Elliot Page

While presenting as female, Page came to recognition for his role in the television franchise ''Pit Pony'' (1997–2000), for which he was nominated for a Young Artist Award, and for his recurring roles in ''Trailer Park Boys'' (2002) and ''ReGenesis'' (2004). One of Page's first roles in a mainstream US-distributed film was in the 2003 made-for-television film ''Going For Broke''. Page had his breakthrough starring as a teenage vigilante in the film ''Hard Candy'' (2005), for which he won an Austin Film Critics Association Award and received an Empire Award nomination. He received critical acclaim for portraying the title role, a pregnant teenager, in Jason Reitman's film ''Juno'' (2007), and earned nominations for an Academy Award, two BAFTA Awards, a Critics' Choice Award, a Golden Globe Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance. At age 20, it made him the fourth-youngest nominee for the Academy Award Best Actress at the time.
Page has earned additional accolades and praise for roles in ''The Tracey Fragments'' (2007), ''Whip It'' (2009), ''Super'' (2010), ''Inception'' (2010), and ''Tallulah'' (2016). He has also portrayed superhero Kitty Pryde in the ''X-Men'' films ''The Last Stand'' (2006) and ''Days of Future Past'' (2014), produced the film ''Freeheld'' (2015) in which he also starred, and made his directorial debut with the documentary ''There's Something in the Water'' (2019). He provided voice acting and motion-capture acting for supernatural main character Jodie Holmes in the video game ''Beyond: Two Souls'' (2013), for which he received a BAFTA Games Award nomination. His later television credits include hosting the documentary series ''Gaycation'' (2016–2017), for which he was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards, and portraying main character Vanya/Viktor Hargreeves in the Netflix superhero series ''The Umbrella Academy'' (2019–present). Provided by Wikipedia
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