Lucas Hedges
Lucas Hedges (born December 12, 1996) is an American actor recognized for his breakthrough performance as Patrick Chandler in the drama film Manchester by the Sea (2016), which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor at age 19.[1][2] Born in Brooklyn Heights, New York, as the son of Oscar-nominated screenwriter and director Peter Hedges and poet and actress Susan Bruce, Hedges initially pursued theater studies at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts before transitioning to on-screen roles.[3][4] Hedges debuted in film with a minor role in Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom (2012) and followed with appearances in Labor Day (2013) and The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014), establishing himself in independent cinema.[5] His subsequent roles in critically acclaimed films such as Lady Bird (2017), Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017), and Boy Erased (2018) highlighted his versatility in portraying complex, emotionally intense characters, often earning praise for authenticity derived from method acting influences.[6][7] In addition to film, Hedges has ventured into theater, receiving the Theatre World Award for his debut in the off-Broadway play Yen and later starring in a stage adaptation of Brokeback Mountain.[8] Despite nominations for Golden Globes and other critics' awards, he has yet to win a major acting accolade, though his consistent collaboration with acclaimed directors underscores his rising prominence in contemporary American cinema.[7][9]
Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Lucas Hedges was born on December 12, 1996, in Brooklyn Heights, New York.[3] He is the younger of two sons born to screenwriter, director, and novelist Peter Hedges, who received an Academy Award nomination for his adaptation of About a Boy (2002), and Susan Bruce (née Titman), a former actress who later pursued poetry.[3][10] The family's artistic environment exposed Hedges to creative pursuits from an early age, with his father's work in film providing direct immersion into the industry.[11] Hedges' older brother, Simon, pursued a career in private equity rather than the arts.[12] Raised in a household centered on storytelling and performance, Hedges frequently visited his father's film sets during childhood, fostering an early fascination with cinema.[11] He has described growing up in an open, liberal family dynamic that emphasized personal expression, though specific details about relocations or daily life remain limited in public accounts.[13] This background contrasted with more conventional upbringings, as Hedges noted his mother's shift from acting to poetry and the pervasive influence of his parents' collaborative creative life.[14]Initial interests and training
Hedges developed an early fascination with acting during his childhood in New York, where he imagined pursuing a Hollywood career centered on superficial aspects of fame.[15] He recalled memorizing the birthdays of child actors as a young enthusiast, reflecting an obsessive interest in the profession from an early age.[16] This passion manifested practically in middle school, where he participated in school plays, drawn to the communal adventure of ensemble performances with peers.[17] In seventh grade, Hedges took on the demanding role of Smike in his school's production of Nicholas Nickleby, delivering a performance marked by intense commitment that impressed observers, including his father.[18] These experiences represented his initial foray into acting without formal instruction, relying instead on innate enthusiasm and school-based opportunities rather than structured classes or coaches.[19] Following high school, Hedges pursued formal training by enrolling in the theater program at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, where he studied acting for approximately one year.[20] This brief period provided his primary academic grounding in the craft before transitioning to professional roles, though he did not complete a full degree and returned to New York thereafter.[21]Acting career
Early roles and breakthrough (2012–2016)
Hedges obtained his initial prominent film role in 2012, portraying Redford, a member of the Khaki Scouts, in Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom.[1] That year, he also appeared in a minor capacity in Arthur Newman.[6] In 2013, Hedges took on small parts in Jason Reitman's Labor Day, where he depicted a younger version of the protagonist's son, and Terry Gilliam's The Zero Theorem, playing the character Bob.[6] [2] By 2014, Hedges continued accumulating supporting credits, including a cameo as a pump attendant in Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel and the role of Ian Webb, the son of Jeremy Renner's journalist character, in Kill the Messenger.[14] [4] These early appearances, often in ensemble casts or brief scenes, provided limited exposure but aligned him with established directors and productions.[22] Hedges achieved his breakthrough in 2016 with the role of Patrick "Paddy" Chandler, a sardonic and resilient teenager coping with his father's death, in Kenneth Lonergan's drama Manchester by the Sea, released on November 18.[6] His performance opposite Casey Affleck's lead character earned widespread critical praise for its emotional depth and authenticity, culminating in an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, announced on January 24, 2017.[23] [24] The film's premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2016 marked a pivotal moment, propelling Hedges into leading considerations for subsequent projects.[1]Lead roles and expansions (2017–2020)
