Sydney Sweeney
Sydney Sweeney | |
|---|---|
Sweeney at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival | |
| Born | Sydney Bernice Sweeney September 12, 1997 Spokane, Washington, U.S. |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 2009–present |
| Signature | |
Sydney Bernice Sweeney (born September 12, 1997)[1] is an American actress. She gained early recognition for her roles in Everything Sucks!, The Handmaid's Tale, and Sharp Objects in 2018. She received wider acclaim for her performances in the drama series Euphoria (2019–present) and the first season of the anthology series The White Lotus (2021), both of which earned her nominations for Primetime Emmy Awards.[2][3]
In film, Sweeney appeared in Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) and later had leading roles in the drama film Reality and the romantic comedy Anyone but You, both in 2023. In 2024, she played Julia Cornwall in the superhero film Madame Web and starred in the horror film Immaculate.
Early life
[edit]Sydney Bernice Sweeney was born on September 12, 1997,[4][1] in Spokane, Washington.[5][6] Her mother is a former criminal defense lawyer and her father works in the hospitality industry.[7] She has one brother.[8] Sweeney was raised in the Idaho panhandle[9] along the Washington border at a rural lakeside home that her family has inhabited for five generations.[10] She has said her family is religious.[11] Sweeney attended school at Saint George's School in Spokane.[12] She was active in numerous sports: "I was in every single sport possible...I was on the soccer team, the baseball team, the snow slalom ski team, I was wakeboarding." Sweeney said she had a wakeboarding accident as a child when the edge of her board propelled backward and sliced the area next to her eye, leaving a permanent scar.[10] She also participated in combat sports including taekwondo, jujitsu, grappling, and kickboxing.[13] Sweeney said she began practicing combat sports at age 5 to help manage her hyperactivity.[14]
Sweeney became interested in acting after auditioning to be an extra in an independent film that was shooting in the Spokane area.[12] To convince her parents to allow her to pursue acting, she presented them with a five-year business plan.[15] Sweeney began to audition and book commercial acting jobs in Seattle and Portland, Oregon, where the family temporarily resided, until moving to Los Angeles at age 13.[16] In high school, Sweeney was on the robotics team and in the mathematics club.[17] She was valedictorian of her graduating class at Brighton Hall School in Burbank, California.[18] In 2016, Sweeney briefly worked at Universal Studios Hollywood, but left after she was hired for an acting job. Sweeney briefly attended the University of California, Los Angeles.[19]
Career
[edit]Early work (2009–2019)
[edit]
As a child actress, Sweeney debuted on television in 2009 with a bit part in an episode of the series Heroes.[20] Her first film role was in the 2010 horror comedy ZMD: Zombies of Mass Destruction.[21] She played supporting roles in television shows such as 90210, Criminal Minds, Grey's Anatomy and Pretty Little Liars.[22][23] In 2018, she starred as Emaline Addario in the Netflix series Everything Sucks!, which revolved around two groups of high school students in Oregon in 1996. She appeared in the HBO miniseries Sharp Objects, recurring as Alice, a roommate whom Amy Adams's character meets at a psychiatric facility.[24][25] Her character originally had a smaller role, but the director kept bringing her in for more scenes.[26] For the role, Sweeney studied stories of girls who experience mental illness and self-harming, and visited hospitals with patients who self-harmed.[24][26] She filmed Everything Sucks! and Sharp Objects concurrently, the former during the week and latter on weekends.[27]
Sweeney had a role in the 2018 film Under the Silver Lake.[28] She had a recurring role in the second season of the dystopian drama series The Handmaid's Tale as Eden Spencer, a pious and obedient girl from the totalitarian and theocratic Republic of Gilead.[23] She starred as the heroine of the horror film Along Came the Devil.[29] In 2019, Sweeney appeared in the drama film Clementine, the coming-of-age film Big Time Adolescence, and Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.[30][31][32]
Breakthrough (2019–present)
[edit]
