Isabela Merced
Isabela Merced (born Isabela Yolanda Moner; July 10, 2001) is an American actress and singer of Peruvian descent.[1][2] Born in Cleveland, Ohio, to a Peruvian mother from Lima and an American father of Polish and Slovak ancestry, Merced began performing in community theater at age six and made her Broadway debut in 2012.[1][3] Her early television work included the lead role of CJ Martin in the Nickelodeon series 100 Things to Do Before High School (2014–2016), earning her Imagen Awards for Best Young Actress in 2015 and 2016.[4][5] Merced transitioned to film with supporting roles in Transformers: The Last Knight (2017) and Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018), followed by a starring turn as Lizzy in Instant Family (2018) and the title character in Dora and the Lost City of Gold (2019).[4][6] More recent projects include Madame Web (2024), Alien: Romulus (2024), the role of Dina in season two of HBO's The Last of Us (2025), Hawkgirl in the DC Universe's Superman film and Peacemaker series, for which she received a 2025 Pride Award for Best Supporting Actress and an Astra Television Award nomination.[7][6][8]Early life
Family background and heritage
Isabela Merced, born Isabela Yolanda Moner on July 10, 2001, in Cleveland, Ohio, is the daughter of Katherine Moner, a nurse originally from Lima, Peru, and Patrick Moner, a firefighter born in Louisiana with Slovak and Polish ancestry.[9][10] Her maternal heritage traces to Peru, where her mother was raised, while her paternal roots reflect European immigrant influences in the American South.[9] In 2019, Merced adopted her late Peruvian grandmother's surname, Yolanda Merced Salazar Pittman, as her professional name to honor her familial ties.[11] As the middle child in a family of five, Merced grew up with an older brother, Jared, and a younger brother, Gyovanni, in a household shaped by her parents' demanding professions in healthcare and public safety.[12] This sibling dynamic fostered early experiences of shared responsibilities and collaboration within the home environment.[4] Merced's upbringing emphasized bilingualism, with Spanish as her first language spoken at home due to her mother's Peruvian origins, alongside English from her father's American background.[10] Peruvian cultural elements, including traditional foods and family gatherings reflective of Lima's customs, influenced her early worldview, reinforcing a dual identity grounded in her parents' respective heritages.[13]Relocation and early training
Merced's family relocated from Cleveland to New York when she was 10 years old in 2011, motivated by her emerging talent in performing arts and to access greater opportunities beyond local theater.[14][15] This transition followed a 2008 house fire in Cleveland that prompted her initial foray into acting through community productions and auditions, such as a role as a Munchkin in a local staging of The Wizard of Oz.[14] To support her developing career, Merced was homeschooled via the Ohio Virtual Academy, which offered the scheduling flexibility needed for frequent auditions and travel between Ohio and the East Coast.[14] She attended the Fairmount Performing Arts Conservatory in Cleveland prior to the move, where she built foundational theater skills through classes and performances.[16] Complementing her acting preparation, Merced trained in dance to enhance her stage presence and began learning the ukulele, an instrument she incorporated into her musical self-expression.[16] These efforts, combined with non-professional experiences like school and community plays, honed her versatility before professional commitments intensified.[3]Acting career
Initial roles and Nickelodeon beginnings (2012–2016)
Merced's acting career began with community theater performances starting at age six, building foundational skills in performance and vocals.[17] Her professional breakthrough came at age 10 with a Broadway debut in the 2012 revival of Evita, where she performed songs in Spanish alongside lead actor Ricky Martin, showcasing early proficiency in bilingual singing and stage presence.[18] Merced transitioned to television in 2014 by voicing the character Kate in Nickelodeon's animated series Dora and Friends: Into the City!, a spin-off of Dora the Explorer that aired through 2017 and emphasized themes of friendship and adventure.[19] She followed this with her live-action Nickelodeon debut in the 2015 TV movie Splitting Adam, playing Lori Collins, a role that involved comedic elements in a story about a teen discovering magical cloning powers.[20] From November 6, 2014, to February 28, 2016, Merced starred as the lead CJ Martin in Nickelodeon's 100 Things to Do Before High School, portraying a proactive middle-schooler who rallies friends to complete a bucket list of experiences before entering high school. The series, created by Scott Fellows, featured episodic challenges that developed Merced's skills in physical comedy and ensemble dynamics, marking her establishment as a Nickelodeon lead.Film breakthrough and major projects (2017–2020)
