
Age: 47
female
Hong Chau (born June 25, 1979) is an American actress. She has received several award nominations for her film roles as Ngoc Lan Tran in Downsizing (2017) and as Liz, a nurse, in The Whale (2022), including a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the latter. Chau was born to Vietnamese parents who lived in a refugee camp in Thailand after fleeing Vietnam in the late 1970s. A Vietnamese Catholic church in New Orleans sponsored Chau and her family to move to the United States. She grew up in New Orleans and majored in film studies at Boston University College of Communication before pursuing an acting career. She appeared in the TV series Treme (2010–2013) and the film Inherent Vice (2014). She went on to have supporting roles in the HBO limited series Watchmen (2019) and the Prime Video series Homecoming (2018–2020). Chau has also played leading roles in the 2019 films Driveways and American Woman and further supporting roles in the 2022 film The Menu and the 2023 Netflix series The Night Agent. Description above from the Wikipedia article Hong Chau, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Hong Chau

Namora
for Namora in The Infinite Four & the Rise of Delight
Suggested by rockscar

Months after their origin, the Infinite Four struggle to balance heroism, public fear, and fractured unity. Their fragile peace shatters when Viktor von Damme, long believed dead, returns as Doctor Delight a ruler empowered by cosmic radiation, advanced technology, and ruthless vision. As Viktor manipulates global powers and unleashes engineered chaos, the team is drawn into conflict with Atlantis, ruled by the proud and dangerous Namor Magwayen. What begins as war evolves into uneasy alliance when a far greater truth is revealed: Earth is being watched. With the arrival of Uatu the Watcher, the Infinite Four realize their world stands at the edge of cosmic judgment. United at last with help from Spider-Man and unexpected allies they must stop Doctor Delight before his “perfect future” erases free will itself.