Australian actress (born 1998)
Odessa Young
Born (1998-03-06 ) 6 March 1998 (age 26) Occupation Actress Years active 2007–present
Odessa Young (born 6 March 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 of which earned her an AACTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role .[ 1] [ 2] 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).[ 3] Young also made her off-Broadway debut in Days of Rage .
Early life and education
Young grew up in Australia, where her father Adam is a musician and her mother Rachel is a writer.[ 4] [ 5] She started taking after-school acting classes at 11 years old.[ 6] She attended a performing arts high school in Sydney , taking part in theatre productions.[ 7] Within two days of turning 18, she relocated from Sydney to Los Angeles, California . Two years later, Young moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn , New York.[ 8]
Career
Odessa Young started acting professionally at the age of 11,[ 9] when she was cast through her drama teacher in the Australian children's show My Place .[ 9] She acted in television series such as Wonderland and Tricky Business before making the transition into feature film work.[ 10]
In 2015, she co-starred in the film The Daughter with Geoffrey Rush and Sam Neill .[ 11] [ 12] She was cast in the title role after modifying her take on the character to seem less mature than in her first audition.[ 13] Also in 2015, she acted alongside Radha Mitchell in Looking for Grace , where she played the titular role .[ 14] [ 15] Later that year, she was dubbed "Australia's brightest rising star" by Elle Magazine .[ 16] For her role in The Daughter , Young attracted considerable critical acclaim[ 17] and won Best Actress in a Leading Role at the 2016 AACTA Awards .[ 18] Her performance in The Daughter also earned her an award for Best Actress from the Australian Film Critics Association.[ 19]
In 2016, she was in final negotiations to play the female lead in When the Street Lights Go On on Hulu .[ 20]
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.[ 21] In 2018, she won Best Actress at the 5th annual Vancouver Web Series Festival for her role in the same series.[ 22]
In 2018, she starred in the films Assassination Nation and A Million Little Pieces .[ 4] 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.[ 7] In winter 2019 she starred in The Mother at Atlantic Theater Company off-broadway as Emily. [ 23]
She was cast in The Stand miniseries in 2019.[ 24] With the Stand , there were four shooting days before lockdown in Vancouver, with shooting picking up again later.[ 8] 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.[ 25] [ 26]
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 ,[ 27] [ 28] when she pulled out of the production over scheduling conflicts related to the COVID-19 pandemic .[ 29] [ 30] In the 2020 film Shirley , Young plays Rose,[ 3] a newly married young woman living in the same house as Shirley Jackson .[ 31] 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 .[ 32] [ 33]
Vogue named her one of six actors to watch in 2021.[ 34] That year, she was also cast in the British film Mothering Sunday .[ 34]
In June 2024, Young was cast to play a love interest of Bruce Springsteen , who will be played by Jeremy Allen White , in the upcoming film Deliver Me from Nowhere which will be based on the book of the same name and will be about the recording of Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska .[ 35]
Filmography
Film
Key
†
Denotes films that have not yet been released
Television
Awards and nominations
References
^ "Seventeen-year-old Aussie Odessa Young is learning the ropes from Hollywood's biggest stars" . Newscomau . 20 February 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ Bunbury, Stephanie (22 January 2016). "Why Odessa Young, star of Looking for Grace and The Daughter, is one to watch" . Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ a b "Odessa Young embraces dramatic intensity of 'Shirley' " . KGET . 2 June 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2021 .
^ a b Bryant, Miranda (20 November 2018). "Odessa Young interview: Young women are set up for failure by society" . Standard . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ "Odessa Young | Actress, Soundtrack" . IMDb . Retrieved 1 May 2024 .
^ "Odessa Young Biography" . Tribute . Retrieved 30 April 2024 .
^ a b King, Darryn (15 October 2018). "Odessa Young Is Raging, On Stage And On Screen" . Forbes . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ a b Quinn, Karl (3 July 2020). " 'You never grow out of the imposter syndrome': Aussie star Odessa Young" . Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 14 January 2021 .
^ a b Herald, New Zealand (15 July 2016). "Meet Australia's next great actress Odessa Young" . m.nzherald.co.nz . Retrieved 31 July 2016 .
