Chloe Bennet
Chloe Bennet (born Chloé Wang; April 18, 1992) is an American actress and singer of mixed Han Chinese and Caucasian descent, born in Chicago, Illinois, to a Chinese father and Caucasian American mother.[1][2] She is best known for portraying the character Daisy Johnson, also known as Quake or Skye, in the ABC superhero series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. from 2013 to 2020, a role that established her prominence in the Marvel Cinematic Universe television franchise.[3][2] Bennet initially pursued a singing career, moving to China at age 15 to host a music video program and release singles before returning to the United States to focus on acting.[1][2] To mitigate typecasting limitations for performers of Asian descent in Hollywood, she adopted the stage surname Bennet, derived from her father's given name.[4] Her other notable works include voicing the lead character Yi in the animated film Abominable (2019) and appearances in films such as Valentines Day (2010) and The Nightlife (2023).[3]
Early Life
Family and Childhood
Chloé Wang, later known professionally as Chloe Bennet, was born on April 18, 1992, in Chicago, Illinois, to Bennet Wang, a Chinese-American investment banker of Han Chinese descent, and Stephanie Crane, a Caucasian-American internist with English, Scottish, Irish, Swiss-German, and German ancestry.[3][5][6] As the only daughter among seven siblings, Bennet grew up with six brothers: three biological, two African-American foster brothers, and one adopted brother of Mexican-Filipino descent.[7][8] Her multicultural family environment, marked by her biracial heritage, influenced her early sense of identity, prompting her to adopt the stage surname "Bennet"—derived from her father's given name—for professional purposes to mitigate perceived barriers related to ethnic typecasting in entertainment.[9][10]Initial Music Career in China
In 2007, at the age of 15, Chloe Bennet relocated to Beijing, China, to pursue a professional singing career under her birth name, Chloe Wang (汪可盈).[3][6] There, she resided with her paternal grandmother while immersing herself in Mandarin language studies and the local music industry, aiming to capitalize on her Chinese heritage in a market dominated by native performers.[3] This move marked her initial foray into entertainment, driven by personal ambition rather than formal training, as she had no prior professional experience beyond informal pursuits in the United States. Bennet's output during this period included the release of her debut single "Uh Oh" on March 2, 2011, produced in collaboration with renowned Chinese producer Zhang Ya Dong, known for work with artists like Faye Wong.[11] The track was issued in both English and Mandarin versions, accompanied by official music videos that showcased a pop style blending Western influences with Chinese elements; the English version became available on iTunes shortly after launch.[12] She followed with "Every Day In Between," released around the same time, further establishing her as an emerging bilingual artist targeting Chinese audiences.[13] These efforts yielded modest visibility through online platforms and promotional appearances, but lacked widespread commercial breakthrough in a highly saturated industry favoring established local talent. By late 2011 or early 2012, Bennet returned to the United States, citing family considerations and the realization that singing opportunities were limited for a non-native artist like herself.[14] In reflections on the experience, she likened it to a temporary "awkward teenage job," underscoring its role as a formative but ultimately unviable path that prompted a pragmatic pivot to acting auditions in Los Angeles.[15] This shift ended her brief music phase in China, with no further releases under the Chloe Wang moniker.Career
Pre-2012 Auditions and Minor Roles
After returning to the United States from China in 2010, Bennet relocated to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career.[3] Her initial on-screen work that year consisted of co-hosting the short-lived TeenNick summer dance series The Nightlife alongside Nick Cannon and Aaron Fresh, marking her first television appearance.[16] Despite this entry point, she faced significant challenges in securing further roles under her birth name, Chloé Wang, with auditions yielding limited callbacks and primarily stereotypical opportunities such as "dorky best friend, the tech person, or the nail lady."[17] In response to these empirical disparities in audition outcomes, Bennet changed her professional name to Chloe Bennet—adopting her father's first name as her surname—in 2011.[18] This adjustment correlated with improved results, as she reported booking her first audition immediately following the change, enabling her to cover living expenses amid persistent rejections.[19] She underwent hundreds of auditions in the preceding period, highlighting the competitive barriers for actors with Asian surnames in securing non-stereotypical parts during that era.[20] These early efforts culminated in minor roles post-name change but prior to her breakthrough, including a recurring supporting part as Hailey, a young singer, on the ABC drama series Nashville across seven episodes from 2012 to 2013.[3] This role represented a step beyond hosting and stereotypical auditions, though it remained secondary amid ongoing industry hurdles for emerging performers.[21]Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Breakthrough (2013–2020)
