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Category: Fictional characters by age. 8 languages. ... This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total. A. Fictional adolescents (3 C, 74 P) C.
Actors playing a younger/older version of a character in a brief flash-back/flash-forward (However, actors who play the same character at different ages for an extended portion of the movie may be included). Large puppets or animatronic characters controlled by multiple performers
Aimee (17 episodes of the series (1976–79)), followed by reunion made-for-TV movies: A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion (1993), (with Rachel Longaker, born 1965); and then two subsequent films Mother's Day on Waltons Mountain and A Day for Thanks on Waltons Mountain, – (using DeAnna Robbins, born 1959), is the adopted blonde-haired daughter of ...
[91] [92] After three seasons with the show, two as a series regular, Ashmore was written out of the series. According to Ashmore, when the producers were first trying to get permission to use the character on Smallville , DC Comics had qualms over how close Jimmy was in age to Clark and Lois, as the character was supposed to be at least ten ...
In numerous television programs, producers have cast multiple actors for the part of the same character. [1] This list does not include different actors briefly playing the same character at significantly different ages, but it does include actors playing the character continuously as the character ages.
Chalcolithic (or "Eneolithic", "Copper Age") Ancient history (The Bronze and Iron Ages are not part of prehistory for all regions and civilizations who had adopted or developed a writing system.) Bronze Age; Iron Age; Late Middle Ages. Renaissance; Early modern history; Modern history. Industrial Age (1760–1970) Machine Age (1880–1945) Age ...
Winston Smith is a fictional character and the protagonist of George Orwell's dystopian 1984 novel also being born in 1945-46 according to the book Nineteen Eighty-Four. The character was employed by Orwell as an everyman in the setting of the novel, a "central eye ... [the reader] can readily identify with."
The Archie comics feature characters who do not age, despite references to various time periods over the course of the series. [7] Similarly, Hergé's Tintin comics take place from the 1920s to the 1970s, while Tintin and the other characters do not age. Many long-established comic characters exist in a floating timeline.