^ Collins, Laura (10 February 2016). "Odessa Young Is Australia's Brightest Rising Star" . Elle . Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ "Jim Schembri interviews Simon Stone and Odessa Young" . Archived from the original on 2 October 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ "Young, 17: 'I don't think I've missed out' " . Daily Telegraph . 20 February 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ O'Donohue, Danielle (3 June 2015). "How Odessa Young Transformed Herself Into 'The Daughter' " . The Music .
^ India (22 July 2016). "Why Radha Mitchell, Sue Brooks and Odessa Young Are Looking for Grace in Venice" . Huffington Post India . Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ M, Adnan (20 September 2015). "TIFF 2015: Odessa Young Explores 'Looking for Grace' " . The Arts Guild . Retrieved 22 July 2016 .
^ "Australian Actress Odessa Young Is One To Watch" . ELLE . Retrieved 7 October 2017 .
^ "Australian actress Odessa Young on fashion and Hollywood" . Vogue.com.au . 17 February 2017. Retrieved 8 October 2017 .
^ "Mel Gibson and Hacksaw Ridge clean up at AACTA Awards" . ABC News . 7 December 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2017 .
^ "Odessa Young" . IMDb . Retrieved 7 October 2017 .
^ Andreeva, Nellie (18 February 2016). "Odessa Young to Star in Hulu Pilot When the Street Lights Go On " . Deadline . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ "Home" . International Academy of Web Television . Retrieved 7 October 2017 .
^ "12 Canadian Series Win Big at Vancouver Web Fest - 604 Now" . 604 Now . 29 April 2018. Retrieved 21 May 2018 .
^ Brantley, Ben (11 March 2019). "Review: Isabelle Huppert Is a Nightmare to Remember in 'The Mother' " . New York Times .
^ Petski, Denise (1 August 2019). " 'The Stand': James Marsden, Amber Heard, Odessa Young & Henry Zaga Set For Stephen King's CBS All Access Series" . Deadline .
^ Stone, Sam (14 December 2020). "The Stand: Odessa Young on Finding Inner Light at the End of the World" . Comic Book Resources . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ Turchiano, Danielle (4 December 2020). "Frannie Goldsmith (Odessa Young)" . Variety . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ "Odessa Young & Ella Rumpf Join 'Tokyo Vice' at HBO Max" . 19 February 2020.
^ "Rachel Keller Joins 'Tokyo Vice', Replacing Odessa Young, as HBO Max Series Eyes Return to Production" . 30 October 2020.
^ Andreeva, Nellie (30 October 2020). "Tokyo Vice Recasting Odessa Young" . Deadline . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ White, Peter (23 November 2020). "Japan's Wowow Boards Michael Mann's 'Tokyo Vice' As Co-Producer As Production Resumes This Week" . Deadline . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ Shaffer, Marshall (11 June 2020). "Features Interview: Odessa Young on the Intuitiveness That Fuels Shirley" . Slant Magazine . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ "Young Hollywood actors perform online for charity" . BBC News . Retrieved 28 August 2021 .
^ George, Doug (13 May 2020). "Oak Parker stages Zoom plays as COVID-19 benefits, casting Florence Pugh and more young Hollywood actors" . chicagotribune.com . Retrieved 28 August 2021 .
^ a b Seth, Radhika (12 December 2020). "These 6 Actors Are Set to Rule 2021" . Vogue . Retrieved 14 January 2020 .
^ Peralta, Diego (20 June 2024). "Odessa Young Will Journey to 'Nebraska' in Bruce Springsteen Biopic" . collider.com .
^ Ritman, Alex (1 February 2024). " 'The Damned' First Look: Odessa Young and Joe Cole Endure a Cruel Winter in Upcoming Horror Film (Exclusive)" . Variety . Retrieved 4 February 2024 .
^ "Odessa Young" . IMDb . Retrieved 9 October 2017 .
^ "2017 Winners & Nominees" .
^ "Official Selections" . Vancouver Web Fest . Retrieved 23 April 2018 .
External links
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