Merced's transition to feature films began with her casting as Izabella in Transformers: The Last Knight (2017), directed by Michael Bay, marking her first major studio role in a blockbuster franchise. She portrayed a resourceful, orphaned Latina mechanic scavenging in the ruins of Chicago after the events of prior films, allying with Autobots like Cade Yeager (Mark Wahlberg) and aiding in the battle against Quintessa's forces. The production, budgeted at $217 million, grossed $605 million worldwide, though it received mixed critical reception for its convoluted plot amid franchise fatigue. Her selection over established actors highlighted a merit-based ascent from Nickelodeon television, contrasting with Hollywood's frequent reliance on nepotistic casting in high-profile action vehicles.[4] In 2018, Merced expanded into thriller territory as Isabel Reyes in Sicario: Day of the Soldado, the sequel to Denis Villeneuve's 2015 film, under director Stefano Sollima.[21] Playing the daughter of a Mexican drug cartel leader kidnapped by U.S. operatives (led by Josh Brolin and Benicio del Toro), her character served as a pivotal moral fulcrum, humanizing the narrative's exploration of border warfare and ethical ambiguities.[22] The film, with a $22 million budget, earned $76 million globally but underperformed relative to expectations, earning a 62% Rotten Tomatoes score for its intensified violence over the original's tension. Critics noted Merced's poised delivery in high-stakes scenes, evidencing her adaptability beyond family-oriented roles.[22] That same year, she co-starred in Instant Family (2018) as Lizzy, the eldest of three foster siblings adopted by an infertile couple (Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne) in this comedy-drama inspired by director Sean Anders' real-life experience. Merced's portrayal captured the character's guarded trauma and gradual thawing, contributing to the film's authentic depiction of adoption challenges. Budgeted at $48 million, it grossed $190 million worldwide and garnered 82% audience approval on Rotten Tomatoes, underscoring commercial viability for her dramatic range. Merced led the 2019 live-action adaptation Dora and the Lost City of Gold as the titular teenage explorer, reimagined for a high-school audience by director James Bobin.[23] Departing from the preschool animated series, her Dora teams with classmates (including Jeffrey Wahlberg and Eugenio Derbez) to rescue her parents and uncover Parapata, blending adventure with self-discovery themes. Despite preconceptions of tonal mismatch, the $30 million production grossed $120 million globally and achieved an 85% critics' score on Rotten Tomatoes for its self-aware humor and Merced's vibrant, bilingual performance.[24] In the Netflix anthology rom-com Let It Snow (2019), adapted from young-adult stories by John Green, Maureen Johnson, and Lauren Myracle, Merced played Julie, a high-achieving teen navigating family strife and a budding romance amid a blizzard.[25] Her segment emphasized relatable insecurities, demonstrating versatility in ensemble-driven holiday fare without theatrical box office metrics, as the streaming release prioritized viewer engagement over traditional earnings. These projects collectively evidenced her broadening appeal, driven by versatile casting rather than industry insider advantages, with box office returns validating audience draw independent of critical consensus variances.Television expansions and streaming roles (2021–2023)
In 2021, Merced portrayed Rachel Cooper, the resilient teenage daughter seeking justice alongside her father in the Netflix action thriller Sweet Girl, directed by Brian Andrew Mendoza and co-starring Jason Momoa.[26] The film, which follows a father's vengeful pursuit after his wife's death from a faulty drug, earned a 24% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 59 critic reviews, with consensus describing it as a generic revenge tale hampered by contrived plotting and uneven pacing despite committed performances.[27] Audience scores were higher at 60% from over 1,000 verified ratings on the site, reflecting appeal among viewers favoring straightforward thrillers, though IMDb user reviews averaged 5.5/10 from 37,000 submissions, often critiquing the script's formulaic elements and Merced's role as overshadowed by Momoa's intensity.[28] Merced expanded into family-oriented streaming content with the 2022 HBO Max adaptation of Father of the Bride, playing Cora Herrera, the younger sister in a Cuban-American family navigating wedding tensions and cultural clashes, directed by Gaz Alazraki and led by Andy García.