In 2017, Hedges continued building his profile with supporting roles in two Oscar-nominated ensemble films. He portrayed Danny O'Neill, a Catholic school student and short-lived romantic interest for the lead character, in Greta Gerwig's coming-of-age comedy-drama Lady Bird, released November 3, 2017.[25] Later that year, he appeared as Robbie Hayes, the son of a deputy police chief, in Martin McDonagh's dark comedy Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, released November 10, 2017.[26] Hedges achieved his first lead roles in 2018, marking a significant expansion in his career toward more demanding dramatic parts often centered on troubled adolescents. In Boy Erased, directed by Joel Edgerton and released November 2, 2018, he starred as Jared Eamons, the son of evangelical parents who enroll him in a conversion therapy program after discovering his same-sex attraction; the film adapts Garrard Conley's 2016 memoir of the same name.[27] [28] This performance represented Hedges' debut as a leading man, requiring him to convey internal conflict amid familial and institutional pressures.[29] Shortly after, in Ben Is Back, directed by his father Peter Hedges and released December 7, 2018, he played Ben Burns, a teen opioid addict returning home unexpectedly for Christmas, clashing with his mother (Julia Roberts) over relapse risks and family secrets.[30] He also took a supporting turn that year as Ian, the abusive older brother, in Jonah Hill's coming-of-age skateboarding film Mid90s, released October 31, 2018.[31] By 2019, Hedges maintained momentum with prominent but ensemble billing in Waves, Trey Edward Shults' family tragedy released November 15, 2019, where he played Luke Williams, the boyfriend of the protagonist's sister amid themes of grief and racial tension.[32] [33] He further appeared as James Lort, a young actor friend to the lead, in the semi-autobiographical Honey Boy, released November 8, 2019, written by and starring Shia LaBeouf as his own father.[34] In 2020, Hedges shifted toward smaller supporting roles in prestige projects, including Tyler, a young nephew accompanying his aunt on a cruise, in Steven Soderbergh's Let Them All Talk, released December 10, 2020, alongside Meryl Streep.[35] This period overall reflected Hedges' progression from breakout supporting parts to leads in intimate, character-driven indies, often exploring psychological strain and familial discord, while collaborating with established directors and co-stars.Stage work and recent developments (2021–present)
In 2023, Hedges portrayed Ennis del Mar in the world premiere stage adaptation of Brokeback Mountain at Soho Place theatre in London, directed by Jonathan Butterell with an adaptation by Ashley Robinson.[36] The production, co-starring Mike Faist as Jack Twist, ran from May to August 2023 and featured original music alongside the source material's themes of suppressed desire and rural isolation.[37] Critics delivered mixed assessments, with some lauding the leads' chemistry and emotional depth—The Guardian described it as a "perfectly pitched staging" emphasizing poignant restraint—while others faulted the adaptation's unsubtle elements and staging choices, as noted in The Independent's two-star review.[36][38] Hedges continued transitioning between screen and stage amid selective projects post-2021. In French Exit (2021), directed by Azazel Jacobs, he played Malcolm Price, the aimless son accompanying his eccentric mother (Michelle Pfeiffer) to Paris after financial ruin; the film received a limited theatrical release on February 12, 2021.[39] That year, he appeared in the FX/Hulu anthology series The Premise, created by B.J. Novak, starring as Jesse Wheeler—a satirical take on a celebrity pop star navigating moral dilemmas—in the episode "The Ballad of Jesse Wheeler," which premiered September 16, 2021.[40] By 2024, Hedges featured in Shirley, John Ridley's Netflix biopic of congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, portraying Robert Gottlieb, her youth coordinator during the 1972 presidential campaign; the film had a limited theatrical run starting March 22, 2024.[41] In 2025, he starred as Gavin in Sorry, Baby, Eva Victor's directorial debut about a reclusive literature professor (Victor) entangled in personal crises, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2025 before a limited release on June 27 and streaming debut on August 5.[42] Hedges is attached to the upcoming Vietnam War thriller Trust the Man, directed by Will Graham and co-starring Daniel Radcliffe, announced February 6, 2025, centering on an Army intelligence officer probing a decorated soldier's past.[43]Personal life
Family ties and privacy
