Welcome to Elizabeth Olsen Source: your best source for all things related to Elizabeth Olsen. Elizabeth's breakthrough came in 2011 when she starred in critically-acclaimed movies Martha Marcy May Marlene and Silent House. She made her name in indie movies like Very Good Girls and In Secret, until her role in 2014 blockbuster Godzilla and then as Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff in Marvel's Avengers and Captain America movies. Elizabeth starred in and produced Facebook Watch's Sorry For Your Loss. After Avengers: Endgame, she starred in the first DisneyPlus+ Marvel series, Emmy nominated, WandaVision. She also starred in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and did the voice for the Scarlet Witch in other Marvel projects. In 2023, she went back to her indie roots with His Three Daughters, and Eternity. She has many projects upcoming. Enjoy the many photos (including lots of exclusives!), articles, and videos on our site!
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Interview/Gallery: Elizabeth Olsen Is Not That Mysterious

The Scarlet Witch and indie darling (who can next be seen as the apex of a love triangle with Miles Teller and Callum Turner in Eternity) has managed to build an A-list Hollywood career while (mostly) avoiding the tabloid pitfalls of fame. But she says she’s not purposefully enigmatic. Some things are just none of your business.

 

 

 
INSTYLE “Mom Tok?”

It’s Friday night in the Valley and I am explaining The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives to Elizabeth Olsen while sharing a baguette. (Let that sink in for a second.)

“Ah, sexy moms,” she nods. “Mmm. In Utah. This is a reality show?”

The Marvel star and indie queen—known for TV series like WandaVision, Love & Death, and Sorry for Your Loss, which she co-produced, and films such as Wind River, Ingrid Goes West, and the upcoming Panic Carefully with Julia Roberts—is genuinely baffled at the premise of a popular unscripted series about young mothers whose common bond is TikTok, hair extensions, and Jesus Christ. “You have to understand,” she says with a shrug, turning back to the salad we’re splitting. “I’m, like, a 90-year-old. If someone new is around, my friends tell them, ‘You have to talk to Lizzie like she’s a Boomer.’”

For the record, when at home here in Los Angeles or in Northern California, where she also resides, Olsen and her husband, the writer and musician Robbie Arnett, watch a lot of movies. They are also watching The Sopranos for the first time (“it’s given me nightmares”). She only indulges in non-prestige (some would say “trashy”) television when in hotel rooms—“that stuff can’t come into the home”—and is such a dedicated sports fan (all of them) that she watches TV via cable “with a hard line so it doesn’t glitch and I miss things.”

Olsen picks up a piece of lettuce with her fingers. Her big green eyes, Margaret Keane–style saucers that have been formidable on-screen foes to Aubrey Plaza, Kathryn Hahn, Iron Man, Jesse Plemons, and Godzilla, grow even larger. “She’s heavily dressed. I should have warned you.” She plops the leaf in her mouth.

This bistro is one of her spots. It’s on Ventura Boulevard, on the other side of the Santa Monica Mountains from Beverly Hills, in the San Fernando Valley. When Olsen, 36, walked in, the only heads that turned were those of the waitstaff, who greeted her casually as she made her way to our table—tousled hair, a red topcoat draped over her shoulders waving behind her like a cape. The only tell that she’s famous, the common denominator amongst Higher Beings when they mix with us proletariat: skin so pristine her face almost appears differently lit, as though inserted into the dining room in post-production A.I.

We’re not far from where Olsen lives today, or her childhood home. But she shakes her head when I declare she grew up “in Hollywood.”

“I mean, yes and no. Other than the fact that, like, kids in our house were working, it felt very much like a strict, disciplined household. My sisters always went to a school.” She tears off a hunk of bread and slathers it with bright yellow butter.

Her sisters are, of course, Mary-Kate and Ashley. Three years older, they are the “You got it dude!” Olsens. The New York Minute Olsens. The perfect-gray-sweater-for-$1500-by-The-Row Olsens. As those two were working, Young Elizabeth, for a short time, considered performing professionally as well.