[29] Released on June 16, this third cinematic take on the Edward Streeter novel received mixed reception, holding a 5.9/10 IMDb average from 14,500 users who praised its heartfelt ensemble dynamics but noted deviations from the source material's lighter tone toward broader identity themes, diluting individual character arcs.[30] In ensemble contexts like this, reviewers and viewers observed Merced's contributions as charismatic yet constrained by supporting roles that prioritized family spectacle over personal depth, aligning with patterns in her period work where streaming platforms emphasized accessible narratives over nuanced leads.[31] These projects marked Merced's shift toward high-volume streaming outputs, prioritizing broad accessibility on platforms like Netflix and HBO Max amid industry pivots to direct-to-consumer models post-2020, though critical feedback highlighted recurring formulaic stakes—such as protective family bonds and cultural assimilation—that limited opportunities for substantive deviation from genre conventions.[27] [30] Data from aggregator sites indicated modest viewership traction without breakout acclaim, underscoring challenges in ensemble-driven adaptations where individual performances, including hers, competed for screentime against starrier co-leads.Recent film and series roles (2024–present)
In 2024, Merced portrayed Anya Corazón, a teenage girl who gains spider-like powers, in the Sony superhero film Madame Web, directed by S.J. Clarkson. The movie, which also starred Dakota Johnson and Sydney Sweeney, faced widespread critical derision for its convoluted script, poor visual effects, and narrative incoherence, earning a 10% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from aggregated reviews. Financially, it underperformed significantly, grossing approximately $100.5 million worldwide against an $80 million production budget, qualifying as a box office bomb when accounting for marketing costs and theater splits.[32][33][34] Merced took on the role of Dina, Ellie’s romantic partner and a key ally in the post-apocalyptic narrative, in HBO's The Last of Us Season 2, which premiered on April 14, 2025. Her performance drew initial casting backlash from some fans questioning her physical resemblance to the video game character from The Last of Us Part II, with Merced addressing the criticism by emphasizing her commitment to authenticity amid online debates. Despite this, her portrayal received praise for emotional depth, particularly in episodes exploring Dina's bisexuality and survival choices, culminating in a win for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series at the 2025 Astra TV Awards on June 11.[35][36][37] In James Gunn's Superman (2025), Merced debuted as Kendra Saunders / Hawkgirl, a winged warrior integrated into the rebooted DC Universe as a member of the Justice Gang, marking her entry into the franchise's shared continuity. The role showcased her in high-stakes action sequences alongside David Corenswet's Superman, generating early positive buzz for her physicality and chemistry, though broader critiques of DC's superhero saturation highlighted franchise fatigue concerns unrelated to her casting. Fan reactions on platforms like Facebook lauded her interpretation, positioning Hawkgirl for potential returns in projects like Peacemaker Season 2.[38][39][40]Music career
Early releases and EPs
Isabela Moner, performing under her birth name at the time, released her debut album Stopping Time on September 18, 2015, via Broadway Records.[41] The 12-track project included the lead single "Dream About Me," accompanied by a music video premiered on September 3, 2015, as a promotional tie-in to her starring role in Nickelodeon's 100 Things to Do Before High School.[42] Additional tracks featured original songs like "Count on Me" and "Every Girl," alongside covers such as Oasis's "Wonderwall," Astrud Gilberto's "The Boy from Ipanema," and Madonna's "I'll Stay."[43] The album's folk-pop sound, often incorporating ukulele and acoustic elements, aligned with Moner's teen-oriented Nickelodeon persona, positioning music as a secondary outlet to her acting work.[44] It also incorporated the theme song "Brand New Day" from the series, released as her first recording on September 11, 2015.[45] Commercial performance remained modest, with no documented entries on major music charts, underscoring its role as promotional material rather than a primary musical endeavor.[46] Following her professional name change to Isabela Merced in 2019, she issued her first EP, the better half of me, on May 22, 2020, through Republic Records.[47] This five-track release marked her initial foray into independent music production post-Nickelodeon, featuring introspective pop tracks like "The Chase" and "I Don't Dance," but garnered limited streaming metrics and critical discourse at launch.[48]Singles and collaborations