Lucas Hedges is the son of author, screenwriter, and director Peter Hedges and actress and poet Susan Bruce Titman.[44][45] He has an older brother, Simon Hedges, who works in private equity in New York.[12][46] The family grew up in Brooklyn, with Hedges maintaining close relationships, as evidenced by joint public appearances such as attending the 89th Academy Awards with his mother in February 2017[47] and the 32nd Film Independent Spirit Awards with his brother in 2017.[48] Professional family ties include Hedges starring as the lead in Ben Is Back (2018), directed by his father Peter Hedges, a project inspired by real family experiences with addiction and substance abuse.[46][10] Peter Hedges has described the collaboration as stemming from mutual trust, noting his son's acting talent was evident from childhood.[18] Hedges prioritizes privacy, avoiding public social media accounts; as of 2017, he stated he does not use platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or Snapchat to limit exposure to fame's intrusions.[49] He maintains a private Instagram for personal purposes only, citing a need to safeguard anonymity amid online scrutiny and his deliberate separation of professional work from personal details.[50][17] This approach reflects his focus on craft over celebrity, with limited disclosures about non-professional life in interviews.[20]Sexuality and public statements
In a September 2018 interview with Vulture, Hedges stated that he views human sexuality as existing on a spectrum rather than in binary categories, explaining, "I recognize myself as existing on that spectrum: Not totally straight, but also not gay and not necessarily bisexual."[51] He recounted early-life infatuations primarily with female peers but also with close male friends through high school, attributing a sense of shame to societal perceptions that non-heterosexual attractions carry inherent challenges compared to heterosexual ones.[52] The following month, during an October 30, 2018, appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show alongside co-star Nicole Kidman to promote Boy Erased, Hedges credited a sixth-grade health teacher with introducing him to the concept of sexuality as a non-binary spectrum, emphasizing its importance for young people navigating identity.[53] He reiterated that the idea resonated because "it's not really that you exist 100 percent as one thing," linking it to his personal experiences without assigning a fixed label.[54] In a concurrent October 30, 2018, interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Hedges described the Boy Erased production as a "completely collaborative, safe space" where he and several cast and crew members identified as queer, noting that the role helped him "speak more truthfully about my own sexuality and to not be ashamed of it."[55] However, he expressed ongoing self-consciousness about public discussions of past crushes across genders and reluctance to categorize himself definitively, stating, "I’ve never really known what to say to that question... I’m not interested in labeling myself in that way" and "I don’t feel like I know enough about myself to give a label."[55] Hedges has made no subsequent public statements elaborating on his sexuality, maintaining a focus on professional privacy in interviews since 2018.[56]Reception and analysis
Critical acclaim and awards
Hedges garnered significant critical praise for his portrayal of Patrick Chandler, the grieving nephew in Manchester by the Sea (2016), directed by Kenneth Lonergan, with reviewers highlighting his ability to convey raw adolescent vulnerability and resilience amid familial trauma.[57] His performance earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor at the 89th ceremony on February 26, 2017, marking him as one of the youngest nominees in the category at age 20.[58] He also secured a win for Best Young Actor/Actress at the 22nd Critics' Choice Awards in December 2016, recognizing his standout debut in a supporting role.[58] Subsequent roles reinforced his reputation for intense, introspective characterizations, particularly in Boy Erased (2018), where he played a young man undergoing conversion therapy, earning a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama at the 76th ceremony in January 2019.[9] Critics noted his nuanced depiction of internal conflict, though the film's thematic handling drew mixed responses on its portrayal of religious institutions.[59] For ensemble work in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017), he received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination as part of the cast.[9] In theater, Hedges transitioned to stage acclaim with his Broadway debut in Mary Page Marlowe (2019), followed by the revival of Brokeback Mountain (2021) at the Samuel Friedman Theatre, where his performance as Ennis Del Mar contributed to the production's Tony Award nomination for Best Revival of a Play.[60] He won the Theatre World Award for Outstanding Debut Performance in recognition of his stage work.[8]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Manchester by the Sea | Nominated[7] |
| 2017 | Critics' Choice Movie Awards | Best Young Actor/Actress | Manchester by the Sea | Won[58] |
| 2018 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Cast | Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | Nominated[9] |
| 2019 | Golden Globe Awards | Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama | Boy Erased | Nominated[61] |
| 2017 | Theatre World Awards | Outstanding Debut Performance | Stage debut | Won[8] |
Portrayals in controversial projects