In June 2019, Sweeney took the role of Cassie Howard, a teenager with a reputation for promiscuity, in the HBO drama series Euphoria.[33] The show was a breakout hit, becoming the second most watched HBO series.[34] Her performance was praised, earning a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series in 2022.[35] Variety wrote that her performance "proves that Sweeney's one hell of a shapeshifter between her deft turns in this, The Handmaid's Tale, Everything Sucks and Sharp Objects."[36] Her many nude scenes in the series received significant attention, generating discussions about nudity in film and the male gaze. Sweeney has said she does not consider on-screen nudity to be a boundary.[37]
In 2020, Sweeney founded the production company Fifty-Fifty Films.[38] The same year, she starred in the television film Nocturne and Webtoon's live-action advertisement for the online comic Lore Olympus, appearing as Persephone.[39][40][41] In 2021, Sweeney appeared in the first season of Mike White's anthology series The White Lotus[42][43] as a sardonic college sophomore.[44] For that performance, she was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie in 2022. She appeared on the Time 100 Next list for 2022.[45]
In 2023, Sweeney starred as U.S. Air Force veteran Reality Winner in Tina Satter's thriller drama Reality, which premiered in February at the 73rd Berlin Film Festival. Steph Green of IndieWire called the film "inventively mounted and extraordinarily tense" and Sweeney "the real deal".[46] Jessica Kiang of Variety wrote that she played Winner "so convincingly that it's hard to remember her as the sardonic, pampered teen in The White Lotus, or the nice-girl-turned-nasty in Euphoria".[47] Sweeney next had a role in the crime thriller Americana, which premiered at the South by Southwest Festival in March 2023.[48][49]
Sweeney starred in the video for the Rolling Stones' single "Angry", from their 2023 album Hackney Diamonds.[50] In response to criticism that the video objectified her, she defended it as "empowerment through embracing my body".[51] At age 25, Sweeney was selected as one of Forbes's 2023 30 Under 30 in the celebrity category.[52][53] She and Glen Powell starred in the romantic comedy Anyone but You, which premiered in December 2023.[54] It became a commercial sleeper hit.[55] Sweeney was an executive producer for the film and was instrumental in hiring Powell and director Will Gluck. She also contributed to the script.[56]
In 2024, Sweeney had a supporting role in the superhero film Madame Web, set in Sony's Spider-Man Universe franchise.[57][58] It was released in February and received negative reviews, bombing at the box office.[59][60] Of the film's commercial and critical failure, Sweeney said, "I was just hired as an actress in it, so I was just along for the ride for whatever was going to happen."[61] In March 2024, Sweeney hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live.[62] Following her appearance, conservative Canadian newspaper National Post ran an article asking "Are Sydney Sweeney's breasts double-D harbingers of the death of woke?"[63][64] and right-wing academic Richard Hanania tweeted "Wokeness is dead" alongside a clip of Sweeney centered on her bust.[65] Sweeney called the obsession with her appearance "this weird relationship that people have with me that I have no control over".[66]

Sweeney then produced and starred in the psychological horror film Immaculate.[67] Sweeney originally auditioned for the project in 2014. Years later, she purchased the rights to the screenplay and hired frequent collaborator Michael Mohan to direct.[68] Sweeney has said that she considered producing a way to create opportunities for herself.[69] Later in 2024, she co-starred in Eden, directed by Ron Howard.[70] Reviewing the film for TheWrap, critic Chase Hutchinson wrote that Sweeney "runs away with the whole thing ... it's her subtle looks and a growing agency that turns Eden into something more ... every moment with her at the forefront is Eden at its best."[71]
In June 2025, Sweeney starred alongside Julianne Moore in Echo Valley.[72] She learned how to ride horses for the role.[73] In August, Americana was released in theaters to low box office. Several medias labeled it a flop, though Deadline argued that it would be profitable in terms of an indie film.[74] Christy, a biopic about boxer Christy Martin, had its world premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival.[75] In addition to starring in the film, Sweeney also produced it.[76] Of taking the role, Sweeney said: "I was blown away and inspired by [Martin's] strength, her perseverance, and who she is as a woman. Having a character that has so many layers and depths, that's a dream as an actor... Then, on the physical side, I grew up kickboxing and grappling. I'm a very outdoorsy, athletic person, so to play a character that [required me] to transform myself was a dream. I loved every part of it."[77] Sweeney's performance was lauded by critic Owen Gleiberman, who wrote that Sweeney gave a "potent, true-note, game-changing knockout of a performance ... She fully expresses the soul of a movie star, which is this: She completely becomes the character, and in doing so becomes us."[78] Though the film was well received critically, it bombed at the box office. In the aftermath, Sweeney said: "I am so deeply proud of this movie ... We don’t always just make art for numbers, we make it for impact. And Christy has been the most impactful project of my life."[79]