“I thought I wanted to be a child actor, but then my ballet teacher wouldn’t put me in The Nutcracker because I’d missed so many rehearsals. And that was the only Nutcracker I wasn’t in my whole life because I was auditioning for TV or film or whatever.” Somehow, at that moment and barely 10, she could see the future. “I wanted to have the career I have now, but I didn’t need to do it until later. I wanted to do recess with my friends.”

Later was 15 years ago, when she stormed the Sundance Film Festival with Martha Marcy May Marlene, a tight, tense thriller about a young woman leaving a cult, co-starring Sarah Paulson. (I tell her that an alternate timeline—Marvel reference—has her working for 30 years, if you count appearing with her sisters in How the West Was Fun. She laughs. “Okay, then I’ve been ‘playing’ for 30 years, because that was not professional!”)
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October 22 2025
Elizabeth Olsen Chooses Between an Afterlife With Miles Teller or Callum Turner in ‘Eternity’ Trailer

Da’Vine Joy Randolph and John Early also star in the romantic comedy that hits theaters in November after premiering at TIFF.

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER – Elizabeth Olsen has a big decision ahead of her in the trailer for the A24 feature Eternity.

Miles Teller and Callum Turner also star in the romantic comedy from director David Freyne. The movie is set to premiere at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival ahead of its theatrical release in November. John Early, Olga Merediz and Oscar winner Da’Vine Joy Randolph round out the cast.

Eternity is set in an afterlife where souls are granted one week to pick where they will spend eternity. After she dies, Joan (Olsen) must choose between Larry (Teller), with whom she shared her life, and her first love, Luke (Turner), who died many years ago.

“A lot has happened in a week,” a confused Olsen tells Teller in the trailer. “You died. I died. I’ve just been reunited with both of my dead husbands, and I have to pick where to spend eternity.”

reyne helmed the film from a script he co-wrote with Pat Cunnane, whose original screenplay landed on the Black List in 2022. Tim White and Trevor White serve as producers.

Olsen’s recent features have included The Assessment and His Three Daughters. Teller recently led in the Apple TV+ movie The Gorge and has a role in next year’s Michael Jackson biopic Michael. Turner starred in last year’s Apple TV+ series Masters of the Air.

During an interview with Extra from earlier this year, Olsen gave hints about Eternity. “It’s real fun,” the actress said at the time. “It’s a callback to Billy Wilder films. I think it’s gonna be a special romantic comedy that we’re all really proud of. I’m excited for it to come out this year.”

July 31 2025
Press: Elizabeth Olsen Joins Kristen Stewart & Oscar Isaac In Hedonistic ’80s Vampire Thriller ‘Flesh Of The Gods’

DEADLINE Emmy and Golden Globe nominee Elizabeth Olsen has joined Kristen Stewart and Oscar Isaac to co-star in vampire thriller Flesh Of The Gods from director Panos Cosmatos (Mandy).

Isaac and Stewart will portray Raoul and Alex, a married couple in glittering ’80s L.A. who descend each evening from their luxury skyscraper condo and head into an electric nighttime realm. When they cross paths with the mysterious and enigmatic Nameless (Olsen) and her hard-partying cabal, Raoul and Alex are seduced into a glamorous, surrealistic world of hedonism, thrills and violence.

The film is written by Andrew Kevin Walker (Se7en) based on a story by Cosmatos and Walker, and is produced by Adam McKay and Betsy Koch of Hyperobject Industries and Gena Konstantinakos and Isaac for Mad Gene Media.

Domestic rights are co-repped by CAA Media Finance and WME Independent, with XYZ Films continuing international sales at this week’s Cannes market. No date yet for start of shoot as schedules get aligned.

The movie returns Stewart to her vampire roots after the global sensation that was the Twilight franchise.

Olsen is is known for playing Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, appearing in Avengers: Age of Ultron, Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame, and the Disney+ series WandaVision. She made her breakthrough in the critically acclaimed indie thriller Martha Marcy May Marlene, and has also starring in Wind River, Ingrid Goes West, and Godzilla, among others.