Merced released her debut single "My Only One (No Hay Nadie Más)", a bilingual pop track featuring Colombian singer Sebastián Yatra, on November 2, 2018.[49] This was followed by "PAPI", a dance-pop song with Latin rhythms released on November 6, 2019, marking her first solo music video.[50] In October 2020, she collaborated with Mexican singer Danna Paola on "Don't Go", a Spanglish pop duet emphasizing emotional vulnerability in relationships, which blended pop and urban influences.[51] Her output shifted toward more introspective Latin pop with the standalone single "AGONIA" on July 22, 2022, exploring themes of heartbreak through reggaeton-tinged production.[52] This period reflected a stylistic evolution incorporating stronger Latin elements, aligning with her Peruvian heritage, though releases remained sporadic amid her acting commitments.[53] In December 2024, Merced issued "Cuffing Season", a holiday-themed pop track with playful synth elements, further diversifying her solo work.[54] A notable collaboration came in August 2025 with Peruvian-American Grammy-winning producer Tony Succar on the salsa-infused "Apocalipsis (versión salsa)", reimagining a pop base into tropical rhythms as a nod to Peruvian musical roots without overt cultural essentialism.[55] This partnership highlighted fusion styles, drawing from Succar's expertise in blending salsa with contemporary sounds.[56] Critics have noted the infrequency of her music drops—averaging one major single or feature every 1-2 years—attributing it to her primary focus on film and television roles, which has limited deeper exploration of musical evolution despite promising genre versatility.[57]Album developments and live performances
Merced continued developing her music output with the release of the salsa version of "Apocalipsis" on August 15, 2025, in collaboration with Peruvian-American producer Tony Succar, transforming the original ballad into a tropical anthem featuring horns and percussion.[56][58] This single marked her exploration of Latin rhythms amid her acting schedule, including roles in The Last of Us Season 2 and Superman. In interviews, Merced expressed intentions to prioritize music further after these projects, aiming to establish herself as a salsa artist while balancing her primary focus on acting.[59][60] Her live performances have remained sporadic, emphasizing intimate or promotional settings rather than extensive tours. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Merced hosted a home concert on July 2, 2020, performing "Apocalipsis" and other tracks for online audiences via HOLA! USA.[61] On October 14, 2025, she delivered a live rendition of the salsa "Apocalipsis" on Sirius XM, showcasing the collaboration with Succar in a radio session that highlighted her vocal range and genre fusion. These appearances underscore music as a secondary endeavor to her film and television commitments, with no large-scale concerts or festival headlining reported as of October 2025.[62]Personal life
Family and relationships
Merced is the middle child of Patrick Moner, a firefighter, and Katherine Moner; she has an older brother named Jared Moner and a younger brother named Gyovanni Moner, born in December 2004.[1][2] Her family relocated multiple times during her childhood, including moves between Ohio and California, reflecting a close-knit dynamic centered on her parents' professions and support for her early pursuits.[63][12] As of 2025, Merced has not married and has no children.[64] She dated actor Jace Norman briefly in 2016, a relationship that ended after several months with no public acrimony reported.[65][66] Additional rumored links include actor Dylan Summerall in 2017, though unconfirmed beyond speculation.[67] Merced currently appears single and emphasizes privacy regarding her personal life, limiting disclosures amid media scrutiny.[68][64]Public persona and identity
Isabela Merced has consistently emphasized her Peruvian-American heritage as a core element of her public identity, describing herself as "Peruvian from Ohio" in a 2025 interview and expressing pride in blending her dual cultures.[69] Born in Cleveland to a Peruvian father and American mother, she has highlighted reconnecting with her Peruvian roots through family visits and cultural practices, stating that these experiences inform her worldview and artistic choices.[70] In a September 2025 Time profile, Merced articulated a refusal to compartmentalize her personal background from her professional output, noting, “Before I was even an artist, I was an American citizen, and I am proudly a daughter of an immigrant,” while centering her Peruvian lineage in discussions of community and groundedness.