Odessa Young

Australian actress From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Odessa Young (born March 6, 1998) is an Australian actress. She gained prominence through her roles in the Nine Network drama Tricky Business (2012) and the 2015 films Looking for Grace and The Daughter, the latter earning her an AACTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. Her films since include Assassination Nation, A Million Little Pieces (both 2018), Shirley (2020), Mothering Sunday (2021) and Manodrome (2023). On television she starred in the miniseries The Stand (2020). Young made her off-Broadway debut in Days of Rage.

Born (1998-03-06) March 6, 1998 (age 28)
OccupationActress
Yearsactive2007–present
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Odessa Young
Young in September 2025
Born (1998-03-06) March 6, 1998 (age 28)
OccupationActress
Years active2007–present
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Early life and education

Odessa Young was born on 6 March 1998.[1] She grew up in Australia, where her father Adam is a musician and her mother, Rachel, a writer.[2]

She started taking after-school acting classes at 11 years old.[3] She attended a performing arts high school in Sydney, taking part in theatre productions.[4] Within two days of turning 18, she relocated from Sydney to Los Angeles, California. Two years later, Young moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York.[5]

Career

Young at the 2023 Berlin International Film Festival

Odessa Young started acting professionally at the age of 11,[6] when she was cast through her drama teacher in the Australian children's show My Place.[6] She acted in television series such as Wonderland and Tricky Business before making the transition into feature film work.[7]

In 2015 she co-starred in the film The Daughter with Geoffrey Rush and Sam Neill.[8][9] She was cast in the title role after modifying her take on the character to seem less mature than in her first audition.[10] Also in 2015, she acted alongside Radha Mitchell in Looking for Grace, where she played the titular role.[11][12] Later that year, she was dubbed "Australia's brightest rising star" by Elle Magazine.[13] For her role in The Daughter, Young attracted considerable critical acclaim[14] and won Best Actress in a Leading Role at the 2016 AACTA Awards.[15] Her performance in The Daughter also earned her an award for Best Actress from the Australian Film Critics Association.[16]

In 2016 she was in final negotiations to play the female lead in When the Street Lights Go On on Hulu.[17]

In 2017 Young starred as Genevieve in the web series High Life; for her performance, she won an International Academy of Web Television Award for Best Lead Actress – Drama.[18] In 2018, she won Best Actress at the 5th annual Vancouver Web Series Festival for her role in the same series.[19]

In 2018 she starred in the films Assassination Nation and A Million Little Pieces.[2] That year, she also made her off-Broadway debut in Days of Rage at the Tony Kiser Theater, where she plays the radical Quinn in 1969.[4] In winter 2019 she starred in The Mother at Atlantic Theater Company off-broadway as Emily.[20]

She was cast in The Stand miniseries in 2019.[21] With the Stand, there were four shooting days before lockdown in Vancouver, with shooting picking up again later.[5] Released in 2020, the series features Young as Frannie, with a "new coda co-written by King himself" that gives her a different portrayal than the book in the final episode.[22][23]

In 2020, Young was cast as a hostess in the HBO Max television series Tokyo Vice, to be directed by Michael Mann and written by J. T. Rogers. She was subsequently replaced by Rachel Keller,[24][25] when she pulled out of the production over scheduling conflicts related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[26][27] In the 2020 film Shirley, Young plays Rose,[28] a newly married young woman living in the same house as Shirley Jackson.[29] In 2020, Odessa Young participated in Acting for a Cause, a live classic play and screenplay reading series created, directed and produced by Brando Crawford. Young played Lady Prism in The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde. The reading raised funds for non-profit charities including Mount Sinai Medical Center.[30][31]

Vogue named her one of six actors to watch in 2021.[32] That year, she was also cast in the British film Mothering Sunday,[32] in which she plays Jane Fairchild.[33]

In June 2024, Young was cast to play a love interest of Bruce Springsteen, played by Jeremy Allen White, in the film Deliver Me from Nowhere based on the book of the same name about the recording of Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska.[34]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2015 The Daughter Hedvig Finch
Looking for Grace Grace
2017 Sweet Virginia Maggie Russell
2018 Assassination Nation Lily Colson
A Million Little Pieces Lilly
The Professor Olivia Brown
Celeste Rita
2019 The Giant Charlotte
2020 Shirley Rose Nemser/Paula
2021 Mothering Sunday Jane Fairchild
2023 Manodrome Sal
2024 My First Film Vita
The Damned Eva [35]
The Order Zillah Craig
2025 Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere Faye Romano
TBA Harmonia Jo Cooper Post-production
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Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released

Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2009 My Place Alexandra Owen 1 episode
2012 Tricky Business Emma Christie Main cast
2013–15 Wonderland Lucy Wallace 3 episodes
2014 The Moodys Fran 1 episode
2017 High Life Genevieve Web series
2020–21 The Stand Frannie Goldsmith Miniseries
2022 The Staircase Martha Ratliff Miniseries
2025 The Narrow Road to the Deep North Amy Mulvaney Miniseries
2025 Black Rabbit Gen Miniseries
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Awards and nominations

More information Year, Association ...
Year Association Category Nominated work Result Ref.
2016 AACTA Awards Best Actress in a Leading Role The Daughter Won [36]
2017 International Academy of Web Television Best Lead Actress – Drama High Life Won [37]
2018 Vancouver Web Series Festival Best Actress High Life Won [38]
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References

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