out arenas, toured the world, and defined a generation. Music wasn’t a job; it was everything. Fame, freedom, chaos, love. Until real life caught up. As the years passed: relationships grew fragile marriages demanded stability children changed priorities egos clashed behind closed doors What the public never saw was the slow collapse: arguments in hotel rooms, missed birthdays, creative control fights, silence between rehearsals. One night, after a disastrous final concert, Fizzy Brains break up — suddenly, publicly, painfully. Years later, each member lives a different, quieter life. The music still echoes in their heads, but the band feels like a closed chapter. Until a chance encounter, an unfinished song, and a realization: They didn’t break up because the music died — they broke up because they stopped listening to each other. Against everyone’s expectations, they decide to reunite. Not for fame. Not for money. But to see if what they had was ever real. They step on scene again — older, scarred, unsure — facing the question: Can something legendary survive real life?