
Age: 52
female
Vera Ann Farmiga (/fɑːrˈmiːɡə/ far-MEE-gə; born August 6, 1973) is an American actress. Farmiga began her professional acting career on stage in the original Broadway production of Taking Sides (1996). After expanding to television and film, her breakthrough came with her starring role as a drug addict in the drama Down to the Bone (2004). She then had roles in the political thriller The Manchurian Candidate (2004), the crime drama The Departed (2006), and the historical drama The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (2008). She was also established as a scream queen for her performances in the horror films Joshua (2007) and Orphan (2009). For her performance in the comedy-drama Up in the Air (2009), Farmiga was nominated for an Academy Award and other accolades. She then made her directorial debut with the drama film Higher Ground (2011), in which she had the leading role. She starred in the thrillers Source Code (2011) and Safe House (2012), before furthering her scream queen status by portraying paranormal investigator Lorraine Warren in the Conjuring Universe films The Conjuring (2013), The Conjuring 2 (2016), Annabelle Comes Home (2019), and The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021). She also starred in the legal drama The Judge (2014), the biographical drama The Front Runner (2018), the monster film Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), and the crime drama The Many Saints of Newark (2021). On television, Farmiga received Primetime Emmy Award nominations for playing Norma Louise Bates in the A&E drama horror series Bates Motel (2013–2017) and starring in the Netflix miniseries When They See Us (2019). She also appears in the Disney+ miniseries Hawkeye (2021), set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and the Apple TV+ miniseries Five Days at Memorial (2022). Description above from the Wikipedia article Vera Farmiga, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Vera Farmiga

Lady Lenore
for Lady Lenore in THE RAVEN (2025 REMAKE)
Suggested by enzotakerian

This new film adaptation could combine elements from the original poem, the Vincent Price movie, and the John Cusack movie. In Victorian London, Sir Edgar, an English-language professor, secludes himself in his quarters, depressed, because his wife, Lenore, died from an unbearable illness. One midnight dreary, he reads books in his study and hears rapping on his window. Upon opening it, a raven flies into his room and supposedly taunts him. Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." The man can't help but feel like the talking bird has something to do with his past. The scary bird is revealed to be a young man named Alan, an old student of Ed who learned sorcery and somehow got turned into a raven. He did not transform into a raven INTENTIONALLY, it was a potential sabotage, and whoever is behind it may have been responsible for Lenore's death.