Elizabeth Olsen

American actress (born 1989) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elizabeth Chase Olsen (born February 16, 1989) is an American actress. She gained worldwide recognition for her portrayal of Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch in the Marvel Cinematic Universe since 2014, with her performance in the miniseries WandaVision (2021) earning her nominations for a Primetime Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award.

Born (1989-02-16) February 16, 1989 (age 37)
OccupationActress
Yearsactive1993–present
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Elizabeth Olsen
Born (1989-02-16) February 16, 1989 (age 37)
Alma materNew York University (BFA)
OccupationActress
Years active1993–present
Spouse
Robbie Arnett
(m. 2019)
Relatives
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Born in Los Angeles, Olsen began acting at age four alongside her sisters Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. She had her debut film role in the thriller Martha Marcy May Marlene in 2011, for which she garnered praise. Olsen received a BAFTA Rising Star Award nomination and graduated from New York University two years later.

Outside of her work with Marvel, Olsen starred in the monster film Godzilla (2014), the mystery film Wind River (2017), the black comedy Ingrid Goes West (2017), the drama His Three Daughters (2023), and the fantasy romance Eternity (2025). She also starred as a widow in the drama series Sorry for Your Loss (2018–2019) and as Candy Montgomery in the miniseries Love & Death (2022), with the latter earning her a Golden Globe Award nomination.

Early life

Elizabeth Chase Olsen[1] was born on February 16, 1989, in Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California.[2][3] Her mother, Jarnie, is a former dancer and personal manager, while her father, Dave, is a real estate agent.[4][5] Their father has Norwegian ancestry while their mother is of French, German and Italian ancestry.[6] She is the younger sister of twin fashion designers Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, who became successful television and film actresses as children. Olsen also has an older brother, James "Trent" Olsen (born 1984).[5][7] Her parents divorced in 1996,[8] and their father remarried that same year. Through him and his second wife, McKenzie, the four siblings have two half-siblings: Courtney and Jake.[7]

Olsen began acting when she was four years old,[9] appearing in Mary-Kate and Ashley's projects, including the 1994 television film How the West Was Fun and the straight-to-video series The Adventures of Mary-Kate & Ashley.[10][11][12] After her sisters' music success with their sophomore album I Am The Cute One, Olsen was signed by their label BMG Kidz in August 1994.[13] Despite being signed to the children's music label, Olsen never recorded any music. As a child, she took ballet lessons and acting classes and spent time at musical theatre camp.[10][14] For a time, she chose ballet over acting and at one point wanted to work as an accountant at Wall Street.[14]

Olsen got back into acting while in high school,[14] but nearly quit pursuing acting in 2004 due to the media attention toward Mary-Kate's eating disorder.[15] She went to Campbell Hall School in Studio City, California.[16] Olsen attended New York University (NYU)'s Tisch School of the Arts, where she majored in drama.[17] During college, she took classes at Atlantic Theater Company. She also spent a semester at the Moscow Art Theatre School in Russia,[5] where she began to take acting more seriously than she had before.[14] She attained understudy roles in the 2008 off-Broadway production of the play Dust and the 2009 Broadway production of the play Impressionism, which led to her securing an agent.[5][10] Olsen graduated from NYU in January 2013.[18]

Career

Early roles (2011–2014)

Olsen at the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con

Olsen made her film debut in the 2011 thriller film Martha Marcy May Marlene.[19] The film, along with her performance, received critical acclaim following its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival.[20][21] Olsen earned several award nominations for her portrayal of the titular Martha, a young woman suffering from delusions after fleeing her life in a cult and returning to her family,[20][22] including those for the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress and the Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead.[21] She attributed her interest in the character to her own fascination with mental illnesses.[19] Olsen next appeared in the horror film Silent House, which garnered her "rave reviews".[23] Despite premiering at the Sundance Film Festival alongside Martha Marcy May Marlene, it was released in 2012,[24] during which she also starred in the thriller Red Lights and the comedy Liberal Arts.[25]

