Audra McDonald as Miss Grace Farrell, Personal Secretary (later wife) to Daddy Warbucks. She eventually fell in love with Daddy Warbucks and becomes Annie's adoptive mother.
The FBI has learned that Annie's parents are actually David and Margaret Bennett, who died some time ago; Annie truly is an orphan. Mr. and Mrs. "Mudge" show up to take Annie and the money, but are quickly exposed.
Hannigan is visited by her con artist brother Rooster and his girlfriend, Lily St. Regis; they plot to pose as Annie's parents to gain the reward. The trio searches the orphans' belongings and Hannigan reveals Annie's parents were killed in a fire; she possesses the other half of the locket.
Before her punishment, Annie is taken away by Grace Farrell to live with Oliver Warbucks. Miss Hannigan disguises herself as Annie's mother and tries to take Annie so she can get Oliver Warbuck's reward money, but she is caught by President Roosevelt.
Roosevelt has important news for Annie, but Warbucks explains that the FBI finally traced her real parents, David and Margaret Bennett, who had died long ago. She finally realizes that she really is an orphan, but is glad that she is not a Mudge.
They decide to adopt all of the orphans, and the wedding proceeds. Annie tells Molly that she always knew the ending would be happy ("I Always Knew").
Meanwhile, Joan transfers Jai to a new division in Arizona, and after two years, Annie finally tells Danielle her CIA secret, leading her sister to distrust her and ask Annie to move out.
The investigation revealed that her real parents were named David and Margaret Bennett and that they are dead. The Mudges are impostors. Annie and Warbucks declare their love for each other. They realize only Miss Hannigan could have given the Mudges the locket and birth certificate.
Annie, born Annie Bennett in the theatrical adaptations and later known as Annie Bennett Warbucks, or Annie Bennett Stacks is the protagonist of the comics, the Broadway musical, and the films of the same name. She is a spunky, optimistic, energetic eleven-year old (10 in the 1982 film) orphan girl.
She tells him his secret is safe with her. Will later asks Grace what it would take to properly adopt Annie. That's when Guy comes in and says that Annie's real parents have been found. Annie is happy, though Will is visibly sad.
Annie's Fake Parents are supporting antagonists in the 2014 movie adaptation Annie. Annie's fake father was portrayed by Dorian Missick, who also voiced Victor Vance in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories. Annie's fake mother was portrayed by Tracie Thoms in her first villainous role.
Warbucks, mainly as a P.R. stunt/status symbol, he quickly finds he actually likes Annie. After some minor sole-searching Mr. Warbucks decides he wants to be a proper father to Annie and formally adopts her.
The Legend of Black Annie (2012) - IMDb.
In the original 1982 version of the movie, Annie is a white, red-haired, freckle-faced orphan in New York City. In the contemporary version, she is also a little orphan girl in the Big Apple, but she happens to be African American.
The foster kids' names from eldest to youngest are: Isabella (age 13), Pepper (age 12), Annie (age 11), Tessie (age 11), and Mia (age 9). Pepper and Kate are the only orphans who wear accessories: Pepper wears a hat while Kate wears glasses. July is the only Asian orphan.
Pepper is one of the orphans from the book Broadway show and film adaptations of Annie. In the version of the stage musical, Pepper is 14 years old. She is also the meanest and bossiest orphan especially towards Molly.
But Uncyclopedia.wikia.com reveals that "the eyes don't actually mean anything; they're just creepy." On the few occasions cartoonist Gray did give Annie pupils, the fans weren't happy with the look, according to the CBS web article "Is There a Tomorrow for Little Orphan Annie?"
Little Orphan Annie enjoyed an extraordinarily long life in newspapers, on stage, and in film. Making her first appearance on Aug. 5, 1924, Annie—who was conceived as an 11-year-old escapee from a Dickensian orphanage—was identifiable by her curly red hair.
Gray's comic strip was inspired by a poem by James Whitcomb Riley about an orphan named Annie. This poem was based on a real-life girl that Riley knew named Mary Alice Smith. The poem is entitled ''Little Orphant Annie.
Annie's unnamed fake mother (Tracie Thoms) is a villainess from the 2014 big screen adaptation of Annie. She and her husband (also unnamed) were hired by Will Stacks' campaign manager, Guy Danlily, to pose as Annie's biological parents.
All of the orphans in ANNIE are female. So, if you cast a male as an orphan, they would have to play the role as a female character and be true to the author's intent.
Punjab is a supporting character in the 1982 film "Annie" and its 1995 sequel Annie: A Royal Adventure. Although he is supposed to be of north-Indian origin, he speaks in a stereotypical southern Indian accent in the movies. Punjab is played by Geoffrey Holder in the 1982 film and Antony Zaki in its sequel.
Annie is genuinely selfish, due to having been abandoned at birth and being used as a tool by everyone she has ever known, even by her adoptive father who wanted a better life for himself through her. She has no interest in protecting strangers due to being unattached to most of humanity to an absurdly high degree.
He finally confessed his big secret to Annie (Piper Perabo): He was MIA for six months in 2006 to train Teo (Manolo Cardona), during which he fell in love with and married fellow spy Helen, who died after they received bad intel from Teo.
Judging by Annie's appearence in her crystal for the last few chapters I can say with confidence that she didn't age physically at all. She appears to be the same height and her hair hasn't grown any longer, just untied.