Emma Laird
Emma Laird is an English actress and former model, best known for her breakout role as Iris, a sex worker entangled in a web of crime and corruption, in the Paramount+ series Mayor of Kingstown (2021–present).[1][2] Born and raised in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, in the East Midlands of England, Laird grew up in a working-class family in a small town surrounded by nature, attending the local Tupton Hall School where she completed her A-levels in 2014.[2][3] At age 18, she was scouted by the modeling agency Models 1 at a music festival, launching a seven-year career in fashion that included editorials for publications like Wonderland Magazine.[4][3] Disillusioned with modeling's demands, she impulsively enrolled in acting classes at the New York Film Academy during a 2016 modeling trip to the city, studying there for three years and marking her shift toward performance.[4][2][5] Laird's breakout role came in 2021 with her starring performance as Iris in Mayor of Kingstown, created by Taylor Sheridan and Hugh Dillon, opposite Jeremy Renner and Dianne Wiest; the series, set in a Michigan prison town, showcased her ability to portray vulnerable yet resilient characters, earning praise for her emotional depth in a demanding role that she described as both petrifying and transformative.[6][1][7] She followed this with a supporting part as Candy in the Apple TV+ limited series The Crowded Room (2023), alongside Tom Holland and Amanda Seyfried, and screen-tested for the lead in a planned Madonna biopic, highlighting her rising profile.[8][9] Her feature film debut arrived in 2023 as Desdemona Holland in Kenneth Branagh's A Haunting in Venice, a supernatural twist on Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot stories.[7][2][10] In recent years, Laird has expanded into more prominent film roles, including Jimmima in Danny Boyle's zombie horror 28 Years Later (2025) and its sequel The Bone Temple (2026, directed by Nia DaCosta), as well as parts in Brady Corbet's epic The Brutalist (2024) with Adrien Brody and Cary Joji Fukunaga's adaptation of Blood on Snow.[3] On television, she leads as the gangster's daughter in the BBC drama Mint, directed by Charlotte Regan and filmed in Glasgow, and has joined the cast of the legal thriller series War alongside Dominic West and Sienna Miller (2026).[3][11] Named one of Variety's 10 Brits to Watch in 2021 and Screen International's Stars of Tomorrow in 2025, Laird continues to balance high-profile projects with a grounded life in England's Peak District, emphasizing roles that allow her to "step outside of herself."[12][3][7]Early life
Birth and upbringing
Emma Laird was born on September 8, 1998, in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England.[3] She spent her early life in Chesterfield, in England's East Midlands region.[2] Laird's family background remains largely private, with limited public details available about her parents or siblings. She grew up in a working-class family in the rural setting of Chesterfield, which provided a grounded environment that influenced her early years, fostering a sense of normalcy away from the spotlight.[2] From a young age, Laird showed interests in creative and outdoor pursuits, including horse riding, camping, and attending music festivals, which hinted at her emerging artistic inclinations. At 18, she attended the Leeds Festival, immersing herself in the vibrant music scene.[13][14]Education
Emma Laird attended Tupton Hall School, a coeducational secondary school and sixth form in Chesterfield, Derbyshire.[15] She completed her A-Levels in 2014, achieving an A grade in Travel & Tourism.[15] During her time at school, Laird developed a strong interest in drama, though she noted that she was rarely selected for lead roles and even faced discouragement from her drama teacher, who predicted she would fail.[16]Modeling career
Discovery and professional work
Emma Laird was scouted as a model at the age of 18 by Models 1 at Leeds Festival.[4][17] She signed with the London-based agency shortly thereafter, marking the beginning of her professional modeling career.[16] Over the next seven years, starting around 2016, Laird built a successful portfolio in the fashion industry, working with international agencies including View Management in Barcelona, Le Management in Copenhagen, and Bravo Models in Tokyo.[18] Her assignments included high-profile campaigns and editorials, such as fronting Pandora's autumn 2019 jewelry collection directed by Tom Craig, and appearing in Stella McCartney's fall 2019 advertising series alongside models like Amber Valletta and Chu Wong.[19][20] Laird's modeling work involved extensive global travel, taking her to cities across Europe, Asia, and beyond for photoshoots, runway shows, and castings, which she later described as a key aspect of the profession despite not being her initial passion.[21] This peripatetic lifestyle represented a significant culture shock for the tomboyish equestrian from rural Derbyshire, thrusting her into the high-glamour, fast-paced world of international fashion.[16] She has reflected on the challenges of constantly adapting to new environments and the demanding schedule, which at times required saying yes to every opportunity to sustain momentum in a competitive industry.[22] Through her modeling engagements, Laird gained exposure to broader creative networks in entertainment and fashion, which broadened her horizons and sparked interest in pursuing acting as a more expressive outlet.[16] These connections, forged during photoshoots and industry events, played a pivotal role in her decision to transition toward performance work.[17]Transition to acting