[71] Merced's approach to identity in casting reflects a preference for authentic integration over performative diversity, advocating roles where her heritage enhances character depth without reducing to tokenism. She has incorporated Latina elements into performances, such as infusing cultural nuances into her Madame Web character, but stresses merit-based selection aligned with her background, as seen in fittings for Dora the Explorer and Dina in The Last of Us, where ethnic congruence supported narrative realism.[72] In 2025 statements, she critiqued superficial representation by insisting on inseparable art-identity ties, arguing that genuine cultural portrayal demands artists draw from lived experience rather than quotas, a view echoed in her Time feature where she positions heritage as fueling creative authenticity amid Hollywood's diversity pushes.[71] On social media, Merced employs platforms like Instagram and TikTok to promote Peruvian pride and address anti-Latino prejudice, sharing content on heritage reconnection and community solidarity, such as posts celebrating diverse Latinx roots. Her advocacy remains targeted—focusing on cultural preservation and anti-hate messaging—while exhibiting restraint in broader political debates, avoiding endorsement of partisan causes despite occasional nods to social injustices like discrimination against brown communities.[73] This measured stance contrasts with more activist peers, prioritizing personal narrative over ideological alignment, as evidenced by her selective engagement during 2025 promotions where identity discussions stayed rooted in heritage rather than expansive activism.[74]Controversies and public criticisms
Casting backlash and representation debates
Isabela Merced's casting as Dora in the 2019 live-action film Dora and the Lost City of Gold received praise for selecting a Latina actress to portray the iconic character, who originates from a Colombian-American background in the animated series, thereby avoiding accusations of whitewashing that had affected prior adaptations of similar properties.[75] The decision aligned with calls for authentic ethnic representation in family-oriented reboots, contrasting with criticisms of non-Latino leads in roles perceived as culturally specific.[76] In contrast, her portrayal of Dina in HBO's The Last of Us Season 2, announced on January 11, 2024, sparked debates over representation due to Dina's canonical half-Jewish heritage in The Last of Us Part II, with Merced's Peruvian-American background fulfilling the Latina aspect but drawing scrutiny for the absence of Jewish ancestry amid broader concerns about underrepresentation of Jewish actors in such roles.[77] Jewish media outlets highlighted this as part of ongoing casting patterns favoring non-Jewish performers for Jewish characters, though Merced addressed general backlash in August 2024, noting the series' collaboration with original creators Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin as a counter to fidelity complaints, while online forums like Reddit featured threads with thousands of comments critiquing her physical resemblance to the game's model over ethnic specificity.[35][78] No formal petitions emerged, but discussions emphasized source material accuracy versus diversity priorities, with Naughty Dog's endorsement via production involvement mitigating some purist objections.[79] Merced's selection as Hawkgirl (Kendra Saunders) in the 2025 DC Universe film Superman, revealed in July 2023, divided fans early on, as Kendra is depicted as African-American in mainstream comics, prompting accusations of mismatched diversity hiring that substituted Latina representation for the character's established Black identity.[80] Reddit communities documented initial backlash with users questioning the deviation from comic ethnicity, framing it within wider DC recasting trends prioritizing broader inclusivity over source fidelity, though Merced responded to criticism in December 2024 by expressing enthusiasm for the role and defending the costume design amid related attire debates.[81] Post-release reactions shifted toward acclaim for her performance, underscoring how preemptive online metrics often overestimate sustained controversy in representation-focused casting.[82]Project receptions and personal statements
