Jacob Elordi - Wikipedia

Australian actor (born 1997)
Jacob Elordi
Elordi in 2025
Born (1997-06-26) 26 June 1997 (age 28)Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
OccupationActor
Years active2015–present
AwardsFull list

Jacob Elordi (born 26 June 1997) is an Australian actor.[1] He rose to prominence with his role as Noah Flynn in Netflix's The Kissing Booth franchise (2018–2021) and earned critical acclaim for his portrayal of Nate Jacobs in the HBO drama series Euphoria (2019–present).[2][3]

In 2023, Elordi portrayed Elvis Presley in Sofia Coppola's biographical drama Priscilla. Elordi earning a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance in Emerald Fennell's black comedy thriller Saltburn. He received further acclaim for his performances in the war drama miniseries The Narrow Road to the Deep North and as the Creature in Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein (both 2025), which earned him nominations at the 83rd Golden Globe Awards.

Early life

Jacob Elordi was born on 26 June 1997 in Brisbane, to Melissa Elordi, a stay-at-home mother and school volunteer, and John Elordi, a house painter.[1][4] Elordi's father was born in Markina-Xemein, Basque Country; he immigrated to Australia from Bilbao when he was eight years old to escape the Francoist dictatorship.[5][6][7] Elordi's paternal grandfather, Joaquín Elordi, was from Ondarroa.[6] Elordi has three older sisters, and grew up in a working class household.[4][7][8]

Growing up, he was a talented junior athlete, representing Victoria in both rugby union and basketball.[9][10] While a player on his school's rugby team, Elordi performed in school musicals starting at age 12, starring in productions of Seussical and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and he soon began taking acting classes.[11] He was first inspired to become an actor by Heath Ledger, particularly because of his role as the Joker in the 2008 film The Dark Knight.[12] He also played Oberon in a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. At age 14, Elordi started practising his American accent, modelling it after that of Vin Diesel.[8] He also attempted modelling at his mother's suggestion at age 15, but was told he was too tall to fit into the sample clothes.[13] Elordi attended the private all-boys Roman Catholic secondary schools of St Kevin's College and St Joseph's College, where he felt "deeply unsettled".[7][14] According to Elordi, he "barely finished high school".[3]

Throughout secondary school, Elordi continued to play rugby until he injured his back during a match, which, according to him, pushed him away from athletics and toward acting.[13] He has stated that, after reading Waiting for Godot in a drama class at age 15, acting "became [his] church" and his personality changed as a result. His mother also encouraged him to pursue acting.[14] He was inspired by actors such as Marlon Brando, Laurence Olivier, Daniel Day-Lewis, Christian Bale, and Ledger, and would read their biographies while emulating their behaviours.[15] He later attended an acting school in Melbourne and moved to the United States in 2017 at age 19 to pursue a career in acting.[13][16]

Career

2017–2022: Early work and breakthrough

Elordi's first experience on a Hollywood film set was in 2017's Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales as an extra,[7] reportedly as one of the redcoats.[17][18] His first acting role was on the Australian film Swinging Safari in 2018, playing the role of Rooster.[19] Elordi starred in the Netflix romantic comedy film The Kissing Booth, which premiered in May 2018, as Noah Flynn, a "bad-boy jock" and the film's primary love interest.[20] Despite largely negative critical reception, the film became one of Netflix's most-watched titles in 2018 and brought Elordi to widespread fame.[21][22]

Elordi reprised the role in the sequels The Kissing Booth 2, which filmed in mid-2019 in Cape Town, and was released in July 2020; and The Kissing Booth 3, which was released on Netflix in August 2021.[20][23][24] In a 2023 interview for GQ, he stated that he had not wanted to make them, calling them "ridiculous" and stating that he did them to "do whatever the fuck [he had] to do" to become an actor in the United States.[25][26] He also spoke out against his objectification as a result of the films.[27]

After filming was completed for the first Kissing Booth film, Elordi moved to Los Angeles. He helped a friend of his film an audition for a role in Sam Levinson's HBO drama series Euphoria, a remake of the Israeli series of the same name. While occasionally sleeping in his car and couch surfing at friends' houses with little money left and his visa expiring soon, he auditioned for Euphoria himself, with plans for it to be his last audition before moving back home.[28][21][12][3] He was then selected to play Nate Jacobs, a troubled high school football player with an abusive father, whom he portrayed from the show's pilot episode in 2019.[2][29] Elordi described the character as "a narcissist" and "a sociopath", while Clay Skipper of British GQ referred to the character as an antihero.[11][3] The role was described by Maanya Sachdeva of The Guardian as an "impressive career pivot" for Elordi and Samantha Bergeson of IndieWire called it his breakout role.[30]