Flesh of the Gods marks the fourth collaboration between Cosmatos and XYZ, as they produced the upcoming Miley Cyrus film Something Beautiful, which will debut at the Tribeca Film Festival in June. They also have Nekrokosm in development with A24.

Upcoming titles from XYZ Films include Banquet, starring Meghann Fahy and directed by Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia; the SXSW thriller Hallow Road, directed by Babak Anvari and starring Rosamund Pike and Matthew Rhys; and The Trip starring Jason Segel, Samara Weaving, Juliette Lewis and Timothy Olyphant, which is currently in post-production.

Olsen is repped by CAA, Brillstein and Sloane, Offer.

May 13 2025
Interview: Elizabeth Olsen is good at ignoring advice

NPR A note from Wild Card host Rachel Martin: Being a supervillain is exhausting. You spend a lot of energy thinking about how to mess with your enemies. Using your actual superpowers is totally draining. And once you’re in that supervillain box, it can be hard to escape. Unless you’re Elizabeth Olsen. She first showed up in the Marvel Cinematic Universe about a decade ago as Wanda Maximoff. And by 2021, she was flying around wreaking havoc as the Scarlet Witch in WandaVision.
And while Olsen hasn’t closed the door on that character, we have definitely seen her talent unfold in some totally different directions over the last few years. I, for one, am sort of obsessed with her performance in the Netflix show Love and Death from 2023. She plays a sweet and loving housewife who brutally murders her husband’s lover. And when I watched how Elizabeth Olsen held all the contradictions of that character at the same time, I knew I was going to be seeing a lot more of her.

Her newest film is called The Assessment, and in it, Elizabeth plays a woman in the not-so-distant future, living in some kind of protected society because the Earth has been destroyed, and she’s got to pass this nightmare of a test in order to be granted the chance to have a baby.

This Wild Card interview has been edited for length and clarity. Host Rachel Martin asks guests randomly-selected questions from a deck of cards. Tap play above to listen to the full podcast, or read an excerpt below.

Question 1: What’s something someone told you that changed your trajectory?

Elizabeth Olsen: I didn’t have any mentors growing up and I felt like I was very self-motivated and I didn’t listen to a lot of people’s opinions within my family, and I just kind of kept doing what I wanted to do.

Rachel Martin: Did your parents try to nudge you away from acting? I mean, we have to just acknowledge your two older sisters were in Full House, Mary-Kate and Ashley. And so it’s not like it was totally foreign to you, that world.
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April 03 2025
Interview: Elizabeth Olsen on ‘The Assessment’s’ Dark Sci-Fi Vision of Parenthood

WNYCA new sci-fi thriller starring Elizabeth Olsen is set in the not-so-distant future, where a couple hoping to have a child must undergo a seven-day evaluation to determine their fitness as parents. Olsen discusses her role as a prospective mother in “The Assessment,” now in theaters.

Transcript:
Kousha Navidar: This is All Of It on WNYC. I’m Kousha Navidar, filling in for Alison Stewart. You’ve probably heard the phrase it takes a village to raise a child. What if village leadership was in charge of saying who could and could not have a child? That’s the premise of the new sci-fi thriller. It’s called The Assessment. It stars Elizabeth Olsen as Mia and Himesh Patel as Aaryan, a couple looking to become parents in a future ravaged by natural disasters which has made parts of the world uninhabitable. Fortunately for them, everyone in their society gets to live a calm life where medical treatment allows them to significantly slow the aging process, but the government maintains a very strict control of resources. This means couples who want a child must undergo a rigorous, and I’m talking rigorous, seven-day evaluation to determine who’s fit to be a parent and to prevent overpopulation. The assessor stays with the couple the entire time. The assessor scrutinizes all aspects of the couple’s lives. Living conditions, work, intimacy, their relationship with their own parents. It’s everything. The Assessment is now playing in theaters. Actor Elizabeth Olsen, we are lucky to have her just across the table right now. She joins us to discuss. Elizabeth, welcome back to All Of It.
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March 26 2025
Press: Elizabeth Olsen Takes the Bow Trend to New Heights in a Sweeping Mint Lace Erdem Gown at Independent Spirit Awards 2025


WWD Elizabeth Olsen put a dramatic spin on the bow trend at the Independent Spirit Awards 2025 in Los Angeles on Friday. The actress arrived at the red carpet trailed by her bow-topped gown.

