
Age: 38
female
Vanessa Nuala Kirby is an English actress. She rose to international prominence with her portrayal of Princess Margaret in the Netflix drama series The Crown (2016–2017), for which she won the BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress. For her performance in the film Pieces of a Woman (2020), she won the Volpi Cup for Best Actress. She received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Kirby made her professional acting debut on stage, with acclaimed performances in the plays All My Sons (2010), A Midsummer Night's Dream (2010), Women Beware Women (2011), Three Sisters (2012), and as Stella Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire (2014). She also appeared in the action films Mission: Impossible – Fallout (2018), Hobbs & Shaw (2019), and The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025), and portrayed Empress Joséphine in the historical drama Napoleon (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Vanessa Kirby, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

On the lawless frontier of Canaan, the scars of violence still bleed. The civil war, known as The Severance, ended in a fragile ceasefire between the two dominant races: The Maruuns - Indigenous settlers of the land, long oppressed and displaced. The Ravari - Off-world colonizers who came with promises of civilization and left it in ashes. Saint Graves, a Maruun war veteran turned bounty hunter, roams the frontier with a long-barreled energy rifle and a haunted conscience. Once a sniper in the war’s deadliest campaigns, he now hunts fugitives and war criminals—not for justice, but penance. But when a failed bounty puts a strange Ravari girl in his protection, Graves finds himself pursued by a far greater threat. The New Pentecost, a rising religious cult led by the messianic Father Leon Varn, believes the girl is the key to awakening an ancient AI god buried beneath Canaan’s crust. Varn claims this god will rewrite the world and purify it of “historical rot.” And he’ll scorch every township, memory, and bloodline to make it happen.
