
Age: 36
male
Derek is a New York City-based American martial artist, actor, choreographer, singer and musician, who has experience as a stage combat instructor and choreographer founded in over 16 years of martial arts training in various disciplines. He graduated from the UCLA's Acting program - TFT and has had extensive experience in onstage performance including a run of Lynn Nottage's Pulitzer winning play 'SWEAT' at the Denver Center for Performing Arts as well as Andy Warhol in the world Premiere of 'Andy Warhol's Tomato' by Vince Melocchi at LA's Pacific Resident Theater and as Liberty Valance in the the New York City premiere of the stage adaptation of 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance'. Notably, Derek Chariton was seen on screen as Billy the Kid in AMC's 'The American West'. Derek was also the lead singer for Epic Floyd, a Pink Floyd cover band, and enjoys singing and playing guitar.

Derek Chariton

Hunter Zolomon / Zoom
for Hunter Zolomon / Zoom in The Flash: Fast Forward
Suggested by mr95

Wally West is the new Scarlet Speedster, having taken up the mantle of The Flash only a couple of years ago. He’s eager, a little impulsive, and hungry to prove himself worthy of the legacy left by his uncle and mentor, Barry Allen. Wally’s relationship with Linda Park grounds him, but the sudden emergence of a time-twisting threat puts everything he loves at risk. As Wally races against an enemy who knows his every move, he’ll discover what truly makes him a hero and a Flash. When a series of temporal anomalies strike Central City—aging buildings to dust, reverting others to their construction—Wally investigates and discovers the culprit: the mysterious Hunter Zolomon (Zoom), who claims to be making Wally a "better hero" by pushing him past his limits. With the help of Linda Park, the tech-genius Chester Runk, and the wisdom of retired speedster Jay Garrick, Wally must master new aspects of the Speed Force, confront his fears of inadequacy, and protect his city from a villain who can be everywhere—and everywhen—at once.