Madame Web (2024), featuring Merced as Anya Corazón/Spider-Woman, garnered severe critical backlash, achieving only an 11% Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes from 269 reviews, marking it among the lowest-rated entries in Sony's Spider-Man Universe.[83] Detractors consistently highlighted deficiencies in the script—such as illogical narrative progression, underdeveloped motivations, and tonal inconsistencies—as primary causes of failure, rather than attributing issues to cast performances or directorial choices alone.[84] In response, Merced has emphasized accountability tied to production elements over individual blame; during an April 11, 2025, Associated Press interview, she described the project's outcome as leaving a "sad taste" while retaining personal affection for the collaborative process, avoiding deflection to audience biases or external pressures.[85][86] Post-release, fabricated statements emerged online falsely claiming Merced blamed male viewers for the film's underperformance, prompting widespread backlash until debunked. On February 29, 2024, Merced directly refuted these via X, labeling them "fake quotes" without verifiable origins and urging improved media literacy to combat misinformation.[87][88] Independent verification confirmed the quotes originated from untraceable social media posts, not interviews or official channels, underscoring vulnerabilities in rapid online narrative formation detached from primary evidence.[89] Merced's personal statements on sociopolitical issues have occasionally intersected with project scrutiny, notably accusations of performative or inconsistent activism on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. She has shared pro-Palestinian Instagram stories alongside content fact-checking misinformation about protest behaviors, such as claims of inherent violence in demonstrations, which critics interpreted as hedging rather than unequivocal solidarity.[90] These remarks, however, stem from individual expression rather than scripted project elements, with no direct linkage to professional receptions; Merced has not publicly elaborated on them in relation to her roles, maintaining separation between private views and on-screen work.[91]Awards and nominations
Acting accolades
Isabela Merced was honored with the Rising Star of the Year Award at CinemaCon on March 30, 2017, spotlighting her breakout potential in advance of her feature film roles, including Transformers: The Last Knight.[8] This industry accolade, presented by the National Association of Theatre Owners, underscores early recognition from exhibitors and studios for promising young performers.[92] In 2020, Merced received the Imagen Award for Best Actress in a Feature Film for her lead performance as Dora in Dora and the Lost City of Gold, a recognition from an organization dedicated to advancing Latino visibility in media, where she outperformed nominees including Ana de Armas and Eiza González.[93] The award highlighted her command of a high-profile adaptation aimed at family audiences, though critics noted the film's mixed commercial reception despite its box office earnings of $120 million worldwide.[7] Merced's depiction of Dina in HBO's The Last of Us Season 2 earned her the Hollywood Creative Alliance's Astra TV Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series on June 10, 2025, affirming her contribution to the series' narrative intensity amid a field of nominees like Carrie Coon and Julianne Nicholson.[94] The win reflects voter preference for her nuanced portrayal in a competitive drama landscape, though the category's emphasis on ensemble prestige often favors longer-tenured actors.[36] Despite this acclaim, Merced received no Primetime Emmy nomination for the role in 2025, a notable omission in a category dominated by incumbents from high-profile series, where The Last of Us itself secured 16 nods but prioritized other cast members amid the Academy's bias toward established prestige television ensembles.[95] The drama supporting actress field, with 20 slots, routinely overlooks breakthrough supporting turns in genre-heavy productions due to its saturation with critically favored performers from legacy shows.[96]| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | CinemaCon Awards | Rising Star of the Year | N/A | Won[8] |
| 2020 | Imagen Awards | Best Actress – Feature Film | Dora and the Lost City of Gold | Won[93] |
| 2025 | Astra TV Awards (Hollywood Creative Alliance) | Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series | The Last of Us (Dina) | Won[94] |
Music and other honors
Merced's vocal contributions to animated features earned her a nomination at the 2021 Hollywood Music in Media Awards for Best Original Song – Animated Film, for performing "Follow Me Home" from Arlo the Alligator Boy alongside Eiza González.[97] This recognition highlighted her singing in a collaborative track written by Ryan Crego and Alex Geringas.[98] Her early musical endeavors, including a Broadway debut singing in Evita at age ten, laid groundwork for youth-oriented honors that encompassed performance versatility.[5] Nominations at the Young Entertainer Awards, such as for Best Young Ensemble Cast in a feature film, reflected her multifaceted start, though primarily tied to acting projects with musical components.[5] Beyond music-specific nods, Merced received the Next Generation Impact Award from the National Hispanic Media Coalition in 2025, saluting her broader cultural influence as a Peruvian-American artist spanning acting and song releases.[99] As of October 2025, her independent singles and collaborations, including the 2025 salsa-infused "Apocalipsis" with Tony Succar, have yet to secure major standalone music accolades like Grammy considerations.[56]Filmography