After several years in modeling, which took her across Europe and to New York, Emma Laird decided to pivot toward acting to seek greater creative fulfillment beyond the industry's superficial demands.[2] The extensive travel and exposure from her modeling work broadened her perspectives, inspiring a desire for deeper emotional expression through performance rather than posing.[3] She has described modeling as creatively limiting and emotionally draining, particularly due to pressures that exacerbated her eating disorder around 2018, motivating her to pursue acting as a more authentic outlet.[17][16] During a 2016 modeling trip to New York, Laird impulsively enrolled in acting classes at the New York Film Academy, studying there for three years and marking her initial shift toward performance.[4][5][2] She quit full-time modeling around 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic due to financial and personal challenges, including selling her house, while continuing occasional modeling gigs to fund acting pursuits.[17] To expand her opportunities, she relocated to London, where she further developed her skills in the city's theater and film scene.[3][23] She later traveled to Los Angeles, landing her first acting agent with APA in April 2021, shortly after booking her breakout television role.[24][23]Acting career
Training and initial roles
Laird began her formal acting training in 2016 at the New York Film Academy (NYFA) in New York City, impulsively enrolling after attending an open day during a modeling assignment; a casting director there secured her a spot in the program starting the following Monday, marking an early pivot toward performance arts.[4] She later completed an intensive two-month acting course at NYFA around 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which she described as a life-saving shift that reignited her passion after years of modeling burnout.[17] This training equipped her with foundational skills in on-camera performance, audition techniques, and character development, emphasizing practical workshops over theoretical study.[5] Her initial professional acting credits emerged shortly after starting at NYFA, including the lead role in the 2018 short film From Life, directed by Uli Meyer, a mystery drama about an artist encountering a enigmatic woman in a churchyard.[25] In 2019, she starred as the lead in In Conversation with a Goddess, Florence Kosky's short film tackling body politics and period poverty, which earned semi-finalist status at the Sunday in the Park Short Film Festival.[26] These minor roles, often in low-budget indie projects, served as her entry points into acting, contrasting sharply with the passive demands of modeling.[4] Transitioning from a modeling background posed significant challenges for Laird, including financial precarity exacerbated by the pandemic—she sold her house to make ends meet while pursuing unpaid auditions—and the lingering effects of industry pressures, such as an eating disorder stemming from agents' demands to maintain an unnaturally thin physique.[17] Despite skepticism from others who viewed her modeling success as incompatible with acting's rigor, early feedback from NYFA instructors and festival responses to her shorts built crucial momentum, validating her potential beyond the runway.[16] Securing an agent in Los Angeles further supported her nascent career by opening doors to U.S.-based opportunities.[24]Breakthrough and major projects
Laird's breakthrough came with her television debut as Iris in the Paramount+ crime thriller series Mayor of Kingstown (2021–present), where she portrayed a resilient dancer entangled in the show's gritty underworld of Kingstown, Michigan, opposite Jeremy Renner as Mike McLusky. The role marked her transition from modeling to acting and earned praise for her nuanced depiction of vulnerability and strength amid themes of exploitation and redemption.[27] Her performance in the series, which spanned three seasons, highlighted her ability to hold her own in ensemble casts, contributing to the show's critical acclaim for its raw exploration of systemic corruption.[1] Building on this momentum, Laird took on the role of Annabelle in the Apple TV+ miniseries The Crowded Room (2023), playing a pivotal love interest to Tom Holland's protagonist in a psychological drama inspired by real events.