
Age: 55
female
Sarah Kate Silverman (born December 1, 1970) is an American comedian, actress, and writer. Her comedy addresses social taboos and controversial topics, including racism, sexism, homophobia, politics, and religion, sometimes having her comic character endorse them in a satirical or deadpan fashion. She has won two Primetime Emmy Awards for her work on television. Silverman was a writer and performer on Saturday Night Live, and she starred in and produced The Sarah Silverman Program, which ran from 2007 to 2010 on Comedy Central, for which she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series. She released an autobiography The Bedwetter in 2010. She also appeared in other television programs, such as Mr. Show and V.I.P. and starred in films, including Who's the Caboose? (1997), School of Rock (2003), Wreck-It Ralph (2012), A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014) and Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018). In 2015, she starred in the drama I Smile Back, for which she was nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role. During the 2016 election, she became increasingly politically active; she initially campaigned for Bernie Sanders but later spoke in support of Hillary Clinton at the 2016 Democratic National Convention. She hosted the Hulu streaming television late-night talk show I Love You, America with Sarah Silverman from 2017 until late 2018. Description above from the Wikipedia article Sarah Silverman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Sarah Silverman

Mrs. Anita Atwater
for Mrs. Anita Atwater in Rope
Suggested by sepanta_kazemi

Two brilliant but dangerously arrogant young men, Brandon and Philip, commit what they believe is the “perfect murder,” strangling a former classmate to prove an intellectual point. Seeking the thrill of superiority, they hide the body in a chest… then invite the victim’s friends and family over for a dinner party—using that same chest as the serving table. As guests mingle unaware, the tension grows unbearable. Brandon revels in the secret, treating the murder like an elegant philosophical experiment. Philip, wracked with guilt, begins to unravel. But it’s their former mentor, Rupert Cadell, a sharp-minded professor with a taste for moral debate, who senses something off. His curiosity turns into suspicion as the evening drifts from polite conversation to chilling glimpses of the boys’ twisted beliefs. Every movement in the room becomes a ticking clock, every remark a test of conscience. What began as an intellectual game soon threatens to collapse under the weight of their own philosophy—and the presence of a man clever enough to expose it.