Jack Champion
Jack Champion is an American actor born on November 16, 2004, in Blacksburg, Virginia, best known for portraying Miles "Spider" Socorro, a human teenager adopted by the Na'vi, in the Avatar film sequels directed by James Cameron.[1][2] Champion began his acting career at age 11 with a minor role as a "Bratty Kid" in the 2015 prank series Swerved on MTV, followed by guest appearances in episodes of the crime drama Gone in 2017 and a small part in the Marvel film Avengers: Endgame in 2019.[3][4] His breakthrough came with the role of Spider in Avatar: The Way of Water (2022), which he originated after auditioning at age 12 and filming the character's arc across multiple sequels during his formative teenage years on the New Zealand set.[5][1] In 2023, Champion gained further recognition for playing Ethan Landry, a member of the new core four killers, in the slasher film Scream VI, marking his entry into the horror genre alongside stars like Jenna Ortega and Melissa Barrera.[3][6] As of 2025, he has appeared in over 15 projects, including the ensemble horror anthology Freaky Tales and the family comedy Everything's Going to Be Great, both released that year.[3][7][8] Champion's recent and upcoming work includes the action thriller Trap House (2025), co-starring Dave Bautista, and his continued role as Spider in Avatar: Fire and Ash (2025), the third installment in the franchise, with filming for Avatar 4 already underway for a 2029 release.[1][9] Before pursuing acting, inspired by school theater at age eight after trying various sports, Champion maintains a low-profile personal life while actively engaging fans on social media.[6][10]Early life
Family and upbringing
Jack Champion was born on November 16, 2004, in Blacksburg, Virginia.[1] He grew up in this rural college town nestled in the Appalachian Mountains, experiencing a close-knit community environment typical of small-town Virginia life during his early years.[11] Champion was raised primarily by his mother, a microbiologist whose professional background in science contrasted with the creative pursuits she fostered at home.[12] She provided a stable and encouraging household, serving as his primary caregiver and guiding influence amid limited public details about broader family dynamics.[13] His mother's role extended to nurturing his budding creativity and exposure to the performing arts, as she actively supported his early interests by helping him secure a small agent to begin building experience.[14] Champion has often credited her unwavering presence, noting in interviews that she has "always been there for me and remains my number one," highlighting her foundational impact on his personal development.[14]Acting beginnings
Jack Champion's interest in acting emerged during his pre-teen years in Blacksburg, Virginia, where he first explored performance through local school theatre productions. Initially drawn to sports but finding little success or passion in them, Champion discovered his affinity for the stage around age eight, participating in community and school plays that allowed him to channel his energy into character work.[15] A pivotal moment came early in his theatre involvement when he played Grumpy the Elf in a holiday production. Forgetting his single line onstage, the young Champion improvised on the spot, drawing laughter from the audience and solidifying his commitment to acting. "At that moment, I had the entire theatre laughing and I was like, ‘Okay, this is my calling’," he later reflected. This experience, supported by self-taught improvisation and basic stage techniques honed in informal settings, marked the shift from casual play to a deliberate pursuit.[5] As Champion approached ages 10 and 11, his enthusiasm led to participation in short films, often facilitated by his mother's encouragement and logistical support as an impromptu "momager." She frequently drove him to auditions and shoots, including lengthy six-hour trips to Atlanta, fostering his resilience amid early rejections and building practical skills like on-camera presence. "She would drive me to short films or wherever I needed to go... Without her, I wouldn’t be an actor," Champion has said, highlighting how family backing propelled him from hobbyist endeavors toward professional aspirations by his early teens.[5]Career
Early roles (2015–2021)
Champion made his professional acting debut in 2015 at the age of 10, appearing as Kid Blink in the National Geographic documentary series American Genius, a role that depicted a young figure in the historical rivalry between newspaper magnates William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer.[16] This minor television credit marked the start of his on-screen career, following early interests in acting that began around age eight through school theater.[11] In 2017, he made a guest appearance as Chris Hale in an episode of the crime drama series Gone.[17] Transitioning to film, Champion secured his feature debut in 2018 with the horror-comedy The Night Sitter, where he portrayed Kevin, a young boy caught in a chaotic babysitting scheme involving a con artist and intruders.[18] The low-budget production provided one of his first substantial supporting roles, showcasing his ability to handle comedic and tense scenes alongside adult leads. The following year, in 2019, he landed an uncredited cameo as the "Kid on Bike" in Avengers: Endgame, briefly interacting with Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) in a post-Quantum Realm escape sequence, which introduced him to the scale of Marvel blockbusters.[19] These early years presented challenges for Champion as a teenager navigating adolescence amid sporadic auditions and shoots, including managing education through homeschooling arranged by his mother during productions like The Night Sitter.[3] In 2017, at age 12, he entered a rigorous four-month audition process for James Cameron's Avatar sequels, submitting self-tapes and meeting the director, which resulted in his casting as the human-Na'vi adopted teen Miles "Spider" Socorro—though filming and the character's prominence would unfold in subsequent years.[20]Breakthrough (2022–2023)
