Grace Van Patten
Grace Van Patten is an American actress born on November 21, 1996, in New York City, recognized for her versatile performances in independent films and streaming series.[1] She debuted on screen at age eight in a small role on the HBO series The Sopranos, directed by her father, and has since built a career spanning television and film, earning acclaim for roles in projects like Hulu's Nine Perfect Strangers (2021) and Tell Me Lies (2022–present).[2][3] The daughter of Emmy-winning director Timothy Van Patten—known for his work on The Sopranos and Game of Thrones—and former model Wendy Rossmeyer Van Patten, Grace grew up in a creative family environment in New York City's Tribeca neighborhood before moving to Brooklyn in 2014.[2] She is the niece of actors Joyce Van Patten and Dick Van Patten, and has two younger sisters: Anna, a model and actress who appeared in the Gossip Girl reboot, and June, who made her acting debut in a 2020 short film.[1][2] Raised around film sets, she attended the prestigious Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, where she honed her skills in a performing arts-focused curriculum encouraged by her family.[3][2] Van Patten's early career included guest spots on shows like Law & Order: Special Victims Unit before breaking out in feature films such as Tramps (2016) and The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) (2017), both distributed by Netflix.[1] Her television roles expanded with the ensemble cast of Nine Perfect Strangers, opposite Nicole Kidman, and the lead in the romantic drama Tell Me Lies, which explores toxic relationships and has been renewed for a third season as of 2025.[3] In 2025, she starred as Amanda Knox in the Hulu limited series The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox, a role that required her to learn Italian and collaborate with the real-life figure, marking a significant step in portraying real historical events.[3] Other notable film credits include Mayday (2021) and Under the Silver Lake (2018), showcasing her range in indie cinema.[1] With Italian heritage influencing her family vacations to Rome, Van Patten continues to draw from personal and familial inspirations in her evolving career.[3]Early life
Family background
Grace Van Patten was born on November 21, 1996, in New York City.[2] She is the eldest daughter of television director and producer Timothy Van Patten and his wife, Wendy Rossmeyer Van Patten.[2] Van Patten has two younger sisters, June Van Patten and Anna Van Patten, both of whom have pursued careers in acting.[2] Her extended family has deep roots in the entertainment industry. She is the niece of actors Dick Van Patten and Joyce Van Patten, who were half-siblings to her father Timothy.[4] Her cousins include actors Vincent Van Patten and Nels Van Patten, sons of Dick Van Patten, as well as actress Talia Balsam, daughter of Joyce Van Patten.[4][5] Van Patten's early exposure to the entertainment industry stemmed from her father's prominent work as a director on acclaimed television series such as The Sopranos and The Wire, where she spent time on set during her childhood.[6]Childhood and education
Grace Van Patten was born on November 21, 1996, in New York City and grew up in the Tribeca neighborhood in a creative household influenced by her family's involvement in the entertainment industry.[7][2] Her early exposure to theater and film came through family connections, sparking her interest in acting by the age of eight, when she visited sets like that of The Sopranos, directed by her father.[8] In 2014, her family relocated to Brooklyn, but Van Patten's formative years in Tribeca shaped her artistic inclinations amid the city's vibrant cultural scene.[7] She attended the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, a renowned institution for aspiring artists, where she focused on performing arts and graduated in 2014.[9][10] The school's rigorous program allowed her to hone her skills in drama and related disciplines, providing a strong foundation for her future pursuits.[11] Following high school, Van Patten deferred admission to the University of Southern California to stay in New York and explore acting opportunities.[7] During this gap year, she enrolled in community college classes in psychology, philosophy, and English to test her academic interests and potentially transfer credits, but she ultimately chose to prioritize her acting aspirations over completing a degree.[12][13] This period marked a pivotal shift, as she began auditioning without an agent while balancing coursework, solidifying her commitment to a professional path in the arts.[7]Acting career
Beginnings
Grace Van Patten made her acting debut at the age of eight, appearing as Ally Pontecorvo in two episodes of the HBO series The Sopranos in 2006, which were directed by her father, Timothy Van Patten.[14] This early role, stemming from family ties to the production, provided her initial exposure in a prominent television drama.[15] Following her debut, Van Patten took on sporadic guest roles in other television series during her pre-teen and early teen years. In 2013, she portrayed Jodie Lanier, a teenager involved in a political scandal, in the episode "October Surprise" of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.[16] The next year, in 2014, she appeared as Ruth Lindsay in the Boardwalk Empire episode "Cuanto," playing a young girl in a historical flashback sequence.[1] These brief appearances allowed her to gain experience in ensemble casts while maintaining a low profile in the industry. Van Patten transitioned to feature films with her first role as Maggie Wyatt in the 2015 independent drama Stealing Cars, directed by Bradley Kaplan, where she played the sister of a troubled car thief.[17] This marked her entry into cinematic work alongside established actors like William H. Macy and Felicity Huffman. During this period, she faced challenges balancing her education at the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts—known for its rigorous performing arts program—with her infrequent auditions and roles.[18] After graduating high school in 2014, Van Patten deferred college admission to the University of Southern California and took a gap year to focus on acting classes and auditions, ultimately deciding to pursue the profession full-time rather than returning to formal education.[7] Her early career garnered limited recognition, primarily through these family-influenced television spots and modest independent projects, laying a foundational base for her development as an actress without widespread attention.[19]Breakthrough roles