In December 2012, Chloe Bennet was cast as the series regular Skye, a skilled hacker and member of the subversive group Rising Tide, in the ABC television series Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..[3] The show premiered on September 24, 2013, and ran for seven seasons, concluding on August 12, 2020, with a total of 136 episodes.[22] Bennet's portrayal evolved significantly over the series; following the first season, Skye's backstory was expanded in season 2 to reveal her as Daisy Johnson, a dormant Inhuman who gains seismic vibration powers, adopting the superhero alias Quake.[23] To perform the increasingly demanding action sequences required for Quake's development into a frontline combatant, Bennet underwent rigorous physical preparation starting after the first season.[24] This included daily four-hour sessions for several months focused on S.H.I.E.L.D.-style training regimens, encompassing martial arts disciplines such as kickboxing, boxing, Krav Maga, and jiu-jitsu to build stamina and fighting proficiency.[25] [15] Her commitment extended to executing complex stunts, including a notable one-take fight scene in season 2 where she sustained an elbow injury but continued filming.[26] Bennet's role marked a breakthrough in her career, elevating her from minor television appearances to a lead in a major Marvel property and contributing to greater visibility for Asian-American performers in superhero narratives.[27] As a half-Chinese actress, Bennet noted that producers incorporated her ethnicity into the character's arc once disclosed during casting, avoiding stereotypical portrayals while highlighting her heritage through family ties in the storyline.[27] [28] The series' conclusion after season 7 stemmed from persistently low viewership ratings and Marvel's strategic pivot toward Disney+ streaming content over broadcast television.[29] [30]Post-S.H.I.E.L.D. Roles and Recent Projects (2021–present)
Following the end of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. in 2020, Chloe Bennet shifted toward roles in streaming platforms, reflecting the industry's move toward on-demand content. In 2024, she starred as detective Lana Lee in the Hulu miniseries Interior Chinatown, an adaptation of Charles Yu's 2020 novel that critiques Asian stereotypes in Hollywood productions.[31] The eight-episode series premiered on November 6, 2024, with Bennet's character aiding protagonist Willis Wu amid a police procedural narrative set in Chinatown.[32] Bennet discussed the role's alignment with her experiences of mixed Asian identity and limited representation, noting the show's emphasis on authentic AAPI portrayals without reductive tropes.[33] Bennet did not reprise her S.H.I.E.L.D. character Daisy Johnson in the 2023 Marvel series Secret Invasion, citing narrative decisions to exclude non-canon elements from the main MCU timeline and a lack of casting outreach.[34] At Dragon Con in September 2025, she expressed regret over the missed opportunity, stating her character "should've been" included given thematic overlaps with Skrull infiltration plots, but confirmed no MCU involvement as producers had not approached her.[35] Persistent physical effects from intensive stunts during S.H.I.E.L.D. influenced her approach to action sequences in Interior Chinatown, where she opted out of certain stunts due to ongoing aches.[36] In voice work, Bennet has voiced Riley in the Amazon Prime animated series Invincible since its 2021 debut, contributing to seasons amid the show's expansion into superhero ensemble dynamics.[37] For 2025 releases, she joined A Very Jonas Christmas Movie on Disney+, portraying Lucy as Joe Jonas's love interest in a holiday comedy involving the brothers racing home for family festivities, scheduled for the Christmas season.[38] In September 2025, Bennet was cast as a series regular in an untitled Hulu drama by Dan Fogelman, playing the youngest daughter in a family led by an NFL figure portrayed by Christopher Meloni. These projects illustrate her pragmatic pivot to diverse streaming roles, including continued modeling appearances at industry events.[39]
Advocacy and Public Positions
Statements on Hollywood Racism and Asian Representation
In August 2017, Bennet publicly described Hollywood as "racist" in an Instagram comment responding to queries about her career challenges as an actress of mixed Chinese and white heritage, attributing casting barriers to discomfort with her ethnic surname.[40] The statement followed her praise for actor Ed Skrein's withdrawal from the role of Major Ben Daimio—a character of Japanese descent—in the Hellboy reboot, a decision Skrein made upon learning of the character's background to avoid whitewashing.[41] Bennet framed such industry practices as systemic obstacles for Asian-American performers, drawing from her pre-Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. audition experiences where ethnic identifiers reportedly hindered opportunities.[42] Amid the 2021 rise in anti-Asian hate crimes—documented by over 3,800 incidents reported to Stop AAPI Hate since March 2020—Bennet advocated for improved representation, aligning with the #StopAsianHate movement.[43] In a March 2021 Entertainment Weekly roundtable with Olivia Munn, Daniel Dae Kim, and others, she critiqued the entertainment industry's insufficient backing for Asian actresses, highlighting how underrepresentation perpetuated vulnerability to societal biases rather than isolated prejudice.[44] Participants emphasized causal economic factors, such as studios' historical reluctance to greenlight Asian-led projects absent proven box-office returns, over purely discriminatory intent.[45] Supporting data underscores pre-2020s disparities: Asian and Pacific Islander actors occupied just 5.9% of speaking roles across 1,300 top-grossing films from 2007 to 2019, with only 3.4% featuring them as leads or co-leads.[46] [47] Bennet's portrayal of Daisy Johnson in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013–2020)—reimagining a white comic character—contributed to modest visibility gains for mixed-heritage Asians, though critics have questioned whether such roles primarily advanced performers with partial European features, potentially sidelining full-Asian talent amid market-driven casting prioritizing broad appeal.[48] While Bennet attributes persistent gaps to entrenched biases, industry analyses point to audience demographics and profitability calculations as key drivers, with representation surging to 15.9% of speaking roles by 2022 only after hits like Crazy Rich Asians demonstrated commercial viability.[49]Name Change and Related Debates
