
Age: 44
female
Lauren Cohan (born January 7, 1982) is a British-American actress best known for her role as Maggie Greene in the AMC post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead (2011–2018; 2020–present). Her other notable TV roles include Bela Talbot in the dark fantasy drama Supernatural (2007–2008), Rose in the supernatural teen drama The Vampire Diaries (2010–2012), Vivian McArthur Volkoff in the action comedy Chuck (2011), and Francesca "Frankie" Trowbridge in the action comedy-drama Whiskey Cavalier (2019). Her film appearances include the comedy Van Wilder: The Rise of Taj (2006), the psychological thriller horror The Boy (2016), the biographical drama All Eyez on Me (2017), and the action thriller Mile 22 (2018).

Lauren Cohan

Abigail Roberts
for Abigail Roberts in Red Dead Redemption
Suggested by underworld_stories

In 1899, the outlaw era is dying. Arthur Morgan, senior enforcer of the Van der Linde gang, rides with Dutch van der Linde, a charismatic leader clinging to freedom as the modern world closes in. After a botched ferry robbery, the gang flees across America, hunted by the law and torn apart by paranoia, greed, and betrayal. Arthur carries out Dutch’s plans—robberies, debt collections, gunfights—but begins to question the cost. While collecting money from sick farmers and broken families, Arthur is diagnosed with tuberculosis, a death sentence. Facing his mortality, he begins helping others instead of taking from them, guiding the young and protecting the innocent where he can. Dutch grows unhinged, manipulated by the ruthless Micah Bell, who pushes the gang toward violence and betrayal. Longtime loyalties fracture. Arthur helps John Marston escape with his family, believing John still has a chance at a better life. As Pinkertons close in, Arthur turns against Micah and finally confronts Dutch’s failures. In the mountains, battered and dying, Arthur fights Micah one last time, buying John precious time to flee. The sunrise breaks over the valley as Arthur collapses, his strength gone but his conscience clear. He watches the world he never fit into move on without him. Arthur Morgan dies not as an outlaw, but as a man seeking redemption—his final act ensuring another can live free.