
Age: 47
female
Rachel Anne McAdams (born November 17, 1978) is a Canadian actress. After graduating from a theatre degree program at York University in 2001, she worked in Canadian television and film productions, such as the drama film Perfect Pie (2002), for which she received a Genie Award nomination, the comedy film My Name Is Tanino (2002), and the comedy series Slings & Arrows (2003–2005), for which she won a Gemini Award. In 2002, she made her Hollywood film debut in the comedy The Hot Chick. She rose to fame in 2004 with the comedy Mean Girls and the romantic drama The Notebook. In 2005, she starred in the romantic comedy Wedding Crashers, the psychological thriller Red Eye, and the comedy-drama The Family Stone. She was hailed by the media as Hollywood's new "it girl" and received a BAFTA Award nomination for Best Rising Star. After a hiatus, McAdams gained further prominence starring in the films The Time Traveller's Wife (2009), Sherlock Holmes (2009), Morning Glory (2010), Midnight in Paris (2011), The Vow (2012), and About Time (2013). For her portrayal of journalist Sacha Pfeiffer in the drama Spotlight (2015), she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. This was followed by roles in the superhero film Doctor Strange (2016) and its sequel Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022), the romantic drama Disobedience (2017), the comedies Game Night (2018) and Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (2020), and the comedy-drama Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret. (2023). On television, she starred in the second season of the HBO anthology crime drama series True Detective (2015), earning a Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Miniseries or Movie nomination. She made her Broadway debut in the Amy Herzog play Mary Jane (2024), for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. Description above from the Wikipedia article Rachel McAdams, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Rachel McAdams

Lois Lane
for Lois Lane in Superman: Man of Tomorrow (2013)
Suggested by blockbuster53

Five years into his public career, Superman has become the world’s greatest symbol of hope, inspiring people across the globe while struggling to balance his responsibilities with life at the Daily Planet. While Lois Lane investigates encrypted files tied to Krypton and Jimmy Olsen chronicles Superman’s heroics, a mysterious object enters the solar system. It is Brainiac, an ancient artificial intelligence that preserves civilizations by shrinking and collecting them before their destruction. Following Brainiac into space, Superman discovers a massive archive containing stolen worlds from across the galaxy. Among them is Kandor, the lost Kryptonian capital. Brainiac reveals he studied Krypton for centuries and preserved parts of its culture before the planet’s demise. Exploring the archive, Clark discovers messages from Jor-El that force him to confront the pain of losing a world he never truly knew. As Brainiac prepares to add Earth to his collection, Superman realizes that heritage alone does not define who he is. Brainiac launches a global assimilation of Earth, forcing Superman into a desperate battle across Metropolis and aboard the alien vessel. While Lois and Jimmy expose Brainiac’s hidden systems on Earth, Superman frees Kandor and destroys the collector’s ship. During the crisis, a Kryptonian escape pod recovered from the vessel opens, revealing Kara Zor-El, a survivor from Krypton who expected to find her infant cousin and is shocked to discover him fully grown. Together they help secure Brainiac’s defeat, though fragments of his consciousness escape into digital networks across the cosmos. In the aftermath, Superman embraces Earth as his true home while welcoming Kara as the first living connection to his lost world and beginning her journey on Earth. Post-Credits: In Paris, Diana Prince watches coverage of Superman’s victory and the appearance of a second Kryptonian. She quietly smiles and says, “The age of heroes has begun again.”