In January 2013, Olsen garnered a nomination for the BAFTA Rising Star Award at the 66th British Academy Film Awards.[26] Later that year, she played Edie Parker, novelist Jack Kerouac's first wife and the author of the Beat Generation memoir You'll Be Okay, in the biographical drama Kill Your Darlings.[27] She also appeared in the American remake of the 2003 South Korean film Oldboy, playing Marie Sebastian, a nurse who helps the protagonist, played by Josh Brolin, find his daughter.[28] That same year, she starred as the titular Juliet in an off-Broadway production of the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. The New York Times critic Ben Brantley described her portrayal as "alternating between saucy petulance and hysteria".[29]

She played the leading role in In Secret, a film adaptation of Émile Zola's 1867 novel Thérèse Raquin. The film was released in February 2014.[30] Later that year, Olsen starred in the monster film Godzilla, opposite Bryan Cranston and Aaron Taylor-Johnson, which received positive reviews and grossed $529 million against a $160 million production budget.[31][32] She and Dakota Fanning co-starred as teenage girls in Brooklyn in the film Very Good Girls, released that same year,[33] which Josh Duboff of Vanity Fair characterized as unfavorably reviewed.[34]

Marvel Cinematic Universe and other roles (2015–present)

Olsen starred in the 2015 superhero film Avengers: Age of Ultron, a sequel to The Avengers,[35] joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe media franchise.[36][37] In the film, she portrayed Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch, which marked the comic book character's film debut.[38] She first appeared as the character in a post-credits scene of the 2014 film Captain America: The Winter Soldier, alongside Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who portrayed Maximoff's brother, Pietro.[36][39] Olsen played the part with an accent originating from a fictional country called Sokovia, which she described as similar to Slovakian.[37] She reprised the role in Captain America: Civil War (2016),[40] Avengers: Infinity War (2018),[41] and Avengers: Endgame (2019),[42] the last of which became the second highest-grossing film of all time.[43] With the role, Olsen rose to fame.[44][45]

Olsen at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con

Olsen portrayed Audrey Williams, the wife, manager, and duet partner of singer Hank Williams, portrayed by Tom Hiddleston, in the 2015 biographical film I Saw the Light, directed by Marc Abraham.[46] In 2017, she starred as a novice FBI agent in the mystery film Wind River and a social media influencer in the comedy-drama film Ingrid Goes West, both of which were released in August to critical praise.[47][48][49] Vulture's David Edelstein found Olsen's "incongruously high-schoolish demeanor" in Wind River problematic,[50] while Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote that she gave a "major eye-opener of a performance" in Ingrid Goes West, deeming it "toxic perfection".[51] The following year, she appeared in the Netflix film Kodachrome, playing a caregiver to a photographer, played by Ed Harris.[52] Olsen executive produced and starred as a young widow named Leigh Shaw in the Facebook Watch web television series Sorry for Your Loss, which premiered in September 2018.[53] She said the three years it took to develop the series enabled her to immerse herself in Shaw's impulses.[54] Critics reviewed the series positively,[55] and Olsen's performance, which earned her a nomination for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Drama Series,[56] was noted as "stunning",[57] "disciplined and sharp",[58] as well as "slyly sympathetic".[59] The show was canceled in January 2020 after two seasons.[60]

Olsen in 2024

Alongside Paul Bettany as Vision, Olsen played Maximoff again in the superhero miniseries WandaVision, which premiered on Disney+ in January 2021.[61] In addition to complimenting Olsen and Bettany's chemistry, critics praised the cast,[62] with Vox's Alex Abad-Santos writing Olsen was brilliant in her portrayal and Linda Holmes of NPR highlighting her "indelible central performance" in their respective reviews.[63][64] Olsen earned a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie and Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film for her performance.[65][66] She reprised the role in the film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, which was released in May 2022 to mixed reviews. Olsen's performance received praise, with Owen Gleiberman of Variety writing that it "generates an operatic fire".[67][68]

Olsen, 2025

Olsen starred as housewife Candy Montgomery in Love and Death (2023), an HBO Max limited series about a 1980 killing in Texas.[69] Her performance earned her a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film.[70] Following the series, Olsen then starred in Azazel Jacobs' drama film His Three Daughters and the science fiction thriller The Assessment.[71] She voiced a variant of Wanda Maximoff in Marvel's animated series Marvel Zombies, which released on September 24, 2025.[72] She then appeared as Joan in David Freyne's romantic comedy Eternity alongside Miles Teller and Callum Turner, which released on November 26, 2025.[73]