Upcoming
[edit]Sweeney will next co-star opposite Amanda Seyfried in The Housemaid, an adaptation of the bestselling novel of the same name.[80] Sweeney is attached to play Kim Novak in Scandalous, a romantic drama to be directed by Colman Domingo.[81] It will shoot in early 2026.[77]
Brand endorsements
[edit]In January 2023, Sweeney became a brand ambassador for Armani Beauty and Laneige.[82][83] Her other advertising deals include partnerships with Miu Miu, Samsung, Ford, Baskin-Robbins, Cotton On and Guess.[84][85] In May 2025, she received widespread attention on social media after partnering with personal care brand Dr. Squatch to launch a limited-edition soap line containing her bathwater.[86]
In July 2025, Sweeney appeared in an advertising campaign for American Eagle Outfitters called "Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans",[87] which became a subject of controversy.[88] Some social media users claimed that the pun on "jeans" and "genes", associated with a blonde-haired, blue-eyed white woman, promoted eugenics and white supremacy.[89][90][91] This, in turn, increased left-wing criticism of the campaign. Mainstream media widely reported on the controversy, and the Trump administration commented on it.[92][93][94][95] The Hollywood Reporter was unsure whether this "media firestorm" had negatively impacted the box office returns of Americana.[96] American Eagle Outfitters later praised the campaign as a great success and said they were planning other collaborations with Sweeney.[97]
Personal life
[edit]Sweeney started dating businessman Jonathan Davino in 2018, and they became engaged in 2022.[98][99][100] They produced films together (including Anyone but You and Immaculate), and Sweeney considered Davino her "producing partner".[100] The couple separated in 2025.[101][102]
Sweeney is an automobile enthusiast. She has restored a 1969 Ford Bronco and a 1965 Ford Mustang, and also owns a 1956 Ford F100 with original patina, gifted by her grandfather.[103][104] As part of her partnership with Ford, Sweeney designed a custom 2024 Mustang.[105]
In 2021, Sweeney purchased a 3,200-square-foot (300 m2) Tudor-style home in Los Angeles, for US$3 million.[106] In 2023, she bought a US$9.9 million "fixer-upper mansion" in Los Angeles's Bel Air neighborhood, and in 2024 she bought a US$13.5 million home in the Florida Keys.[106]
Filmography
[edit]| † | Denotes film or TV productions that have not yet been released |
Film
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | ZMD: Zombies of Mass Destruction | Lisa | [107] | |
| The Opium Eater | Sarah Detzer | |||
| Takeo | Samantha Wright | Short film | ||
| Night Blind | Lost Girl | |||
| The Ward | Young Alice | [108] | ||
| 2013 | Spiders 3D | Emily Cole | ||
| 2014 | Angels in Stardust | Annie | ||
| 2015 | Held | Lily Woods | Short film | |
| Love Made Visible | Leah | |||
| The Martial Arts Kid | Julie | Straight-to-video film | ||
| The Unborn | Little Janey Hutchins | Short film | ||
| Stolen from Suburbia | Emma | |||
| 2016 | Cassidy Way | Kelsey Connors | Straight-to-video film | |
| The Horde | Hailey Summers | |||
| 2017 | Vikes | Ida | ||
| Dead Ant | Samantha "Sam" | |||
| It Happened Again Last Night | Young Paige | Short film | ||
| 2018 | Relentless | Ally | Straight-to-video film | |
| Under the Silver Lake | Shooting Star #2 | |||
| Along Came the Devil | Ashley Winbourne | |||
| 2019 | Big Time Adolescence | Holly | ||
| Clementine | Lana | |||
| Once Upon a Time in Hollywood | Dianne "Snake" Lake | |||
| 2020 | Nocturne | Juliet Lowe | ||
| 2021 | The Voyeurs | Pippa Monroe | ||
| Night Teeth | Eva | |||
| 2023 | Reality | Reality Winner | ||
| Americana | Penny Jo Poplin | |||
| Anyone but You | Beatrice "Bea" Messina | Also executive producer | ||
| 2024 | Madame Web | Julia Cornwall | ||
| Immaculate | Sister Cecilia | Also producer | [67] | |
| Eden | Margret Wittmer | [109] | ||
| 2025 | Echo Valley | Claire Garrett | [72][110] | |
| Christy | Christy Martin | Also producer | [76] | |
| The Housemaid † | Millie Calloway | Post-production; also executive producer | [80] | |
| 2026 | The Devil Wears Prada 2 † | TBA | Cameo; Post-production | [111] |