Olsen wore a mint green lace gown from Erdem’s spring 2025 collection, with a contrasting pink bow at the shoulder. The “Assessment” star paired her asymmetrical draped midi dress with a pair of nude pointed-toe heels and drop earrings dangling with pearl-laden hoops. Olsen completed her look with a cranberry lip, light blush and blush eyeshadow.

Last year, bows were impossible to miss on the red carpet and the runways for fall 2024. Between the Critics Choice Awards and the fall 2024 collections for Sandy Liang and Prada, the traditional accent became a main event with plentiful takes on it. Olsen’s entry to the trend, though, is a markedly relaxed take on the breakout embellishment.

The collection Olsen’s gown hails from was rife with avant, flowing takes on bows, whether at the shoulders of pastel dresses or at the hips of drop waist dresses or tailored jackets. Erdem‘s spring 2025 collection filtered the trend through a 1920s lens and consisted largely of pastel shades, including the pale pink and mint green on Olsen’s lace dress.

Mint has been a popular color choice on the red carpet over the past year, with Dakota Fanning, Simone Ashley and Jill Biden all stepping out in the soft shade.

Olsen was in attendance at the Independent Spirit Awards 2025 in support of her 2023 film “His Three Daughters” with Carrie Coon and Natasha Lyonne, for which director Azazel Jacobs was given the Robert Altman Award.

The 2025 Film Independent Spirit Awards, held on Feb. 22 in Santa Monica and hosted by Aidy Bryant, honor the best performances, writing and direction in independent film in 2024. “Anora” and “I Saw the TV Glow” lead the field with six nominations each.

This year’s red carpet at the Independent Spirit Awards also brought out Emma Stone, Hunter Schafer, Julianne Moore, Lily Gladstone, Demi Moore, Ryan Destiny, Julia Fox, Colman Domingo, Mikey Madison and more.

February 23 2025
Press/Gallery: Film Independent Spirit Awards 2025

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY The Film Independent Spirit Awards returned with their 40th ceremony on Saturday, with Anora, its star Mikey Madison, and director Sean Baker dominating the film category awards. Baby Reindeer led in the TV acting category winners, though Shōgun took the New Scripted Series award.

Saturday Night Live alum Aidy Bryant hosted the awards show, which honors independent and low-budget film projects and television. The ceremony took place in Santa Monica and streamed live on Film Independent’s YouTube channel and X (formerly Twitter) feed.

The Indie Spirits are a distinct organization in the awards season landscape because they’re specifically designed to focus on smaller film productions — to qualify for the awards, the maximum budget a movie can have is $28 million (though there’s no budget cap on the TV side — the shows just have to be new this year).

As a result, the Indie Spirits only sometimes overlap with the Oscars — smaller-budget films like Everything Everywhere All at Once, Nomadland, and Moonlight have all found major success with both awards bodies, whereas movies like Past Lives have triumphed at the Spirits in years when higher-budget productions like Oppenheimer win big at the Academy Awards.

Another key distinction that sets the Indie Spirits apart from other awards shows: all acting categories at the Indie Spirits are gender-neutral, so there are fewer categories overall for both film and TV: Best Lead Performance, Best Supporting Performance, and Best Breakthrough Performance for both mediums, plus a Best Ensemble Cast on the TV side.

Anora and I Saw the TV Glow dominated the film category nominations with five each, with Anora winning three awards overall. Shōgun led the TV field, with five nominations, though it won only one award for Best New Scripted Series. Projects like Dìdi, Baby Reindeer, and English Teacher all received four nominations each, with Didi winning in two categories and Baby Reindeer winning three. The Apprentice, Janet Planet, Sing Sing, and Agatha All Along all garnered three nominations apiece, but saw no awards between them.