Olsen will next appear in Sam Esmail's thriller Panic Carefully, which is set for release on February 26, 2027.[74] In 2025, Deadline reported that FX had ordered a pilot for Seven Sisters, a drama series.[75] The report indicated the project would reunite Olsen with director Sean Durkin, who previously directed her in Martha Marcy May Marlene.[76] She is also attached to star in Todd Solondz's dark comedy Love Child with Charles Melton, an Apple TV+ limited series Once There Were Wolves, adapted from Charlotte McConaghy's novel, and Panos Cosmatos' vampire thriller Flesh Of The Gods alongside Oscar Isaac and Kristen Stewart.[77]

Personal life

Olsen has credited Diane Keaton as a primary influence, both in her acting and personal life. Keaton helped Olsen learn to be "the kind of woman I wanted to be, because I hadn't seen the woman I felt connected to in films. I was like, I'm not the sexy one, I'm not the nerd, I don't know where I fit."[14] Her older sisters, Mary-Kate and Ashley, have also influenced her and given her career advice, though at one point Olsen considered changing her name to her middle name, Chase, to distance herself from her sisters, as she wanted to be noticed for her talent and not solely for being their sister.[1]

Olsen says she became an atheist at the age of 13 because she believes "religion should be about community and having a place to go in prayer, not something that should determine women's freedoms."[78] She once held a real estate license in New York, which she obtained after first moving there.[79] Olsen is an ambassador for the company Bobbi Brown Cosmetics.[55] She and actor Boyd Holbrook were in a relationship from 2011 to 2014.[80]

Olsen became engaged to musician Robbie Arnett, of the American band Milo Greene, in July 2019 after three years of dating.[81][82] The two secretly eloped that same year.[83][14] She and Arnett live in Los Angeles.[84] Together, they co-wrote the children's books Hattie Harmony: Worry Detective, released in June 2022, and Hattie Harmony: Opening Night, released in June 2023. Olsen and Arnett's experiences with anxiety inspired the books' creations.[85][86]

Filmography

Key
Denotes film or TV productions that have not yet been released

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1994 How the West Was Fun Girl in Car Television film [11]
2011 Martha Marcy May Marlene Martha / Marcy May / Marlene Lewis [21]
2012 Red Lights Sally Owen [25]
Silent House Sarah [24]
Peace, Love & Misunderstanding Zoe [10]
Liberal Arts Zibby [25]
2013 Kill Your Darlings Edie Parker [27]
Oldboy Marie Sebastian / Mia Doucett [28]
2014 In Secret Thérèse Raquin [30]
Captain America: The Winter Soldier Wanda Maximoff Uncredited cameo; mid-credits scene [39]
Very Good Girls Gerry Fields [33]
Godzilla Elle Brody [31]
2015 Avengers: Age of Ultron Wanda Maximoff [35]
I Saw the Light Audrey Williams [46]
2016 Captain America: Civil War Wanda Maximoff [40]
2017 Ingrid Goes West Taylor Sloane [47]
Wind River Jane Banner [47]
Kodachrome Zooey Kern [52]
2018 Avengers: Infinity War Wanda Maximoff [41]
2019 Avengers: Endgame [42]
2021 Spider-Man: No Way Home Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch Uncredited cameo; post-credits scene [87]
2022 Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness [67]
2023 His Three Daughters Christina Also executive producer [88]
2024 The Assessment Mia [71]
2025 Eternity Joan Cutler Also executive producer [89]
2027 Panic Carefully TBA Post-production [90]
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2016 Drunk History Norma Kopp Episode: "Siblings" [91]
2017 HarmonQuest Stirrip Episode: "The Keystone Obelisk" [92]
2018–2019 Sorry for Your Loss Leigh Shaw Main role; also executive producer [55]
2021 WandaVision Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch Main role; 9 episodes [61]
2021–2022 Marvel Studios: Assembled Herself 2 episodes [93][94]
2022 Saturday Night Live Episode: "Benedict Cumberbatch/Arcade Fire" [95]
2023 Love & Death Candy Montgomery Main role; 7 episodes [69]
What If...? Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch Voice; 2 episodes [96]
2025 Marvel Zombies Voice; 3 episodes [97]
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Theatre

