
Age: 78
female
Barbara Hershey (born Barbara Lynn Herzstein; February 5, 1948) is an American actress. In a career spanning more than 50 years, she has played a variety of roles on television and in cinema in several genres, including westerns and comedies. She began acting at age 17 in 1965 but did not achieve much critical acclaim until the latter half of the 1980s. By that time, the Chicago Tribune referred to her as "one of America's finest actresses". Hershey won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries/TV Film for her role in A Killing in a Small Town (1990). She received Golden Globe nominations for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Mary Magdalene in The Last Temptation of Christ (1988) and for her role in The Portrait of a Lady (1996). For the latter film, she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and won the Los Angeles Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress. She has won two Best Actress awards at the Cannes Film Festival for her roles in Shy People (1987) and A World Apart (1988). She was featured in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), for which she was nominated for the British Academy Film Award for Best Supporting Actress and Garry Marshall's melodrama Beaches (1988), and she earned a second British Academy Film Award nomination for Darren Aronofsky's Black Swan (2010). Description above from the Wikipedia article Barbara Hershey, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Barbara Hershey

Mrs. Donnely
for Mrs. Donnely in The Martian (HBO MAX)
Suggested by dcuofficial

in the early 1960s, where the boundaries between good and evil blur within the shadows of Cold War paranoia and government secrecy. FBI agent John Jones, a quiet but relentless investigator, finds his mind slowly overtaken by an alien consciousness known only as “The Martian.” As the entity begins to influence his thoughts, emotions, and memories, John spirals into psychological collapse. While investigating a series of ritualistic killings tied to classified government programs, John uncovers a buried experiment from decades earlier one that may explain the Martian’s presence inside him. As he loses control, his transformation drags him deeper into the dark machinery of government corruption, paranoia, and interstellar conspiracy. The closer he gets to the truth, the further he drifts from his own humanity and closer to the frontlines of a coming intergalactic war.