
Age: 23
female
Jenna Marie Ortega (born September 27, 2002) is an American actress. She began her career as a child and received recognition for her role as a younger version of Jane in The CW comedy-drama series Jane the Virgin (2014–2019). She then won an Imagen Award for her leading role as Harley Diaz in the Disney Channel series Stuck in the Middle (2016–2018). She played Ellie Alves in the thriller series You (2019) and starred in the family film Yes Day (2021), both for Netflix. In the drama film The Fallout, Ortega received praise for her performance as a traumatised high school student (2021). She gained wide recognition for portraying Wednesday Addams in the Netflix horror-comedy series Wednesday (2022–present), for which she received nominations at the Golden Globe, Primetime Emmy, and Screen Actors Guild Awards. She also starred in the slasher films Scream (2022), X (2022), Scream VI (2023), and the fantasy film Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024). Media publications have dubbed Ortega "Gen Z's scream queen." She was featured on The Hollywood Reporter's Power 100 list in 2023 and Forbes's 30 Under 30 list in 2024. Ortega has also been noted for her fashion and for supporting various charitable causes. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jenna Ortega, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jenna Ortega

Camila Herrera
for Camila Herrera in NO HAY VUELTA (2026)
Suggested by amrowe8596

In modern-day America, 22-year-old DACA recipient Camila Herrera is thrown into crisis when her undocumented mother is detained by ICE. Desperate to save her, Camila reaches out to her estranged father Jorge, who was deported years ago and now lives in Tijuana under a false name. He illegally crosses the border to help, and father and daughter — virtual strangers — embark on an emotional road trip across the Southwest, trying to reach her mother’s immigration hearing in time. Along the way, they stop in Tucson to stay with Rafael, Jorge’s disillusioned cousin and a former immigration activist who warns them that hope is a dangerous thing. With ICE closing in, Jorge is captured again, and Camila must face the system alone. When her mother chooses deportation over indefinite detention, Camila is left to start over — hollowed out but quietly defiant. A slow-burning, devastating portrait of family, memory, and survival in a country that never fully lets you belong.