
Age: 76
male
Gabriel James Byrne (born 12 May 1950) is an Irish actor. He has received a Golden Globe Award and nominations for a Grammy Award, two Primetime Emmy Awards and two Tony Awards. Byrne was awarded the Irish Film and Television Academy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018 and was listed at number 17 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's greatest film actors in 2020. In 2009, The Guardian named him one of the best actors who never received an Academy Award nomination. Byrne's acting career began at the Focus Theatre in Dublin before he joined London's Royal Court Theatre in 1974. His screen debut came in the Irish drama serial The Riordans and the spin-off show Bracken. He went on to star in such films as Defence of the Realm (1986), Lionheart (1987), Miller's Crossing (1990), Little Women (1994), Dead Man (1995), The Usual Suspects (1995), The Man in the Iron Mask (1998), Enemy of the State (1998), Vanity Fair (2004), The 33 (2015), and Hereditary (2018). He co-wrote The Last of the High Kings (1996) and produced In the Name of the Father (1993). For his Broadway work, Byrne has received two nominations for the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for his roles in the Eugene O'Neill plays A Moon for the Misbegotten (2000) and Long Day's Journey into Night (2016). For his television work, Byrne has received two nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his role as Paul Weston in the HBO drama series In Treatment (2008–2010). He also received a Golden Globe Award. His other notable television roles include Vikings (2013), Maniac (2018), and War of the Worlds (2019–2022). Description above from the Wikipedia article Gabriel Byrne, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Gabriel Byrne

Enrico Marini
for Enrico Marini in Resident Evil (1996)
Suggested by freddyfan0130

The Spencer Mansion was constructed in the Arklay Mountains in the 1960s by George Trevor, an architect who subsequently disappeared. The mansion housed an underground laboratory used by Umbrella Pharmaceuticals for top-secret bio-weapons development on behalf of the US military. Soon after the ε strain's completion in 1998, the virus broke out and infected the staff, causing noticeable necrosis of the skin, and severe brain damage which limits their intelligence and triggers the excessive production of hormones, making them murderously angry; obsessively hungry, and growing several inches. In their volatile state, they are unable to prevent their mutant test-subjects escaping, leading to a number of deaths of hikers and suburban factories. In July 1998, the Raccoon Police Department, unable to solve the murder and animal attack cases, hands over the investigation to S.T.A.R.S., an elite law-enforcement unit funded by Umbrella.