
Age: 31
female
Zoey Francis Chaya Thompson Deutch (born November 10, 1994) is an American actress. She is daughter of director Howard Deutch and actress-director Lea Thompson. She gained recognition for her roles in the film Everybody Wants Some!!, the Netflix comedy series The Politician, and the film Set It Up. Deutch began her career with roles on the Disney Channel comedy series The Suite Life on Deck (2010–2011) and The CW crime drama series Ringer (2011–2012). Following her credited film debut in the gothic romance film Beautiful Creatures (2013), she starred in the fantasy horror film Vampire Academy (2014), for which she received a Teen Choice Award nomination. Deutch achieved critical praise for her roles in numerous films, including Richard Linklater's Everybody Wants Some!! (2016), Why Him? (2016), Before I Fall (2017), Flower (2017), and Rebel in the Rye (2017), for which she has received awards from the Dallas International Film Festival and the SCAD Savannah Film Festival. In 2017, her mother directed her and her sister Madelyn in the comedy-drama film The Year of Spectacular Men, which Deutch also co-produced. She went on to star in the critically acclaimed romantic comedy Set It Up (2018), the zombie comedy Zombieland: Double Tap (2019), and the comedy-drama Buffaloed (2019), which she also produced.

Zoey Deutch

Betty Brant
for Betty Brant in Spider-Man: The Amazing Return
Suggested by Spidermaj

# Spider-Man: The Amazing Return Peter Parker's been benched. His web-shooters are gathering dust, his suit's in the closet, and his aunt keeps asking when he's coming home for dinner. But when a new threat emerges—one that's equal parts ridiculous and genuinely dangerous—Peter discovers that being a friendly neighborhood Spider-Man isn't something you can just clock out from. Juggling day jobs, love interests, and the persistent urge to crack jokes while dangling from skyscrapers, Peter swings back into action. He's older, wearier, and somehow even quippier. His enemies are meaner. His responsibilities are messier. And his web-shooters? They've never been more temperamental. Because saving the city never really stops—it just takes better comedic timing.