
Age: 30
female
Anya-Josephine Marie Taylor-Joy (/ˈænjə/; born 16 April 1996) is an American actress and voice actress. Born in Miami and raised in Buenos Aires and London, she left school at 16 to pursue an acting career. After several minor television roles, her breakthrough came with a leading role in the horror film The Witch (2015). Her career progressed with roles in the horror film Split (2016) and its sequel Glass (2019), the black comedy film Thoroughbreds (2017), and playing Emma Woodhouse in the period drama Emma (2020). Taylor-Joy featured in the television crime drama series Peaky Blinders (2019–2022) and earned international recognition for playing Beth Harmon in the period drama miniseries The Queen's Gambit (2020), winning a Golden Globe Award and a SAG Award, in addition to a nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award. She then starred in the horror film Last Night in Soho (2021), the action films The Northman (2022) and The Gorge (2025), and the black comedy The Menu (2022). She also voiced Princess Peach in the animated film The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023). She starred as Imperator Furiosa in the apocalyptic film Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024). Description above from the Wikipedia article Anya Taylor-Joy, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Anya Taylor-Joy

Pamela Courson
for Pamela Courson in The Doors: Break On Through (Biopic)
Suggested by kaueoliveira

The film, "The Doors: Break On Through," is a non-linear, impressionistic journey through the brief, incandescent career and chaotic life of Jim Morrison and The Doors. Beginning with the band's formation in the mid-1960s at UCLA Film School—where the poet Jim Morrison met the jazz-influenced keyboardist Ray Manzarek—the story explores their shared vision to merge rock music with high art, poetry, and shamanistic performance. The narrative focuses intensely on the band's creative core: Manzarek's classically trained arrangements, Robby Krieger's flamenco-infused guitar, and John Densmore's jazz-rock rhythms providing the perfect, dark canvas for Morrison’s volatile, charismatic genius. The central conflict is the rapid, devastating deterioration of Jim Morrison. The film follows the band's ascent to global fame through electric hits like "Light My Fire," while simultaneously documenting Morrison’s descent into alcoholism, drug use, and an increasingly destructive stage persona fueled by his obsession with being a "Lizard King" and a cultural icon. It delves into the infamous controversies—the stage arrests, the obscenity trial—that defined the era. The story culminates in Morrison's self-imposed exile to Paris and his untimely death at 27, leaving behind a legacy of revolutionary music and a profound, cautionary tale about the price of mythic artistic freedom.