
Age: 62
male
David Mark Morrissey (born 21 June 1964) is an English actor and director. Morrissey grew up in the Kensington and Knotty Ash areas of Liverpool. He learned to act at the Everyman Youth Theatre, alongside Ian Hart, Mark and Stephen McGann, and Cathy Tyson. At the age of 18, he and Hart were cast in the television series One Summer (1983), which won them recognition throughout the country. After making One Summer, Morrissey attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art before acting with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. Throughout the 1990s, he often portrayed policemen and soldiers, though took other defining roles such as Bradley Headstone in Our Mutual Friend (1998) and Christopher Finzi in Hilary and Jackie (1998). More film parts followed, including roles in Some Voices (2000) and Captain Corelli's Mandolin (2001), before he played the critically acclaimed roles of Stephen Collins in State of Play (2003) and Gordon Brown in The Deal (2003). The former won him a nomination at the British Academy Television Awards and the latter a Best Actor award at the Royal Television Society Awards. His film roles have not always been acclaimed; his appearance as the male lead in Basic Instinct 2 (2006) was widely criticised, and The Reaping (2007) bombed at the box office. Since then, he has had leading roles in Sense and Sensibility (2008), Red Riding (2009) and Five Days (2010), acted in the films Nowhere Boy (2009) and Centurion (2010), and produced and starred in the crime drama Thorne (2010). He returned to the stage in 2008 for a run of Neil LaBute's In a Dark Dark House and will take the title role in the Liverpool Everyman's production of Macbeth in 2011. As a director Morrissey has helmed short films, and the dramas Sweet Revenge (2001) and Passer By (2004) for the BBC. His feature debut, Don't Worry About Me, premiered at the 2009 London Film Festival and was broadcast on BBC television in March 2010. He is married to the novelist Esther Freud, has three children and is a patron of numerous charities. Description above from the Wikipedia article David Morrissey, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

David Morrissey

George Stacy
for George Stacy in Spider-Man: Negativity
Suggested by remkosel

After the events of Spider-Man: No Way Home, Peter Parker can be the anonymous Spider-Man again like years ago. He's trying to restart his life by going to college and got a job at the Daily Bugle, which reunites him with his former classmate Betty Brant. In his freetime he helps at F.E.A.S.T., now run by Martin Li after May's death. As a child, Li was overexposed to Devil's Breath which granted him special abilities in negative energy. He wants revenge on Norman Osborn, the man responsible for his exposure to Devil's Breath. Peter has found new friends at college and needs to face a new villain, Mac Gargan who became the Scorpion thanks to a failed experiment financed by JJJ in an attempt to stop "Spider-Menace". Li is starting to create an army by giving people some of his abilities to take over New York and even got some Spider-Man villains on his side. Peter needs help to stop Li and his negative army and meets America Chavez, who travels with him to different universes to recruit some of the people Spider-Man met in the past. Peter and America can build their own multiversal Spider-team to take on Li's army. In deperate need of a high-tech suit, Peter goes to the Baxter Building to ask Reed Richards for help and get the Fantastic Four on board. Martin Li gets beaten and is granted with an anticure so he can be the good friendly leader of F.E.A.S.T. In a post credits scen, Li hires a young boy named Miles who becomes close with Peter.