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Venue Ref.
2013 Romeo and Juliet Juliet Classic Stage Company [29]
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Accolades

More information Year, Association ...
Accolades received by Elizabeth Olsen
Year Association Category Nominated work Result Ref.
2011 Chicago Film Critics Association Most Promising Performer Martha Marcy May Marlene Won [98]
Best Actress Nominated [99]
Detroit Film Critics Society Best Breakthrough Performance Nominated [100]
Elle Women in Hollywood Woman of the Year N/a Won [101]
Florida Film Critics Circle Pauline Kael Breakout Award Martha Marcy May Marlene Won [102]
Ghent International Film Festival Special Mention Won [103]
Gotham Independent Film Awards Best Breakthrough Actress Nominated [104]
Best Ensemble Performance[a] Nominated
Indiana Film Journalists Association Best Actress Won [105]
Los Angeles Film Critics Association New Generation Award[b] Won [106]
Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards Best Actress in a Leading Role Won [98]
San Diego Film Critics Best Actress Nominated [107]
Satellite Awards Best Actress – Motion Picture Nominated [108]
St. Louis Film Critics Association Best Actress Nominated [109]
Toronto Film Critics Association Best Actress Runner-up [110]
Village Voice Film Poll Best Actress 5th place [111]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Best Actress Nominated [112]
2012 Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Breakthrough Performance Won [113]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards Best Actress Nominated [114]
Dublin Film Critics' Circle Awards Best Actress 5th place [115]
Breakthrough Artist 3rd place
Dorian Awards We're Wilde About You / Rising Star Award N/a Nominated [116]
Independent Spirit Awards Best Female Lead Martha Marcy May Marlene Nominated [117]
International Cinephile Society Awards Best Actress Nominated [118]
NewNowNext Awards Next Mega Star Silent House Nominated [119]
Online Film Critics Society Best Actress Martha Marcy May Marlene Nominated [120]
Saturn Awards Best Actress Nominated [121]
Vancouver Film Critics Circle Best Actress Won [122]
2013 British Academy Film Awards BAFTA Rising Star Award N/a Nominated [26]
Fangoria Chainsaw Awards Best Leading Actress Silent House Won [123]
2014 Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie: Breakout Star Godzilla Nominated [124]
2015 Deauville American Film Festival Hollywood Rising Star Award N/a Won [125]
Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie: Breakout Star Avengers: Age of Ultron Nominated [126]
2016 Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie: Chemistry[c] Captain America: Civil War Nominated [127]
2018 MTV Movie & TV Awards Best Fight[d] Avengers: Infinity War Nominated [128]
Teen Choice Awards Choice Action Movie Actress Nominated [129]
2019 Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Actress in a Drama Series Sorry for Your Loss Nominated [56]
2021 MTV Movie & TV Awards Best Performance in a Show WandaVision Won [130]
Best Fight[e] Won
Hollywood Critics Association Awards Best Actress in a Limited Series, Anthology Series, or Television Movie Nominated [131]
Dorian Awards Best TV Performance Nominated [132]
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited or Anthology Series or Movie Nominated [65]
TCA Awards Individual Achievement in Drama Nominated [133]
People's Choice Awards Female TV Star of 2021 Nominated [134]
2022 Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Actress in a Movie/Miniseries Nominated [135]
Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Actress in a Superhero Series Won [136]
Golden Globe Awards Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film Nominated [66]
Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Female TV Star (Family) Nominated [137]
Saturn Awards Best Actress in a Streaming Television Series Nominated [138]
People's Choice Awards Female Movie Star of 2022 Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Won [139]
Action Movie Star of 2022 Won
2023 Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Movie Actress Nominated [140]
Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Actress in a Superhero Movie Nominated [141]
Best Villain in a Movie Nominated
MTV Movie & TV Awards Best Villain Won [142]
Awards Daily Cooler Awards Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited/Anthology Series Love & Death Nominated [143]
Gold Derby Awards Limited Movie/Actress Nominated
Online Film & Television Awards Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Limited or Anthology Series Nominated
2024 Golden Globe Awards Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film Nominated [70]
Independent Spirit Awards Robert Altman Award[f] His Three Daughters Won [144]
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Notes

References

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