[28] Her portrayal of the compassionate yet conflicted Annabelle added emotional depth to the narrative of mental health and identity. This project further solidified her presence in high-profile streaming content, showcasing her range in intimate, character-driven stories. In film, Laird expanded her portfolio with supporting roles that garnered attention for their intensity. She played Desdemona Holland, a young assistant with Romani heritage in Kenneth Branagh's A Haunting in Venice (2023), contributing to the ensemble mystery's atmospheric tension alongside Branagh's Hercule Poirot. The following year, she portrayed Audrey, the sharp-tongued wife of a furniture magnate, in Brady Corbet's epic The Brutalist (2024), opposite Adrien Brody; her performance was lauded for capturing the character's icy pragmatism in a tale of postwar ambition and betrayal.[3] More recently, in Alex Burunova's Satisfaction (2025), Laird led as Lola, a blocked composer grappling with trauma and relational dynamics on a remote Greek island, delivering a critically acclaimed turn that premiered at SXSW and was praised for its raw emotional authenticity.[29] Laird's rising profile has been recognized by industry outlets, including Variety's 10 Brits to Watch in 2021 for her Mayor of Kingstown debut, and Screen International's Stars of Tomorrow in 2025, honoring her work in The Brutalist and beyond.[27][3] She has spoken about selectively choosing roles that challenge her, turning down clichéd supporting parts like "someone’s girlfriend with nothing to do" to focus on complex characters she can authentically inhabit.[30] This approach extends to collaborations, such as her upcoming work with Aaron Taylor-Johnson in Cary Joji Fukunaga's Blood on Snow, where she has described him as her most generous co-star, fostering a supportive environment on set.[30] Looking ahead, Laird appears in Danny Boyle's 28 Years Later (2025) as Jimmima, a survivor in the zombie franchise's revival, requiring intensive stunt training and marking a shift to action-oriented fare; she reprises the role in Nia DaCosta's sequel The Bone Temple (2026).[3] She has also joined the cast of HBO and Sky's legal thriller series War (announced 2025), starring with Dominic West and Sienna Miller in a story of clashing London law firms.[11] She will also star as Shannon, the daughter of a crime family, in the BBC One series Mint (2026), directed by Charlotte Regan.[31] Additionally, she stars as Eve in Terry Gilliam's Carnival at the End of Days (2025), an ensemble fantasy comedy featuring Johnny Depp and Jeff Bridges. These projects underscore her versatility and growing international appeal as of late 2025.Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | From Life | Woman | Uli Meyer | Short film[32] |
| 2019 | In Conversation with a Goddess | The Girl | Florence Kosky | Short film[33] |
| 2023 | A Haunting in Venice | Desdemona Holland | Kenneth Branagh | Feature film[34] |
| 2024 | The Brutalist | Audrey | Brady Corbet | Feature film[35] |
| 2025 | Satisfaction | Lola | Alex Burunova | Feature film[36][29] |
| 2025 | 28 Years Later | Jimmima | Danny Boyle | Feature film[37] |
| 2025 | Fackham Hall | Poppy Davenport | Jim O'Hanlon | Feature film (upcoming)[38] |
| 2025 | Falling | TBA | TBA | Feature film (upcoming)[39] |
| TBA | Blood on Snow | TBA | Cary Joji Fukunaga | Feature film (upcoming)[40] |
| 2026 | 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple | Jimmima | Nia DaCosta | Feature film (upcoming)[41] |
Television
Emma Laird's television career began with a prominent role in the crime drama series Mayor of Kingstown, where she portrayed Iris, a main character involved in the show's central narrative of power and corruption in a prison town.[42] The series, created by Taylor Sheridan and Hugh Dillon, aired on Paramount+ from 2021 to present, spanning four seasons with Laird appearing in all 34 episodes as of November 2025 as a main cast member. In 2023, she took on a recurring role as Annabelle, Danny Sullivan's high school girlfriend, in the Apple TV+ miniseries The Crowded Room, a psychological thriller inspired by Daniel Keyes' The Minds of Billy Milligan.[8] Directed by Akiva Goldsman, the 10-episode limited series featured Laird in 5 episodes, highlighting her character's supportive yet pivotal presence in the protagonist's story of mental health and identity.[43] Laird has several upcoming television projects. She is set to appear as Molly Giordano, a training associate at a prestigious law firm, in the HBO and Sky legal thriller War, which began filming in 2025.[11] In the BBC One crime drama Mint, created by Charlotte Regan, she will play the lead role of Shannon, a young woman navigating family secrets and criminal ties, with production wrapping in late 2025 for a potential 2026 release.[44] Additionally, she joins the cast of Apple TV+'s sci-fi adaptation Neuromancer in an undisclosed supporting role, based on William Gibson's seminal cyberpunk novel, with filming ongoing as of November 2025.[45]| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021–present | Mayor of Kingstown | Iris | Main role; 34 episodes (as of November 2025); Paramount+ |
| 2023 | The Crowded Room | Annabelle | Recurring role; 5 episodes; Apple TV+ miniseries |
| 2025 | War | Molly Giordano | Supporting role; HBO/Sky series (upcoming) |
| TBA (2026) | Mint | Shannon | Lead role; BBC One series (upcoming) |
| TBA | Neuromancer | TBA | Supporting role; Apple TV+ series (upcoming) |