· Tara Price · Lifestyle

About Sydney Sweeney, the Emmy-Nominated Actress from Euphoria and The White Lotus

<p>Sydney Sweeney breaks Hollywood mould with Emmy nods, vintage cars, cult horror hits, and classic glamour.</p>

Sydney Sweeney wasn’t supposed to blend in. Not in a high school hallway. Not on screen.

And certainly not in Hollywood’s typecast machine. At 26, she’s already outpaced the typical trajectory of an “it girl,” with a filmography that stretches from Euphoria’s mascara-streaked heartbreak to producing cult horror thrillers and rom-com hits that helped revive an entire genre.

But her story didn’t start in Los Angeles. It began on the Idaho-Washington border, in a rural lakeside home passed down through five generations.

“Coming from a smaller town and trying something new and out of the ordinary can be incredibly challenging,” she told ELLE.

She wasn’t handed the spotlight. She asked for it — via a PowerPoint.

After auditioning to be an extra in a local indie film, 11-year-old Sydney presented her parents with a five-year business plan convincing them to let her pursue acting.

“They began driving me to LA for auditions,” she later said. Those drives were a brutal 38 hours roundtrip.

She’d sleep in the backseat while her parents rotated driving shifts. The sacrifices piled up.

Her classmates pulled into school parking lots in luxury cars. She rolled in driving her grandparents’ old Volvo.

Eventually, her parents divorced. “Whether or not that was because of coming here, it definitely was a catalyst,” she admitted to Glamour.

“So I knew I had to succeed in some capacity so that it wasn’t for nothing”.

She got there by sheer accumulation. Guest roles in 90210Grey’s Anatomy, and Pretty Little Liars, as highlighted in this overview of her TV characters.

Sydney Sweeney in Everything Sucks!
Sydney Sweeney in Everything Sucks!

Her big break came in 2018 when she landed Everything Sucks! 

A nostalgic high school dramedy on Netflix, and Sharp Objects, where she played Alice, a self-harming teen opposite Amy Adams.

That role was originally minor, but her performance led the director to expand it. To prepare, she read case studies about self-injury and visited hospitals.

Sydney Sweeney in The Handmaid's Tale
Sydney Sweeney in The Handmaid’s Tale

Around the same time, she also appeared in The Handmaid’s Tale as Eden Spencer, a pious teen bride whose tragic arc deepened the show’s already dystopian atmosphere.

Her early work already showed what would become her signature: emotionally honest, physically vulnerable, and never overdone.

Then Euphoria happened.

As Cassie Howard, Sweeney crafted one of the most chaotic, overanalysed, and deeply sympathetic characters in recent TV memory.

A teen spiralling through codependency, heartbreak, and the unbearable weight of wanting to be loved, Cassie struck a nerve.

“She wasn’t afraid to show her emotions. She wore them on her sleeve and didn’t know how to hide them,” Sweeney said.

That rawness, messy, hormonal, desperate – earned her a Primetime Emmy nomination and made Cassie one of the internet’s most memeable sad girls.

She followed that with Olivia in The White Lotus, an icy college sophomore vacationing with her privileged family in Hawaii.

Another Emmy nod. And then came The VoyeursNocturne, and Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, where she played Snake, a member of the Manson family.

But the more complex her roles got, the more people seemed obsessed with her image.

“Ever since I burst onto the scene as Cassie, my body has been the topic of endless cultural conversations,” she said in ELLE.

From Reddit threads to think-pieces, her nude scenes in Euphoria sparked debate.

Some accused the show of objectification, others praised her performance as empowerment. Sweeney has made her stance clear: “I don’t consider on-screen nudity a boundary,” she told Vanity Fair.

What she does take issue with is how her image is shaped outside her control. “Unfortunately, I don’t get to control my image – my image is in your guys’ hands.”

So she took back some of that control. In 2020, she founded her own production company, Fifty-Fifty Films.

Her goal was to create the kinds of roles and stories she wasn’t being offered. “I love being able to have a seat at the table,” she said. “I want to be the one bringing it to the table.”

Immaculate was the first result. A religious horror film in which she plays Cecilia, a nun pregnant with the Antichrist.

Sweeney had auditioned for the project years earlier but ended up buying the rights and producing it herself.

“The script stuck with me,” she told ELLE. “It kept me on the edge of my seat and ignited my imagination.”

While Immaculate became a cult hit, Madame Web; Sony’s Spider-Man spin-off in which she played Julia Carpenter was a different story.

Released in 2024, it was panned by critics and bombed at the box office. Sweeney’s take? “I was just along for the ride for whatever was going to happen.”

Then, in true Sydney Sweeney fashion, she turned that flop into comedy fuel during her SNL monologue, roasting the film’s failure alongside rumors about her love life and her mother’s controversial birthday party.

Her producing streak hasn’t slowed down. She co-produced and starred in the 2023 rom-com Anyone But You alongside Glen Powell.

Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney in Anyone But You (2023)
Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney in Anyone But You (2023)

Despite a soft opening, the film grossed over $200 million globally. “It was all because of the fans,” she said. “None of it was forced… they shared that love with everybody.”

More roles followed. In Eden, she plays a German farm wife navigating survival under extreme conditions.

Critics were quick to single her out. “Every moment with her at the forefront is Eden at its best,” wrote TheWrap.

In Echo Valley, she shares the screen with Julianne Moore.

In Christy, she’ll portray pioneering boxer Christy Martin. “Her story is so inspiring,” Sweeney said in interviews.

“I was blown away by her strength and perseverance.” The role required months of physical training. “My body was completely different. I was so strong — like crazy strong,” she told People. “I loved it.”

She’s even working on a Barbarella reboot and hopes to involve Jane Fonda. The writers are locked in. The groundwork is in motion.

Off-screen, Sweeney is equally hands-on. She restores vintage cars, including a 1969 Ford Bronco and 1965 Mustang.

She once called herself “a huge gearhead,” and collaborated with Ford on a custom design.

Sydney Sweeney in The Rolling Stones’ "Angry" music video, 2023
Sydney Sweeney in The Rolling Stones’ “Angry” music video, 2023

She was also named brand ambassador for Armani Beauty and Laneige, and appeared in The Rolling Stones’ “Angry” music video as a glam-rock seductress tormenting Mick Jagger.

She also brought back something else Hollywood forgot…glamour.

Whether it’s her pink satin skirt set on the Immaculate premiere carpet or custom Miu Miu and Vivienne Westwood gowns, Sweeney’s aesthetic is unmistakable.

She told The Zoe Report, “I always love finding those classic Old Hollywood silhouettes and mixing them with something cheeky.”

On red carpets, she channels Marilyn Monroe. Off-screen, she’s perfectly content in sweats and sneakers. “I don’t try to be anyone else. What you see is what you get.”

And despite the spotlight, or maybe because of it, her personal life remains complicated.

She was engaged to Jonathan Davino, whom she’s referred to as her “producing partner” at Fifty-Fifty Films.

Still, she keeps building. “There are always new challenges,” she told ELLE. “I’m embracing the process and going to continue to learn throughout it.”

From Idaho kid with a dream to Emmy-nominated actress, producer, rom-com queen, horror heroine, car restorer, and old-Hollywood revivalist, Sydney Sweeney is shaping her narrative one credit at a time. She’s not asking permission.

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