Champion's breakthrough came with his lead role as Miles "Spider" Socorro, a human teenager raised by the Na'vi on Pandora, in James Cameron's Avatar: The Way of Water (2022). He secured the part after a rigorous four-month audition process that began with self-tapes and progressed to meetings with the casting director.[21] To prepare, Champion trained extensively in parkour starting at age 12, along with fight choreography, archery, and free diving, enabling him to perform many of his own stunts.[22] Filming presented significant technical challenges, particularly with motion capture and underwater sequences. The production required underwater performance capture, a novel technique that involved capturing actors' movements in water tanks to integrate seamlessly with CGI environments.[23] Champion shot scenes twice: first in motion-capture suits on practical sets, then in New Zealand acting opposite 10-foot-tall foam Na'vi puppets, demanding intense imaginative focus.[22] The physical demands led to daily cuts and bruises from stunts, though no major injuries occurred.[22] His portrayal of Spider, blending vulnerability and defiance, contributed to the film's global success, grossing over $2.3 billion worldwide.[21] In 2023, Champion took on a pivotal role as Ethan Landry, a college student and part of the core group navigating the Ghostface killings, in Scream VI. The character added layers to the franchise's ensemble dynamic, with Champion's performance highlighting a seemingly wholesome exterior amid escalating tension and twists.[6] Filming provided a lighter contrast to Avatar, resembling a "high-budget student film" with collaborative improvisation among the young cast, including Jenna Ortega and Mason Gooding.[6] He described the experience as an honor, particularly donning the iconic Ghostface mask.[6] That same year, Champion appeared in a supporting role as Zach Turner, the teenage son of a high-stakes banker played by Liam Neeson, in the action thriller Retribution. The film follows a tense car-bound narrative where the family faces life-threatening peril, with Champion's character adding emotional stakes to the father's desperate efforts.[24] These projects marked Champion's rapid ascent, earning him widespread media recognition as a rising talent. Following the releases, he signed with United Talent Agency, solidifying his Hollywood presence.[25] Interviews in outlets like The Hollywood Reporter and V Magazine highlighted his maturation during the Avatar production, positioning him as Hollywood's newest teen heartthrob at age 18.[21][26] His breakthrough roles in major franchises amplified his visibility, transitioning him from supporting parts to lead opportunities and establishing him as a versatile young actor.[27]2024–present
In 2025, Champion portrayed Lucid, a punk rocker defending his community against neo-Nazis in the first segment of the anthology film Freaky Tales, directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck. Set in 1987 Oakland, the interconnected stories pay homage to the era's punk scene and social activism, with Champion sharing the ensemble cast alongside Pedro Pascal, Ji-young Yoo, and Too $hort.[28][29] That year, he starred as Derrick Smart, a teenage jock, in the family comedy Everything's Going to Be Great, directed by Steven Rogers, alongside Allison Janney and Bryan Cranston.[30] Champion also appeared as Cody in the action thriller Trap House, co-starring with Dave Bautista as a rebellious teen involved in a cartel heist scheme.)[31] Champion reprised his breakout role as Miles "Spider" Socorro in Avatar: Fire and Ash, the third film in James Cameron's Avatar franchise, released on December 19, 2025. The production utilized extensive motion-capture filming in New Zealand to further explore Pandora's ecosystems and interstellar conflicts, building on the series' expansion into new Na'vi clans and human-Na'vi tensions.[32][33] In August 2025, Champion joined the cast of Netflix's upcoming comedy-drama Don't Say Good Luck, directed by Julia Hart, which follows a high school student navigating the lead role in her school's production amid her mother's cancer recurrence. The film stars Sunny Sandler in the lead, with co-stars including Melanie Lynskey, Steve Buscemi, Max Greenfield, and Stephanie Beatriz.[34][35] Champion has already filmed portions of Avatar 4, slated for release in 2029, underscoring his long-term commitment to the franchise as Spider, a character central to the series' intergenerational narrative.[36] Reflecting on his career trajectory in 2025 interviews, Champion has addressed rumors of superhero roles, such as Cyclops in Marvel's X-Men reboot, expressing enthusiasm for diversifying beyond science fiction while appreciating the opportunities from Avatar. His recent projects in indie anthologies and family dramas signal efforts to broaden his range amid the franchise's demands.[37][38]Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | The Divergent Series: Insurgent | Abnegation Child | Uncredited cameo. [39] |
| 2016 | Where Are You, Bobby Browning? | Young Bobby | Supporting role. [40] |
| 2017 | Extraordinary | Young Dave | Supporting role. [41] |
| 2018 | The Night Sitter | Kevin | Supporting role. [18] |
| 2019 | Avengers: Endgame | Kid on Bike | Uncredited supporting cameo. [19] |
| 2022 | Avatar: The Way of Water | Miles "Spider" Socorro | Supporting role. [42] |
| 2023 | Scream VI | Ethan Landry | Supporting role. [43] |
| 2023 | Retribution | Zach Turner | Supporting role. [44] |
| 2024 | Freaky Tales | Lucid | Supporting role as a punk rocker. [28] |
| 2025 | Everything's Going to Be Great | Derrick Smart | Supporting role. [30] |
| 2025 | Avatar: Fire and Ash | Miles "Spider" Socorro | Supporting role (upcoming). [32] |
| 2025 | Trap House | Cody | Supporting role. [45] |
| 2025 | Don't Say Good Luck | TBA | Upcoming Netflix film. [34] |