During this time, Elordi also appeared in the 2019 horror anthology film The Mortuary Collection.[31] Elordi then starred in Lance Hool's 2020 romantic drama film 2 Hearts as Chris Gregory, a college student and the film's narrator.[32] Entertainment Weekly's Maureen Lee Lenker wrote that his performance in the film was "ham-fistedly goofy" while Owen Gleiberman of Variety opined that Elordi was "done no favors by being in" 2 Hearts.[33] He appeared later that year as the son of the title character in the Australian comedy film The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee.[34][35] In 2022, he starred as Charlie, a piano teacher, in Adrian Lyne's erotic thriller Deep Water.[36][37]

2023–present: Diversification

In 2023, Elordi starred as Ian, a British film actor, in Sean Price Williams' drama film The Sweet East, which premiered at the 76th Cannes Film Festival.[38][39] Williams based Elordi's character in the film on Robert Pattinson following his role in The Twilight Saga.[3] He also starred in the 2023 crime thriller film He Went That Way, adapted from the 1987 Conrad Hilberry novel Luke Karamazov, as Bobby, a 19-year-old serial killer.[40][41] The film received negative reviews from critics, with Glenn Kenny of The New York Times writing in a review, "Elordi's performance here lacks the discipline he applied to his work in Priscilla and even the wretched Saltburn."[42][43]

Elordi in 2025 at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival

He next portrayed a controlling Elvis Presley in the Sofia Coppola–directed Priscilla Presley biopic Priscilla, which is based on Priscilla's memoir Elvis and Me.[44] Coppola chose Elordi to play the role partially because of his "effect on women" during their first meeting, which she found comparable to Elvis's.[8] Priscilla premiered at the 80th Venice International Film Festival, where it was met with positive reception.[45] Gabriella Ferlita of PinkNews stated that Elordi "achieved countless words of praise for his rendition of The King" from critics.[46] His performance was often compared by critics to that of Austin Butler in Elvis (2022).[47][48][49] Richard Lawson of Vanity Fair wrote that Elordi "carefully calibrates Elvis's appeal and his pill-addled, domineering presence, his exacting demands and storms of frightening anger [in] a more enlightening take on the man than the one seen in Elvis".[48]

In his final release of 2023, Elordi starred in Emerald Fennell's psychological drama Saltburn as Felix Catton, a wealthy and charismatic British Oxford University student.[50][51][52] Critics from Empire, The Detroit News, and the Chicago Sun-Times described it as a star-making role for Elordi,[53][54][55] while Nicholas Barber of BBC News described him in the film as "a revelation" and Marshall Shaffer of Slant wrote that his performance was "the secret weapon of Saltburn".[56][57] For the role, he earned a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.[58]

In 2024, Elordi hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live.[59] The episode received mostly negative critical reception for what critics found to be a heavy reliance on jokes about Elordi's attractiveness.[60][61] Elordi starred in Oh, Canada, a drama film directed by Paul Schrader, in which he played the younger version of Richard Gere's character, an aging documentary filmmaker reminiscing on his life.[8] Critics noted the lack of resemblance between Elordi and Gere, particularly due to Elordi being about half a foot taller than Gere.[62] His second film role that year was in On Swift Horses, a period drama about LGBTQ relationships, in which he starred as Julius, a gambler who falls in love with another man in 1950s Las Vegas.[63] He received acclaim for his work in the film from critics, including Robert Daniels of Screen Daily, who described it as "an electrifying performance",[64] and Jourdain Searles of The Hollywood Reporter, who said that "Elordi gives his best performance yet as Julius, showing his more sensitive, vulnerable side on the big screen for perhaps the first time."[65]

In 2025, Elordi played the lead role of Dorrigo Evans in a miniseries adaptation of the novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North. He next played the Creature (also known as Frankenstein's monster) in the Netflix horror film Frankenstein, directed by Guillermo del Toro. The film had its world premiere at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival[66] and was released on 24 October 2025.[67][68] RogerEbert.com considered his performance as Frankenstein's creation "marvelous in conveying the monster's intelligence, sensitivity, and inherent gentleness", while the Washington Post called it "transformative".[69][70] Both of these roles earned him nominations at the 83rd Golden Globe Awards, for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film and Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture.

In 2026, he will star as Heathcliff in Emerald Fennell's upcoming adaptation of Wuthering Heights; the film is due to be released on 13 February 2026.[71] He will also star in Ridley Scott's science fiction film The Dog Stars, which is currently scheduled to be released on 27 March 2026.[72][73]

Public image

Elordi at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival

By the early 2020s, Elordi became known as a heartthrob and a sex symbol for Generation Z in the media.[74][75][26][76][77][13] Gabriella Paiella of GQ wrote that Elordi had "classic, undeniable leading man looks", while Larisha Paul of Rolling Stone called him "Hollywood's reigning heartthrob of the 2020s".[8][78] Elordi also became well known for his height of 1.97 metres (6 ft 6 in).[79][80][81] Esther Zuckerman wrote of Elordi in The Atlantic that he was best known for being "very tall" and "very handsome in a classical way".[82]

