
Age: 23
female
Jenna Marie Ortega (born September 27, 2002) is an American actress. She began her career as a child and received recognition for her role as a younger version of Jane in The CW comedy-drama series Jane the Virgin (2014–2019). She then won an Imagen Award for her leading role as Harley Diaz in the Disney Channel series Stuck in the Middle (2016–2018). She played Ellie Alves in the thriller series You (2019) and starred in the family film Yes Day (2021), both for Netflix. In the drama film The Fallout, Ortega received praise for her performance as a traumatised high school student (2021). She gained wide recognition for portraying Wednesday Addams in the Netflix horror-comedy series Wednesday (2022–present), for which she received nominations at the Golden Globe, Primetime Emmy, and Screen Actors Guild Awards. She also starred in the slasher films Scream (2022), X (2022), Scream VI (2023), and the fantasy film Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024). Media publications have dubbed Ortega "Gen Z's scream queen." She was featured on The Hollywood Reporter's Power 100 list in 2023 and Forbes's 30 Under 30 list in 2024. Ortega has also been noted for her fashion and for supporting various charitable causes. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jenna Ortega, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jenna Ortega

Assistant Director
for Assistant Director in The Blood Orchid
Suggested by alexanderarmstrong

In a slick, neon-drenched town cloaked in an atmospheric, cold sludge aesthetic, toxicity isn't just present—it's celebrated. Leading the quiet resistance is Bucky, a fierce, uncompromising punk-rock feminist protester who refuses to stay silent. But when a ruthless crowd of local men brutally beats Bucky and leaves him in a coma just for holding a sign, the town's fragile peace completely shatters. Standing over Bucky's hospital bed is a tactical mastermind (played by Jenna Ortega), offering condolences for the horrific price he paid for his activism. But with broken bones and rock-and-roll defiance, Bucky delivers a brutal manifesto: he doesn't want pity; he wants accountability. His sacrifice becomes the ultimate catalyst. The apology transforms into pure gasoline, igniting The Blood Orchid—not a disorganized, frantic group of friends looking for messy revenge, but a highly functioning, omnipresent shadow syndicate of women who have endured systemic relationship trauma and are ready to weaponize it. Operating like a seamless, clinical machine, the multi-woman society maps out a calculated hit list targeting the town’s most unrepentant "pieces of shit," including the smug country-club golden boy Kenny and the vile Old Man Harold. As the syndicate executes its precise, high-volume vigilante justice, they must simultaneously navigate the town's chaotic collateral damage—chiefly Goofy Gary, a hyper-expressive, loud, and socially oblivious nuisance. Gary isn't a bad guy; he genuinely believes in "equal rights and equal vibes," wanting to hang out with the ladies the exact same way he would with the guys.