Television
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Heroes | Little Girl | Episode: "Hysterical Blindness" | |
| Criminal Minds | Dani Forester | Episode: "Outfoxed" | ||
| 2010 | Chase | Kayla Edwards | Episode: "Pilot" | |
| 90210 | Girl | Episode: "How Much Is That Liam in the Window" | ||
| 2011 | Kickin' It | Kelsey Vargas | Episode: "Swords and Magic" | |
| The Bling Ring | Izzy Fishman | Television film | ||
| 2014 | Grey's Anatomy | Erin Weaver | Episode: "Don't Let's Start" | |
| 2017 | The Middle | Female Student #1 | Episode: "The Final Final" | |
| Pretty Little Liars | Willa | Episode: "Till Death Do Us Part" | ||
| 2018 | Everything Sucks! | Emaline Addario | Main role; 10 episodes | |
| The Handmaid's Tale | Eden Spencer | Recurring role; 7 episodes (season 2) | ||
| Sharp Objects | Alice | Miniseries; 7 episodes | ||
| The Wrong Daughter | Samantha | Television film | ||
| 2019–present | Euphoria | Cassie Howard | Main role; 16 episodes | |
| 2021 | The White Lotus | Olivia Mossbacher | Main role; 6 episodes (season 1) | |
| 2021–2022 | Robot Chicken | Barbie / Additional Characters | Voice role; 4 episodes | |
| 2024 | Saturday Night Live | Herself (host) | Episode: "Sydney Sweeney/Kacey Musgraves" |
Podcasts
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Strawberry Spring | Anne Bray | 8 episodes | [112] |
Web
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | In the Vault | Haley Caren | 7 episodes | |
| 2020 | Day by Day | Winnie Chapman (voice) | Episode: "Winnie, Betty and... " | |
| 2021 | Downfalls High | Scarlett | ||
| 2024 | Hot Ones | Herself | Episode: "Sydney Sweeney Endures a Nightmare While Eating Spicy Wings" |
Music video appearances
[edit]| Year | Title | Artist | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | "Graveyard" | Halsey | |
| 2023 | "Angry" | The Rolling Stones |
Awards and nominations
[edit]| Award | Year | Category | Work / Nominee | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AACTA Awards | 2024 | Audience Choice Award for Favourite Actress | Sydney Sweeney | Nominated | [113] |
| Astra TV Awards | 2022 | Best Supporting Actress in a Broadcast Network or Cable Series – Drama | Euphoria | Nominated | [114] |
| Best Supporting Actress in a Broadcast Network or Cable Limited or Anthology Series | The White Lotus | Nominated | |||
| Critics' Choice Television Awards | 2024 | Best Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television | Reality | Nominated | [115] |
| Dorian Awards | 2022 | Best Supporting TV Performance | Euphoria | Nominated | [116] |
| Dublin Film Critics' Circle Awards | 2023 | Best Actress | Reality | Nominated | [117] |
| Fangoria Chainsaw Awards | 2024 | Best Lead Performance | Immaculate | Nominated | [118] |
| Gracie Awards | 2024 | Best Actress in a Leading Role in a Movie Made for TV | Reality | Won | [119] |
| MTV Movie & TV Awards | 2022 | Best Performance in a Show | Euphoria | Nominated | [120] |
| Best Fight (shared with Alexa Demie) | Won | ||||
| People's Choice Awards | 2022 | Drama TV Star of the Year | Euphoria | Nominated | [121] |
| 2024 | Comedy Movie Star of the Year | Anyone but You | Nominated | [122] | |
| Primetime Emmy Awards | 2022 | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series | Euphoria | Nominated | [123] |
| Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie | The White Lotus | Nominated | |||
| Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2019 | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series | The Handmaid's Tale | Nominated | [124] |
| Santa Barbara International Film Festival | 2026 | Virtuoso Award | Christy | Won | [125] |
| Sidewalk Film Festival | 2019 | Special Shout Jury Mention for Acting | Clementine | Won | [126] |
| Young Artist Awards | 2011 | Best Performance in a Short Film – Young Actress | Takeo | Nominated | [127] |
| Best Performance in a TV Series – Guest Starring Young Actress 11–15 | Chase | Nominated | |||
| 2019 | Best Ensemble Performance in a Streaming Series or Film | Everything Sucks! | Nominated | [128] |
References
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- ^ Emmy Awards (July 12, 2022). "Outstanding Supporting Actress In A Limited Or Anthology Series Or Movie – 2022". Television Academy. Archived from the original on September 22, 2022. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
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- ^ Treffry, Lindsey (February 7, 2025). "'I'll have what she's having': Spokane's Sydney Sweeney makes cameo in Super Bowl ad re-creating iconic 'When Harry Met Sally' scene with Meg Ryan, Billy Crystal". Spokesman.com. Archived from the original on March 12, 2025. Retrieved May 8, 2025.