Elordi's relationships, including with Euphoria co-star Zendaya, model Kaia Gerber, The Kissing Booth co-star Joey King, and YouTuber Olivia Jade, also received widespread coverage in tabloids and on social media.[2][13][15] Elordi was the face of Hugo Boss's Boss the Scent fragrance in January 2022.[83] In March 2023, he became a global brand ambassador for the Swiss watch company TAG Heuer.[84][85]

In February 2024, Joshua Fox, a producer for the KIIS 106.5 radio show The Kyle and Jackie O Show, alleged on the show that, after he asked Elordi for his bath water—a reference to his role in Saltburn—as a gift for host Jackie O, Elordi pushed him and put his hands around his neck.[86] As of February 2024[update], the New South Wales Police Force were investigating the allegations.[87][88][89]

Filmography

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

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2017 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales Redcoat[17][18] Uncredited extra[7]
2018 Swinging Safari Rooster
The Kissing Booth Noah Flynn
2019 The Mortuary Collection Jake Matthews
2020 The Kissing Booth 2 Noah Flynn
2 Hearts Chris Gregory
The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee Chase Hogan
2021 The Kissing Booth 3 Noah Flynn
2022 Deep Water Charlie De Lisle
2023 He Went That Way Bobby Falls Also executive producer
Priscilla Elvis Presley
Saltburn Felix Catton
The Sweet East Ian Reynolds
2024 Oh, Canada Young Leonard Fife
On Swift Horses Julius Walker Also executive producer
2025 Frankenstein The Creature [90]
2026 Wuthering Heights Heathcliff Post-production[91]
The Dog Stars Hig Post-production

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2019–present Euphoria Nate Jacobs Main role[92]
2020 Acting for a Cause Mr. Darcy Episode: "Pride and Prejudice"
2024 Saturday Night Live Himself (host) Episode: "Jacob Elordi / Reneé Rapp"[59]
2025 The Narrow Road to the Deep North Dorrigo Evans Miniseries; main role[67]

Music videos

Year Title Artist
2025 "Day One" Bon Iver featuring Dijon and Flock of Dimes

Accolades

Award Year Category Work Result Ref.
AACTA Awards 2022 Audience Choice Award for Best Actor Euphoria Nominated [93]
2024 Best Supporting Actor Saltburn Nominated [94]
2026 Best Lead Actor in Television Drama The Narrow Road to the Deep North Pending [95]
Astra Film Awards 2026 Best Supporting Actor - Drama Frankenstein Pending [96]
Austin Film Critics Association 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Pending [97]
BAFTA Film Awards 2024 Best Actor in a Supporting Role Saltburn Nominated [98]
Rising Star Award Nominated
Chicago Film Critics Association 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [99]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 2026 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Pending [100]
Golden Globe Awards 2026 Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film The Narrow Road to the Deep North Pending [101]
Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture Frankenstein Pending
Gotham Awards 2025 Outstanding Supporting Performance Frankenstein Nominated [102]
Vanguard Tribute Frankenstein Honored [103]
Indiana Film Journalists Association 2025 Best Supporting Performance Frankenstein Nominated [104]
Michigan Movie Critics Guild 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [105]
Breakthrough Award Frankenstein Nominated
New York Film Critics Online 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Won [106]
Online Film & Television Association 2023 Breakthrough Performance: Male Saltburn Nominated [107]
People's Choice Awards 2024 Drama Movie Star Priscilla Nominated [108]
Movie Performance Saltburn Nominated
Phoenix Critics Circle 2025 Best Actor in a Supporting Role Frankenstein Nominated [109]
San Diego Film Critics Society 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [110]
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [111]
Santa Barbara International Film Festival 2026 Virtuoso Award Frankenstein Won [112]
Seattle Film Critics Society 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [113]
Toronto Film Critics Association 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Runner-up [114]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association 2025 Best Supporting Actor Frankenstein Nominated [115]

References

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    • Lattanzio, Ryan (17 May 2024). "Oh, Canada Review: Paul Schrader's Rueful Ode to Death and Regret Is as Confused as Its Protagonist". IndieWire. Retrieved 31 October 2024. The casting of Jacob Elordi as a younger version of Gere — two people who look absolutely nothing alike — suggests the director doesn't care about such anachronisms.
    • Strong, Hannah (17 May 2024). "Oh, Canada – first-look review". Little White Lies. Retrieved 31 October 2024. There isn't much physical resemblance between Elordi and Gere (Elordi is seven inches taller for a start).
    • Debruge, Peter (17 May 2024). "Oh, Canada Review: Paul Schrader Separates the Art From the Artist in Prismatic Portrait of a Dying Director". Variety. Retrieved 31 October 2024. Leonard [is] played by Richard Gere in the present and Jacob Elordi when the character is half a century younger and half a foot taller ... He doesn't really look like Gere, but that's immaterial ...
    • Barber, Nicholas (17 May 2024). "Oh, Canada Review: Paul Schrader Gets the Better of Himself in Richard Gere Reunion". TheWrap. Retrieved 31 October 2024. [Elordi] delivers a dead-on Gere impersonation, even if it's tricky to believe that the character has shrunk by a foot in height over the intervening years.
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