
Age: 50
male
Corey Daniel Stoll (born March 14, 1976) is an American actor. He is best known for his roles as Congressman Peter Russo on the Netflix political thriller series House of Cards (2013–2016), for which he received a Golden Globe nomination in 2013, and Dr. Ephraim Goodweather on the FX horror drama series The Strain (2014–2017). From 2020 to 2023, he portrayed Michael Prince, a business rival to protagonist Bobby Axelrod, in the Showtime series Billions. He was also a regular cast member on the NBC drama series Law & Order: LA (2010–2011). Stoll played Darren Cross/Yellowjacket/M.O.D.O.K. in the Marvel Cinematic Universe film Ant-Man (2015) and its sequel Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (2023). For his portrayal of Ernest Hemingway in Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris (2011), he was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Male. His other notable films include Black Mass (2015), First Man (2018), The Seagull (2018), The Many Saints of Newark (2021), and West Side Story (2021). He acted off-Broadway in Intimate Apparel (2004) and on Broadway in Appropriate (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Corey Stoll, 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.
