Carrie Coon
Definition
Carrie Coon is an acclaimed American actress, born January 24, 1981, in Copley, Ohio, celebrated for her nuanced portrayals of complex women across television, film, and theater.
Best known for roles like Nora Durst in HBO's The Leftovers, Gloria Burgle in Fargo season 3, Bertha Russell in The Gilded Age, and Laurie Duffy in The White Lotus season 3, she has earned multiple Emmy nominations and a Critics' Choice Television Award.
Coon made her Broadway debut in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? earning a Tony nomination, and has voiced characters like Proxima Midnight in Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame.
Examples
Carrie Coon's piercing gaze in The Leftovers turns everyday mysteries into existential crises worth pondering over coffee.
Watching Carrie Coon navigate Gilded Age high society makes you wonder if your own wardrobe could survive such scrutiny.
In Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Carrie Coon busts ghosts with the same unflappable cool she brings to every role.
Carrie Coon's Emmy-buzzed performance in The White Lotus has resort-goers everywhere second-guessing their towel-folding techniques.