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This brings us to the Sydney Sweeney-starring, originally Bron-financed Tony Tost-written-directed western, Americana, which the media has condemned as a flat-out bomb in its $500K opening at 1,100 theaters, particularly in the wake of the Euphoria star's controversial American Eagle jeans campaign.
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With the lens lingering intimately on her figure, and the apparent sensual tone throughout the campaign, consumers were quick to point out what they saw as the regressive nature of the material. A blonde bombshell catering to the male gaze, they argued, was a quintessential symbol of a bygone era. (...) Even more concerning, critics argued, was the use of Sweeney as the archetype of "good genes." A conventionally attractive, white, thin, blonde woman with blue eyes being held up not just as the beauty ideal but as the pinnacle of good breeding bordered on eugenic thinking, they asserted, and contributed to the glorification of whiteness.
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Indeed, critics have accused the ad of peddling "Nazi" propaganda, pointing out that the play on words with "great genes" has racist connotations and veers towards white supremacist ideals. Many have also highlighted that considering Sweeney is blue-eyed and blonde-haired, it echoes eugenic messaging.(...) Sayantani DasGupta, a professor of Narrative Medicine, has even analysed the ads in a viral TikTok post, showing how the American Eagle campaign is "imbued with eugenic messaging", which has seen the "forced sterilization and decrease of reproduction among undesirable communities" in the American South. The professor concluded the American Eagle advert is "contributing to and reinforcing this kind of anti-immigrant, anti-people of colour, pro-eugenic, political moment."
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It's the latest controversy to highlight a growing cultural rift over perceived "wokeness" as conservative-leaning culture swings back into the mainstream. In recent years, those on the online right have often praised media that unapologetically upholds traditional white American beauty standards, especially when it doesn't come with any attempt to be inclusive.
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[JD Vance's] comments joined a chorus of Republican and right-wing voices who argued that a new American Eagle ad campaign with Ms. Sweeney, one of Hollywood's top young stars, had stoked left-wing outrage over its slogan: "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans." They claimed that progressives were up in arms over the intentional double-entendre with the word "genes," suggesting it was winking at eugenics or white supremacy. In reality, most progressives weren't worked up much at all. (...) Criticism of the ad campaign had come almost entirely from a smattering of accounts with relatively few followers, according to an analysis of social media data by The New York Times. Conversation about the ad did not escalate online or in traditional media until days later, after right-leaning influencers, broadcasters and politicians began criticizing what they described as a wave of progressive outrage.
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The backlash has been swift and fierce, and some of it, at least, if you ask me, is fair. The internet has been quick to condemn the advertisement as noninclusive at best and as overtly promoting "white supremacy" and "Nazi propaganda" at worst. (...) Together, the campaign feels regressive and not retro, offensive and not cheeky. The advertisement, the choice of Sweeney as the sole face in it and the internet's reaction reflect an unbridled cultural shift toward whiteness, conservatism and capitalist exploitation. Sweeney is both a symptom and a participant. (...) It isn't just that far-right ideology is proliferating on the fringe; our entire cultural ethos has moved further right, allowing for this sort of content.
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According to Sophie Gilbert, a staff writer at the Atlantic and author of the book Girl on Girl which explores how pop culture is shaped by misogyny: "The slogan 'Sydney Sweeney has good jeans' obviously winks at the obsession with eugenics that's so prevalent among the modern right." Dr Sarah Cefai, a senior lecturer in gender and cultural studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, agrees. "Honestly, what were they thinking, that a white supremacist fantasy has permission to be aired so conspicuously?"
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Many felt that the ad was playing into this dark, not-very-concealed conversation about genetics in America. "This is intentional. This is pointed, and you're calling out to the consumers that you hope to attract here," said Cheryl Overton, a long-time brand strategist and communications executive. "If American Eagle is really out there trying to target Americans to the right or to the far right, so be it. If that's who the product is designed for now, that is their right as a company to do that. But you have to know that folks are educated, folks are nuanced, and folks are willing to call brands out."
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Americana, directed by Tony Tost, opens in the wake of a media firestorm engulfing Sweeney after American Eagle dropped its "Sydney Has Great Jeans" campaign July 23.
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