
Age: 38
male
Thomas Andrew Felton (born September 22, 1987) is an English actor who played Draco Malfoy in the film adaptations of the best-selling Harry Potter fantasy novels by J. K. Rowling. Born in Surrey, Felton began appearing in commercials and made his screen debut in the role of Peagreen Clock in The Borrowers (1997). He portrayed Louis T. Leonowens in Anna and the King (1999) before being cast in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (2001). Felton appeared in seven sequels until the final film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 (2011). Felton appeared in the sci-fi film Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011). He was subsequently cast in indie films From the Rough (2011) and The Apparition (2012). Felton starred as Viscount Trencavel in the historical miniseries Labyrinth and as James Ashford in the period drama Belle (2013), which released to critical acclaim. In 2015, he reoccured as a murder suspect in TNT's Murder in the First. Felton appeared in Message from the King and A United Kingdom, which premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival. He portrayed Doctor Alchemy on The CW's The Flash, based on the comic books of the same name. Felton co-starred in drama film Feed (2017), action-thriller Stratton (2017), and biographical film Megan Leavey (2017). Felton was a series regular on the 2018 sci-fi series Origin and appeared as Laertes in Claire McCarthy's Ophelia (2018), both to critical praise. Felton portrayed the villain in family-horror A Babysitter's Guide to Monster Hunting (2020).

Tom Felton

Hagen
for Hagen in The Ring of the Nibelung: Twilight of the Gods
Suggested by jvpirate

Twilight of the Gods (Götterdämmerung) is the fourth and final installment of the non-musical movie version of Richard Wagner’s Ring cycle. After leaving Brünnhilde and setting off on his travels, Siegfried meets Gunther, king of the Gibichungs (a race of mortals who live near the Rhine), his sister Gutrune, and their half-brother Hagen, Alberich’s son. They trick Siegfried into drinking a potion that makes him forget about Brünnhilde and fall in love with Gutrune instead. Then using the Tarnhelm, a magic helmet, he disguises himself as Gunther and brings Brünnhilde - against her will - to the hall of the Gibichungs to present her as Gunther’s new bride. Upon realizing Siegfried’s betrayal, an outraged Brünnhilde plots with Gunther and Hagen to kill Siegfried. In a hunting excursion, Hagen kills Siegfried by stabbing him in the back, and later kills Gunther over Alberich’s ring on Siegfried’s finger. Brünnhilde, however, now remorseful, builds Siegfried a funeral pyre, on which she burns his body, her horse Grane, and herself. The fire then rises up and sets the hall of the Gibichungs ablaze, after which the Rhine overflows its banks, the Rhinemaidens swim in, drown Hagen, retrieve the ring and return with it to their underwater home, while the world is destroyed.