Robert Altman Award
WINNER: His Three Daughters
Director: Azazel Jacobs
Casting Director: Nicole Arbusto
Ensemble Cast: Jovan Adepo, Jasmine Bracey, Carrie Coon, Jose Febus, Rudy Galvan, Natasha Lyonne, Elizabeth Olsen, Randy Ramos Jr., and Jay O. Sanders

The Independent Spirit Robert Altman Award is presented to the ensemble cast, director and casting director of a film by the Film Independent, a non-profit organization dedicated to independent film and independent filmmakers. It is named after director, screenwriter, and producer Robert Altman, who is considered a “maverick” in naturalistic films.

 

 

 

February 23 2025
Interview/Gallery: Elizabeth Olsen and Callum Turner on Siblings, Letterboxd, and the State of Indie Film

INTERVIEW: Last month, when Elizabeth Olsen got on Zoom with her friend and soon-to-be Eternity co-star Callum Turner, she’d just taken the morning flight from London to New York. “They call that the CEO flight,” Turner joked. “Because you wake up, get on the plane, do your work, then you’re in London and you have dinner and you go to bed.” Olsen, in fact, was in London to promote her latest film His Three Daughters, a wrenching and deceptively small family drama written and directed by Azazel Jacobs, who hand-delivered the movie’s melodic script to its three stars, Olsen, Carrie Coon, and Natasha Lyonne. The trio hadn’t met prior to filming, but an abbreviated production schedule —and the demands of a script that called for extreme intimacy—allowed them to fast-track their chemistry. “Carrie and I shared a two-bedroom apartment instead of a trailer because we had no money to make this movie,” explained the WandaVision star. “All three of us came out super honest and vulnerable knowing we only had three weeks to shoot this thing.” The result is one the year’s most touching and well-acted films, following the sisters as they convene in New York at the bitter end of their father’s life. When Olsen and Turner got together to discuss the film, the conversation naturally touched on sibling dynamics, the state of independent film, and their favorite directors, from Todd Haynes to Catherine Breillat.

 

 

 

 

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ELIZABETH OLSEN: Hi.

CALLUM TURNER: How are you? How’s your jet lag?

OLSEN: I took the morning flight from New York. Have you ever done that one?

TURNER: They call that the CEO flight or something, don’t they?

OLSEN: No one’s told me that

TURNER: Because you wake up, get on the plane, do your work, then you’re in London and you have dinner and you go to bed.

OLSEN: That’s exactly what I did.

TURNER: You’re the CEO.

OLSEN: Where are you?

TURNER: I’m at home. I really want to talk about your film.

OLSEN: You got to see it? You’ve been really busy and I feel bad that you were forced to watch a movie.
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November 09 2024
Interview/Photoshoot: Elizabeth Olsen: ‘I’m not the sexy one. I’m not the nerd. I don’t know where I fit’

She thought acting was ‘silly’, despite having A-list sisters. Her interests lay in dance, accountancy, agriculture, construction. Here she explains how she conquered her anxiety and embraced being a Hollywood star

 

THE OBSERVER – The actor Elizabeth Olsen and I are in a London hotel, staring down at her dinner. She lifts the lid from one plate: a bowl of plain black beans. She lifts another: a bowl of similarly spare couscous. You wouldn’t know it, but Olsen is something of a foodie. She takes a set of knives around the world when filming, makes her own ricotta, knows what brand of caviar is best, and records the name of every restaurant she visits. She’s been engaged for years in an LA “croissant crawl” to find the best French pastry in the city, though she takes the hunt international every chance she gets. This past week she’s eaten a huge amount of red meat, she tells me, and developed high cholesterol as a result. Hence the simple grain and pulse dishes before her. Carefully she returns the lids. Then she says, “I am probably not going to eat while we talk.”

In person, Olsen, who is 35, manages the curious combination of being at once unnerving and disarming. Those wide eyes – so expressive and searching on screen – would be unsettling if it weren’t for her easy wit. It’s the eyes that Hollywood has latched on to: they have been deployed to reveal the trauma of an ex-cult member (her indie breakout Martha Marcy May Marlene), a wife in a loveless marriage driven to murder (Love & Death), a grieving widow (Sorry For Your Loss). As Wanda Maximoff, appearing in the Marvel films that have dominated her last decade, her eyes have been used to portray a virtual assault course of loss.