In 2011, prior to securing significant acting roles, Chloe Bennet, born Chloé Wang to a Chinese father and white American mother, adopted the professional surname "Bennet"—derived from her father's first name—to improve audition prospects in Hollywood. She stated that her original surname "Wang" led to immediate rejections, as casting directors appeared uncomfortable with it, limiting her to ethnic-specific roles amid broader industry biases against Asian-sounding names. Following the change, Bennet reported a marked increase in callbacks and bookings, including her breakthrough as Daisy Johnson in Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013–2020), attributing this to navigating practical market barriers rather than denying her heritage.[18][41][50] The name change drew renewed scrutiny in August 2017, amid heightened debates over Hollywood whitewashing, particularly after actor Ed Skrein exited the role of Major Ben Daimio in the Hellboy reboot due to the character's Asian heritage. Bennet posted on Instagram praising Skrein's decision, prompting commenters to highlight her own surname anglicization as hypocritical or indicative of internalized bias, especially given her biracial appearance allowing her to "pass" as white in auditions. Online discussions, including in Asian-American forums, amplified accusations that such adaptations benefited from and perpetuated casting preferences for less "ethnic" identifiers, contrasting with calls for authentic representation.[40][9] Bennet defended the decision publicly, emphasizing that it was a survival tactic in a "racist" industry where Asian surnames imposed verifiable barriers, not an erasure of identity: "Changing my last name doesn't change the fact that my BLOOD is half Chinese, that I lived in China, speak Mandarin or that I was culturally raised both in America and China." She argued the shift enabled broader opportunities, allowing her to advocate from within the system rather than remaining sidelined, and cited personal experience as evidence of systemic disincentives for retaining heritage names.[19][18][51] Critics, including opinion pieces and community voices, countered that individual accommodations like name changes reinforce market incentives favoring assimilation over challenging biases, potentially undermining collective demands for overhaul in representation. While Bennet's success post-change—evidenced by roles in high-profile projects—supports claims of surname-related hurdles, detractors viewed it as prioritizing personal gain amid her public stances on Asian visibility, sparking debates on whether such strategies navigate or entrench causal realities of ethnic exclusion in casting. Empirical patterns, such as lower booking rates for actors with non-Western surnames documented in industry anecdotes, underscore the tension between pragmatic adaptation and ideological purity in addressing disparities.[52][42][53]Personal Life
Romantic Relationships
Chloe Bennet dated YouTuber and boxer Logan Paul from July 2017 to October 2018, in an on-and-off relationship that became public after sightings in Hawaii and confirmation via social media.[54][55] The pair faced scrutiny following Paul's January 2018 vlog in Japan's Aokigahara forest, where he filmed and reacted insensitively to a suicide victim's body, leading to widespread backlash for disrespecting mental health and the deceased; Bennet had reportedly warned him against such reckless content prior to the incident but reconciled afterward, publicly defending the relationship and describing Paul as one of her best friends despite criticism.[56][57][58] In 2022, Bennet was rumored to be involved with actor Dylan O'Brien after they were spotted on a flirty lunch date at Potato Chips Deli in Los Angeles in June, though no confirmation followed and the speculation faded.[59][60] She began dating actor Taron Egerton in mid-2024, with the relationship gaining attention through public outings including hand-holding and a kiss in New York City on December 8, 2024, but they split by June 2025, after which Egerton was reported on dating apps.[61][62][63] Bennet has been single since the end of her relationship with Egerton, with no confirmed partners as of October 2025.[63] Her romantic choices, particularly the defense of Paul amid his history of controversial content including past racial insensitivity, have drawn commentary for appearing inconsistent with her advocacy against anti-Asian bias in entertainment, prioritizing personal loyalty over broader alignment with representational causes.[64]Health Impacts from Career
