
Age: 56
male
Colman Jason Domingo (born November 28, 1969) is an American actor, playwright, and director. Prominent on both screen and stage since the 2010s, Domingo has received various accolades, including a Primetime Emmy Award, and nominations for an Academy Award and two Tony Awards. Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2024. Domingo's early Broadway roles include the 2005 play Well and the 2008 musical Passing Strange. He gained acclaim for his role as Mr. Bones in the Broadway musical The Scottsboro Boys (2011), for which he was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical. He reprised the role in the 2014 West End production, receiving a nomination for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Performance in a Supporting Role in a Musical. In 2018, he wrote the book for the Broadway musical Summer: The Donna Summer Musical. After early roles in various incarnations of the Law & Order series and as part of the main cast for The Big Gay Sketch Show, Domingo had his breakthrough playing Victor Strand in the AMC series Fear the Walking Dead (2015–2023). He gained wider acclaim for his recurring role as the recovering drug addict Ali on the HBO series Euphoria (2019–present), winning the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series in 2022. Domingo received consecutive nominations in 2024 and 2025 for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayals of civil rights activist Bayard Rustin in the biopic Rustin and a prison inmate in the drama Sing Sing. His other notable film appearances include roles in Lincoln (2012), The Butler (2013), Selma (2014), If Beale Street Could Talk (2018), Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020), Zola (2021), and The Color Purple (2023). Description above from the Wikipedia article Colman Domingo, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Colman Domingo

Norman Osborn
for Norman Osborn in Spider-Man: Web of the City
Suggested by bendover3

College. Rent. The Daily Bugle. And every night, the mask. He's been Spider-Man long enough to know what it costs — and lately, the bill keeps getting higher. When a mysterious new villain begins terrorizing New York from the shadows, Peter finds himself chasing a ghost. The Hobgoblin leaves no trail, no face, no name. Just chaos, fear, and a city slowly tearing itself apart. But the deeper Peter digs, the closer the danger gets — until it touches someone he can't afford to lose. Somewhere in Manhattan, a man in a perfect suit watches it all unfold. He built this web. Every thread leads back to him. And nobody — not Spider-Man, not the NYPD, not the Daily Bugle — even knows he exists. Spider-Man: Web of the City is a story about a hero stretched to his limit, a villain who never loses, and the city that holds them both — tangled, humming, alive. Some webs are meant to catch you. Some are meant to let you go.