
Age: 51
male
David Kenneth Harbour (born April 10, 1975) is an American actor. He has received nominations for a Tony Award, a Golden Globe Award, and two Primetime Emmy Awards. David began his career acting in Shakespearean theatre productions. After his professional debut on Broadway in the 1999 revival of The Rainmaker, he was nominated for a Tony Award for his performance in a production of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. He made his television debut on Law & Order in 1999 and had supporting roles in films such as Brokeback Mountain (2005), Revolutionary Road (2008) and Black Mass (2015). Harbour gained global recognition for his portrayal of Jim Hopper in the Netflix science fiction series Stranger Things (2016–2025), for which he received a Critics' Choice Television Award as well as nominations for two Primetime Emmy Awards. His starring film roles include the title character in Hellboy (2019), Santa Claus in Violent Night (2022) and a former racer in the sports film Gran Turismo (2023). Harbour has played Red Guardian in the Marvel Cinematic Universe media franchise, beginning with the film Black Widow (2021). Description above from the Wikipedia article David Harbour, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

David Harbour

Detective Harvey Bullock
for Detective Harvey Bullock in Psychedelic Patterned Mania
Suggested by walkerluiger3

Hollywood, 1979. The golden age of auteur cinema is ending. Superpowered metahumans and the Justice Society dominate screens, pushing out the old masters of gritty, human stories. Among the casualties is Abnero “Tommy” Krillo, a legendary Italian-American director famed for neon-lit gangland epics and experimental lightning effects that once set cinema ablaze. Now broke and bitter, Abner dreams of one last masterpiece—an experimental light-and-color system he believes will reinvent movies. When Hollywood’s gatekeepers mock him and seize his home, an accident fuses his experimental “sliding disco lights” into living polka dots that cling to his white suit. Transformed, obsessed, and furious, Abner adopts the persona of Polka Dot Man, determined to steal back Hollywood’s artistry and destroy the producers who exiled him. What begins as an act of revenge becomes a psychedelic war for the soul of cinema—half serial-killer thriller, half surreal superhero nightmare.