Van Patten's breakthrough came with her lead role as Ellie in the 2016 independent film Tramps, directed by Adam Leon, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and marked her first major streaming release on Netflix in 2017.[20][21] The romantic crime drama, in which she stars opposite Callum Turner as a young woman entangled in a botched criminal job across New York City, was praised for her naturalistic performance, establishing her as a rising talent in indie cinema.[22] In 2017, Van Patten achieved several milestones that solidified her transition to more prominent roles. She portrayed Eliza Meyerowitz, the rebellious daughter of Adam Sandler's character, in Noah Baumbach's The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected), which premiered at the New York Film Festival before its Netflix release later that year.[23] The ensemble family comedy-drama earned the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Ensemble Cast, highlighting Van Patten's contribution alongside stars like Ben Stiller and Dustin Hoffman.[24] That same year, she appeared as Leyla in the horror thriller Central Park, playing one of six friends targeted by a killer during a night out, and as Mackenzie Darling, the aspiring filmmaker granddaughter in the ensemble romantic comedy The Wilde Wedding, opposite Glenn Close and John Malkovich.[25] Additionally, Van Patten made her Off-Broadway debut as the terminally ill Julie in Hamish Linklater's The Whirligig at The New Group, a role that explored themes of addiction and family through a nonlinear narrative.[26] Van Patten continued her momentum into 2018 with supporting roles that showcased her versatility. She played the enigmatic Balloon Girl in David Robert Mitchell's neo-noir mystery Under the Silver Lake, contributing to the film's surreal Los Angeles odyssey alongside Andrew Garfield.[27] On television, she guest-starred as Olivia Meadows, a college acquaintance haunting Jonah Hill's character during a psychedelic drug trial, in the Netflix miniseries Maniac created by Patrick Somerville.[28] Her early versatility earned industry acclaim, including being named one of Variety's "10 Actors to Watch" in 2017 for standout performances in Tramps and The Meyerowitz Stories.[9] Following her graduation from Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts in 2014, Van Patten shifted toward lead and ensemble parts in both indie films and mainstream streaming projects, forgoing initial plans for college to pursue acting full-time.[7][10]Recent projects
Van Patten's recent work has increasingly focused on lead roles in independent films and streaming series, showcasing her ability to portray nuanced, emotionally complex characters. In 2019, she starred as Lilian, a directionless young woman navigating post-college life in New York, in the indie drama Good Posture, directed by Dolly Wells, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and earned critical praise for its sharp wit and Van Patten's vulnerable performance. The following year, she played Cassie, the resilient daughter of a war veteran, in J.J. Abrams-produced thriller The Violent Heart, where her portrayal of familial tension and personal growth was highlighted by reviewers for its authenticity. Continuing her streak in indie cinema, Van Patten took on the role of Ana, a rebellious dreamer transported to a surreal wartime fantasy, in Karen Cinorre's Mayday (2021), a visually inventive film that premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival and emphasized her physical and emotional range in ensemble dynamics.[29] Transitioning prominently to television, Van Patten earned acclaim for her supporting role as Zoe, a young attendee grappling with grief at a wellness retreat, in the 2021 Hulu miniseries Nine Perfect Strangers, adapted from Liane Moriarty's novel and directed by David E. Kelley, opposite stars like Nicole Kidman.[21] Her breakthrough in serialized drama came with the lead role of Lucy Albright, a college student entangled in a toxic romance, in Hulu's Tell Me Lies (2022–present), based on Carola Lovering's novel; the series was renewed for a third season in 2025, with Van Patten teasing its "fucking chaotic" and "messiest" narrative twists in interviews, promising deeper exploration of her character's psychological turmoil.[30] This role marked her growing prominence in dramatic streaming content, aligning with a career trajectory toward platforms like Hulu and Netflix, where she has balanced intimate, character-driven stories with broader accessibility.[31] On stage, Van Patten portrayed Joan of Arc in the 2018 Off-Broadway production of Mother of the Maid at The Public Theater, directed by Matthew Penn, opposite Glenn Close as her mother; the play, written by Jane Anderson, offered a fresh perspective on the saint's familial bonds and received positive notices for Van Patten's fiery, conviction-filled performance.[32] In 2025, she assumed the titular lead as Amanda Knox in Hulu's miniseries The Twisted Tale of Amanda Knox, which premiered in August and dramatizes the real-life wrongful conviction case; Van Patten collaborated closely with the actual Amanda Knox during preparation, drawing on personal meetings to authentically capture the subject's resilience and media scrutiny over 16 years.[33][34] Throughout these projects, Van Patten has discussed the challenges of embodying multifaceted women, particularly in Tell Me Lies, where filming intimate scenes with co-star and real-life partner Jackson White provided a sense of safety amid the vulnerability required, allowing her to delve into themes of desire and betrayal without reservation.[35] This evolution underscores her shift toward streaming's demand for sustained character arcs, positioning her as a rising voice in contemporary dramatic roles.Filmography
Films
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Stealing Cars | Maggie[36] |
| 2016 | Tramps | Ellie |
| 2017 | Central Park | Leyla[25] |
| 2017 | The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) | Eliza Meyerowitz[37] |
| 2017 | The Wilde Wedding | Mackenzie Darling[38] |
| 2018 | Under the Silver Lake | Balloon Girl[27] |
| 2019 | Good Posture | Lilian[39] |
| 2020 | The Violent Heart | Cassie |
| 2021 | Mayday | Ana[40] |