
Age: 36
female
Jessie Buckley (born 28 December 1989) is an Irish actress and singer. Her accolades include Best Actress at the Oscar Academy Awards 2026 (becoming the first Irish woman to win it), a British Academy Film Award, an Actor Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Scottish BAFTA, in addition to nominations for two Academy Awards. Buckley began her career in 2008 as a contestant on the BBC talent show I'd Do Anything, in which she came second. A RADA graduate, her early onscreen appearances were in BBC television series such as War & Peace (2016) and Taboo (2017). Buckley made her film debut with the lead role in Beast (2017), followed by her breakout role as an aspiring country music singer in the musical film Wild Rose (2018); the latter earned her a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. Buckley's career progressed with starring roles in films such as I'm Thinking of Ending Things (2020), Men (2022), Women Talking (2022) and Wicked Little Letters (2023). For her performance as a troubled mother in the psychological drama The Lost Daughter (2021), she received nominations for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. She gained further recognition for her portrayal of Agnes Shakespeare in the period drama Hamnet (2025), receiving a Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award, an Actor Award and an Academy Award for Best Actress. On television, Buckley has starred in the HBO miniseries Chernobyl (2019) and season four of Fargo (2020). On stage, Buckley's portrayal of Sally Bowles in a 2021 West End theatre revival of Cabaret won her the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical. In 2022, she released the collaborative album For All Our Days That Tear the Heart with Bernard Butler, which was shortlisted for the 2022 Mercury Prize. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jessie Buckley, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Jessie Buckley

Jo Rowling
for Jo Rowling in THE SPELL OF PERSEVERANCE (2027)
Suggested by amrowe8596

In the early 1990s, Joanne Rowling, a struggling single mother in Edinburgh, battles poverty, unemployment, and depression while raising her infant daughter, Jessica. Grieving her mother’s death and reeling from a failed marriage, Jo pours her pain into a story about a boy wizard, writing Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in local cafés. Facing rejection from twelve twelve publishers, self-doubt, and financial strain, she perseveres, typing drafts on a manual typewriter. In 1996, Bloomsbury offers a modest advance, and agent Christopher Little, champions her vision. By 1997, the book’s book is published, sparking the start of a phenomenon. The biopic captures Jo’s raw resilience and the birth of magic from hardship.