During the seven seasons of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013–2020), Bennet performed extensive stunts as Daisy Johnson, including learning kickboxing, boxing, Krav Maga, and jiu-jitsu, which contributed to multiple injuries such as breaking her elbow during a one-take fight scene in the season 2 episode "The Dirty Half Dozen" filmed in 2015.[26][65] These demands resulted in cumulative physical wear, with Bennet later describing ongoing aches from "going too hard" on the series.[66] In interviews promoting Interior Chinatown (2024–2025), Bennet revealed that lingering effects from her S.H.I.E.L.D. stunt work prompted her to largely forgo action sequences in the series, stating, "I'm still aching" and opting to sit out most stunts to avoid further strain.[66][67] She recounted dislocating a finger during one limited stunt on the production, underscoring persistent vulnerability, and remarked, "I shouldn't be doing that stuff anymore," highlighting the long-term toll of repeated high-impact physical performance without sufficient recovery protocols common in television schedules.[67] Bennet's experience exemplifies the biomechanical risks in action-oriented television, where performers absorb repetitive forces—such as falls, strikes, and rolls—over extended shoots, often leading to chronic musculoskeletal issues absent robust injury mitigation beyond basic training.[68] Her admissions, drawn from direct accounts rather than aggregated studies, illustrate how such roles can impose lasting physical costs, influencing subsequent career choices toward less demanding choreography.[66][67]Works and Achievements
Key Acting Roles
Bennet's early television work included a recurring role as Hailey, an aspiring singer, in the ABC drama series Nashville from 2012 to 2013.[3] Her breakthrough came with the lead role of Skye, evolving into Daisy Johnson/Quake, in the Marvel series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., which aired on ABC from September 24, 2013, to May 12, 2020, spanning seven seasons.[69] [3] In film, Bennet provided the voice for the protagonist Yi, a Chinese teenager, in the DreamWorks animated feature Abominable, released on September 27, 2019.[69] She also starred as Karen in the musical comedy remake Valley Girl, which premiered on May 8, 2020.[70] Subsequent voice roles include Riley in the adult animated series Invincible on Amazon Prime Video, starting March 25, 2021.[71] More recently, she portrayed Lana Lee in the Hulu adaptation of Interior Chinatown, debuting February 1, 2024.[37] Bennet has additional credits in projects like the voice of Shelby in the animated Rally Road Racers (2023) and a supporting role in the upcoming thriller Mosquito.[37]Music Releases
Chloé Bennet, performing under her birth name Chloé Wang (汪可盈), pursued a music career in China starting in 2007 at age 15, after moving there to live with her grandmother and study Mandarin.[20] She released her debut single "Uh Oh" in early 2011, available in both English and Mandarin versions, with music videos produced by Chinese collaborators including renowned producer Xiao Ke.[11][12] The track featured pop styling aimed at the Chinese market, reflecting her efforts to build a fanbase through local television appearances and online platforms during her time abroad.[11] Later that year, Wang followed with the single "Every Day in Between," another pop-oriented release without accompanying album support.[13] Both singles achieved niche visibility in China but garnered modest streams and sales, limited by her emerging status and the competitive landscape for foreign-origin artists in the Mandarin music scene.[72] No full-length albums were produced, and following her return to the United States, Bennet did not issue further music releases or pursue recordings, instead transitioning fully to acting pursuits.[20] Occasional references to her early tracks appear in retrospective profiles, but no revival or new material has emerged since 2011.[72]Awards and Nominations
Bennet received nominations from the Teen Choice Awards and Kids' Choice Awards for her role as Daisy Johnson in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., awards that emphasize popularity among younger audiences rather than peer-reviewed artistic merit.[73][74] These included two Teen Choice nods in 2015 and 2016 for breakout TV performance, followed by action genre categories in 2018 and a summer series slot in 2019, none resulting in wins.[74][75] Similarly, Kids' Choice Awards nominated her in 2015 for Favorite TV Actress and in 2016 for Favorite Family TV Actress, again without victory.[76] Her work has garnered no nominations from prestigious bodies like the Primetime Emmys or Screen Actors Guild Awards, underscoring limited recognition for performers in science fiction television genres outside fan-voted polls.[73] In recognition of her visibility as a mixed Asian-American actress, Bennet won Actress of the Year at the 2015 Unforgettable Gala, an event honoring Asian-Pacific Islander achievements in entertainment.[77] She was also presented with a Visionary Award by East West Players in 2017, the oldest professional theater of color in the United States, for advancing diverse narratives.[78] These accolades highlight her role in increasing Asian representation amid broader industry gaps, though they remain niche compared to mainstream honors.[79]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Teen Choice Awards | Choice TV: Breakout Star | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[74] |
| 2015 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite TV Actress | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[76] |
| 2015 | Unforgettable Gala | Actress of the Year | Overall career | Won[77] |
| 2016 | Teen Choice Awards | Choice TV Actress: Action | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[74] |
| 2016 | Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite Family TV Actress | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[76] |
| 2017 | East West Players | Visionary Award | Overall contributions | Won[78] |
| 2018 | Teen Choice Awards | Choice TV Actress: Action | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[73] |
| 2019 | Teen Choice Awards | Choice Summer TV Star: Female | Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. | Nominated[73] |