Olsen’s latest film is a Netflix indie, His Three Daughters, which sees her back in grief mode as Christina, one of three estranged sisters (the others are played by Natasha Lyonne and Carrie Coon) who reunite at their ailing father’s apartment to await his death. “I mean, I feel like these are the characters I’m drawn to,” Olsen says, of portraying grief-stricken women. “But this is different, right? I felt like Christina was someone soft, someone I haven’t really explored before. I usually try – especially recently – to find characters that seem adjacent but different to me.”

His Three Daughters can be painful to watch, particularly if you have lost someone recently. It explores how siblings often revert to childhood roles when they are together as adults. But it also makes known the terrible admin of death: the banality of being put on hold on different phones, of concluding someone’s life via paperwork, the Do Not Resuscitate form reduced to the world of the tax return.

Olsen’s Christina is the most balanced of the sisters and we see her using breathing exercises and meditation to find calm. It’s something Olsen can relate to. She suffered extreme bouts of anxiety and panic attacks in her 20s. “I’ve gone through phases of it,” she says, of using meditation. “Figuring out what works for me, or what works enough. No one talked about panic attacks in the mid-2000s. I thought it meant you just write a list and check things off and get over it. I didn’t realise it was something you had no control over, but I had to figure out how to have some control.”

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October 02 2024
Interview/Photoshoot: Elizabeth Olsen’s Sister Act

Taking a break from the Marvel universe, the ethereal actress shines in ‘His Three Daughters’, an intense, critically acclaimed drama about a trio of competitive sisters that harks back to her indie roots.

 

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THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Death has been on Elizabeth Olsen’s mind lately. It started — or, rather, became much more acute — on a recent helicopter ride. The actress was on an East Coast press tour for her new movie, His Three Daughters, and Netflix scheduled a junket day in New York City, followed by a screening out in the Hamptons. The tight turnaround meant that Olsen, her co-star Natasha Lyonne and a studio rep had only one way to get there in time.

“I’ll never do it again,” she says. “It was 45 minutes straight of me creating a narrative about how I’m going to die.” As she’s telling this story, she divulges that, actually, she thinks about her own death all the time. The notion of the chopper hurtling over greater Long Island takes its place in line behind car accidents and random acts of violence.

“Whenever I’m stopping at a red light, I make sure to stagger my car so that I don’t line up with the window of the driver right beside me,” she says. “I think it might have to do with growing up in L.A. during an era when kidnappings were a popular topic of the news.”

The actress, 35, knows she has a tendency to say things that can be taken out of context — “My problem is that I’m not strategic enough about what I say. I’ve said things, and I’m like, ‘Oh shit, Lizzie’ ” — so it’s worth putting on the record that she doesn’t sound or seem crazy as she talks about imagining her own demise.

In fact, she seems deeply calm and confident. (Her Daughters co-star Carrie Coon’s first impression of Olsen feels apt here: “She was plain-spoken, honest and self-effacing, and so upright in posture and deed.”) We’re having coffee at the café attached to her local fishmonger (she needs to get a branzino to cook at home later), and she’s wearing an outfit that appears, to the semi-trained eye, to be head-to-toe The Row, the fashion brand owned by her older sisters, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. It’s impossible to seem anything but aggressively centered when one is draped in luxury silks, to say nothing of the grounded practicality of having a local fishmonger.

Perhaps not surprisingly, His Three Daughters also is about death. A darkly funny, deeply affecting story about sisters — Olsen, Lyonne and Coon — who return to their father’s Lower East Side apartment during his last days of hospice care, it is simultaneously a return to form for Olsen and the start of a new era in her career.

Before her years spent fronting Marvel blockbusters, she worked almost entirely in independent film — projects like Martha Marcy May Marlene, the cult thriller she booked after graduating from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, the Allen Ginsberg biopic Kill Your Darlings and Neon’s Ingrid Goes West. Daughters is a return to the prestige projects she favored early in her career.

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September 24 2024