
Age: 52
male
James Paul Marsden (born September 18, 1973) is an American actor. He began his acting career by guest-starring on the television shows Saved by the Bell: The New Class (1993), Touched by an Angel (1995), and Party of Five (1995). Marsden gained fame for his portrayal of Cyclops in the X-Men film series from 2000 to 2014, and for his roles in the films The Notebook (2004), Superman Returns (2006), Hairspray (2007), Enchanted (2007), 27 Dresses (2008), and Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (2013). He portrayed John F. Kennedy in the drama film The Butler (2013) and Tom Wachowski in the Sonic the Hedgehog film series (2020–present). Marsden starred in the science fiction series Westworld from 2016 to 2022 and in the black comedy series Dead to Me from 2019 to 2022, for which he received a nomination for a Critics' Choice Television Award. He played guest roles in the Modern Family (2011) and 30 Rock (2012–2013) sitcoms. He starred as a fictionalised version of himself in the mockumentary series Jury Duty (2023), for which he received nominations for a Golden Globe Award and a Primetime Emmy Award. Marsden has since starred in the thriller series Paradise (2025). Description above from the Wikipedia article James Marsden, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

A high-profile anniversary dinner in an upscale New York home is thrown into chaos the moment the first guests—Ken and Chris—step inside. They find their host, Charlie Brock, injured under mysterious circumstances, his wife Myra missing, and the entire house staff gone without explanation. Panicked and desperate to avoid a public scandal, they scramble to hide what’s happened just as the remaining guests arrive. Soon Lenny and Claire walk into the uneasy atmosphere, instantly sensing that something is off. Moments later, Glenn and Cassandra, an ambitious couple already locked in their own personal drama, join the gathering—and every new arrival only adds more confusion to the fragile cover story. Things get even more tangled when Ernie, a cheerful therapist with a habit of trying to fix everyone’s problems, enters the mix. Unaware of the truth, he interprets every odd detail in the most unhelpful way possible—fueling new misunderstandings and spiraling the room into deeper chaos. With lies piling up and explanations collapsing, the guests juggle half-truths, misplaced assumptions, and rising paranoia, all while trying to keep the night from erupting into a full-blown disaster. The elegant dinner quickly turns into a frantic scramble to protect reputations, save friendships, and preserve whatever sanity they have left. As tempers flare and pressure mounts, it becomes clear: the real madness isn’t the mystery itself—it’s the guests trying to survive it.
