
Age: 61
female
Marisa Tomei (born December 4, 1964) is an American actress. She has received various accolades, including an Academy Award and nominations for two further Academy Awards, a BAFTA Award, two Golden Globe Awards, and three Screen Actors Guild Awards. After working on the television series As the World Turns, Tomei came to prominence as a cast member on The Cosby Show spin-off A Different World in 1987. After having minor roles in a few films, she came to international attention in 1992 with the comedy, My Cousin Vinny, for which she received the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. She received two additional Academy Award nominations for In the Bedroom (2001) and The Wrestler (2008). Tomei has appeared in a number of successful movies, including What Women Want (2000), Anger Management (2003), Wild Hogs (2007), The Ides of March (2011), and Parental Guidance (2012). She also portrayed May Parker in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, having appeared in Captain America: Civil War (2016), Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), Avengers: Endgame (2019), Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019), and Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021). Tomei has also worked in theater. She was formerly involved with the Naked Angels Theater Company and appeared in plays, such as Daughters (1986), Wait Until Dark (1998), Top Girls (2008), for which she received a nomination for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play, and The Realistic Joneses (2014), for which she received a special award at the Drama Desk Awards.

StoryShuffle is a serial anthology framed as bedtime. Henry Hemsely tells stories to his grandkids, Selene and Milo. He is a shaky storyteller, so he rewrites everything mid sentence. The kids interrupt and demand changes. Comedy swings into action, then into sudden drama. The twist. The characters inside the stories hear Henry’s narration. They argue with the voice controlling their world. Five rotating stories drive the series. The Knight and the Talking Tree Sir Alden Greyford gets an order from King Edwin of Bramblekeep. Kill the “monster” in the Blackwood. Alden charges in with a sword that keeps breaking. At the center, he finds Gravelroot, a kind talking tree who wants someone to listen. Henry tries to force a battle. The kids change the rules. Alden gets a ridiculous fire sneeze. Gaylord Munck appears to mock every mistake. Alden wins by listening, not killing. The Three-Day Sheriff Jack Miles enters a dusty border town and gets mistaken for a sheriff because of his huge hat. He teams with Claudia, his smart horse, and Rose Harper, the saloon owner. Billy “Three Fingers” Kane threatens the town. The kids demand a ten man duel and random chaos, including a giant cow in the street. Jack becomes a hero by doing the job while terrified. The Last Bus Sam Headley drives an old bus toward a bridge that closes soon. Every passenger creates a new problem. A cat rescue detour. A prank kid. A forgotten stop. A couple fighting in the aisle. Mad Tax narrating louder than Henry. Officer Baker chasing them for shifting reasons. Sam holds the group together and pushes through the chaos. Operation Teapot Occupied France. A resistance team must destroy an enemy radio station. They discover it under a bakery, surrounded by tea and pastries. The kids demand cake, so the team throws a tea party as cover. Messages hide in poetry. A cake loving enemy soldier becomes a weak link. The mission succeeds through distraction and nerve. Café Rain In a small town cafe, Ethan Parker and Claire Bertrand keep meeting. Every time they get close to honesty, it rains. The regulars вмеш. The musician scores the tension. The painter captures their moments. The kids demand upgrades, so the rain turns colorful and the cafe turns surreal. The rain stops only after they admit their feelings. StoryShuffle runs on one engine. Henry, Selene, and Milo reshape the plot in real time. The story worlds fight back. The bedtime voice becomes part of the action.