Feature films
Merced's breakthrough in feature films came with the role of Izabella in Transformers: The Last Knight (2017), directed by Michael Bay, where she portrayed a resourceful orphan girl who repairs vehicles and allies with the Autobots in their battle against Decepticons.[4][100]
In 2018, she played Isabel, the daughter of a cartel leader, in Sicario: Day of the Soldado, directed by Stefano Sollima, a crime thriller sequel focusing on U.S. operations against drug cartels.[101] The same year, Merced starred as Lizzy, one of three foster siblings, in the comedy-drama Instant Family, directed by Sean Anders, which depicts a couple navigating adoption challenges.[101]
Merced took the lead role of Dora in Dora and the Lost City of Gold (2019), directed by James Bobin, a live-action adventure film adapting the children's animated series, following high school student Dora on a quest to find her parents in the Peruvian jungle.[23][24]
In 2024, she portrayed Anya Corazón, a teenager destined for spider-like powers, in the superhero film Madame Web, directed by S.J. Clarkson.[33][102] That year, Merced also starred as Kay in the sci-fi horror Alien: Romulus, directed by Fede Álvarez, playing a young survivor aboard a derelict space station infested with xenomorphs,[103] and as Aza Holmes, a teenager grappling with obsessive-compulsive disorder, in the drama Turtles All the Way Down, directed by Hannah Marks, based on John Green's novel.[101]
Merced appears as Kendra Saunders / Hawkgirl in Superman (2025), directed by James Gunn, depicting the winged warrior in the DC Universe reboot centered on Clark Kent's origin.[104][62]
Television series
Merced's television debut came with the lead role of CJ Martin in Nickelodeon's 100 Things to Do Before High School, a live-action comedy series that premiered with a pilot TV movie on November 6, 2014, and ran for one season from November 6, 2015, to February 28, 2016.[105] As CJ, the determined and adventurous protagonist, Merced appeared in all 26 episodes, portraying a seventh-grader who, along with her friends, embarks on challenges to maximize their middle school experiences before high school. The series emphasized themes of friendship and personal growth through episodic "things" like starting a garage band or solving mysteries, with Merced's performance showcasing her early comedic timing and energy.[106] Merced returned to television in a major capacity as Dina in the second season of HBO's post-apocalyptic drama The Last of Us, which premiered on April 14, 2025.[79] Adapted from the video game, Dina is a resilient Jackson community patrolwoman and Ellie's romantic partner, characterized by her wit, loyalty, and combat skills amid fungal outbreaks; Merced's portrayal featured in key arcs across the season's seven episodes, including pivotal moments of survival and emotional depth in episodes like "Day One" and the finale.[107] Her performance drew attention for capturing Dina's blend of humor and toughness, contributing to the season's focus on interpersonal relationships in a dystopian setting.[108]Discography
Extended plays
Isabela Merced released her debut extended play, the better half of me, on May 22, 2020, via Republic Records, marking her first major musical project as a recording artist.[109] The five-track EP features a bilingual mix of English and Spanish songs, blending Latin pop rhythms with urban influences, and was completed amid the early stages of the COVID-19 quarantine period.[110] Producers involved include Zach Skelton and G.O Kings Bred, with contributions from songwriters such as Andrés Torres and Mauricio Rengifo (known for "Despacito").[111][112] The EP's themes center on self-love, introspection, and personal evolution, reflecting Merced's experiences of growth in 2019 and the introspective isolation of 2020. Merced described the title as a reimagining of the "better half" concept, emphasizing self-reliance over romantic dependency: "I've found the better half of me is actually myself."[112][47] Tracks like "apocalipsis" evoke end-times urgency in relationships with upbeat Latin beats, while "the chase" adopts an urban edge exploring pursuit and desire.[113] The tracklist is as follows:- "apocalipsis"
- "todo esta bien"
- "lovin kind"
- "chocolate"
- "the chase"[109][110][47]