In the 2018 film Boy Erased, directed by Joel Edgerton and released on November 2, Hedges starred as Jared Eamons, a fictionalized stand-in for memoirist Garrard Conley, depicting a young man from a conservative Baptist family who is outed as homosexual and subsequently enrolled in a church-run conversion therapy program in 2004.[27] The portrayal emphasizes Jared's internal conflict, isolation, and emotional distress amid coercive group sessions, Bible studies reframed as therapeutic tools, and subtle institutional pressures, culminating in his eventual rejection of the program after witnessing a peer's suicide. Hedges' performance, noted for its restraint and vulnerability, earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama, with critics praising his ability to convey suppressed anguish without overt histrionics. The project itself sparked debate, as conversion therapy—practices aimed at altering sexual orientation—has been empirically linked to increased risks of depression, anxiety, and suicidality in studies by organizations like the American Psychological Association, which deemed them ineffective and unethical in a 2009 task force report based on over 80 peer-reviewed analyses. However, Boy Erased's narrative framing, which attributes homosexuality primarily to nurture and family dynamics while portraying religious adherence as the root of harm, has faced pushback from conservative outlets for lacking balance and overstating the uniformity of conversion therapy abuses. For instance, a review in The Gospel Coalition argued the film enforces a binary where sexual desires are immutable, forcing religion to yield rather than allowing for personal transformation, reflecting broader cultural tensions over empirical claims of fluidity in orientation versus fixed identity.[62] Such critiques highlight potential selection bias in source materials, as Conley's memoir draws from personal experience amid programs varying widely in approach, with some participants self-reporting benefits in small-scale surveys dismissed by mainstream psychology due to methodological flaws like lack of controls. Hedges' role thus positioned him in a project amplifying progressive critiques of evangelical practices, though the film's box office of $17.6 million against a $9.5 million budget indicated limited resonance beyond urban audiences. Hedges revisited themes of personal turmoil in Honey Boy (2019), playing a semi-autobiographical young Shia LaBeouf amid the actor's documented history of legal issues, including a 2017 arrest for public intoxication and disorderly conduct, and later allegations of emotional abuse from ex-partner FKA Twigs in a 2020 lawsuit. His portrayal of Otis Al-Nassr, a child actor navigating an alcoholic father's volatility and early industry exploitation, underscores cycles of trauma without directly endorsing or condemning LaBeouf's real-life conduct, though the film's introspective therapy sessions have been seen as an implicit defense mechanism for the controversial figure who penned the script. This role drew minor scrutiny for glamorizing dysfunction in Hollywood's nepo-adjacent circles, but lacked the ideological flashpoint of Boy Erased, focusing instead on causal links between parental neglect and adult maladaptation as evidenced in developmental psychology literature.Public image and career trajectory
Lucas Hedges emerged as a prominent figure in independent cinema following his Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Patrick Chandler in Manchester by the Sea (2016), marking a rapid ascent from earlier supporting parts in films like Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom (2012).[63] This breakthrough led to a flurry of lead and supporting roles in critically acclaimed projects between 2017 and 2019, including Lady Bird (2017), Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017), Boy Erased (2018), and Ben Is Back (2018), where he portrayed complex, emotionally vulnerable characters often grappling with family dysfunction, addiction, or identity crises.[17] His output during this period—appearing in multiple films annually—earned him a reputation as one of Hollywood's most ubiquitous young actors, culminating in a Golden Globe nomination for Boy Erased.[17] By the late 2010s, Hedges transitioned toward stage work, debuting on Broadway in Kenneth Lonergan's The Waverly Gallery (2018) alongside Elaine May and later starring in the West End revival of Brokeback Mountain (2023) opposite Mike Faist, reflecting a deliberate pivot to theater amid a slowdown in film roles.[64] [65] Recent film commitments include the dark comedy French Exit (2021) and an upcoming Vietnam War-set thriller Trust the Man (announced for 2025 production), signaling a selective approach prioritizing substantive narratives over commercial volume.[66] This trajectory underscores Hedges' preference for auteur-driven projects and live performance, contrasting with peers who pursued mainstream franchises. Publicly, Hedges has been perceived as an introspective and anxiety-prone talent, frequently discussing in interviews his struggles with fitting in during adolescence, ADHD, and the pressures of sudden fame, which he attributes to a non-conformist upbringing in New York.[67] [68] Media profiles often highlight his reluctance to embrace celebrity culture, with Hedges expressing wariness of online perceptions and a desire to avoid being typecast as "That Guy Who's In Everything." His openness about sexual fluidity—first articulated in 2018 promotions for Boy Erased, where he noted the role facilitated more candid self-expression—has positioned him as relatable to audiences navigating identity, though he maintains privacy on personal relationships.[55] Lacking major scandals, his image remains that of a grounded, versatile performer committed to emotional authenticity over stardom's excesses.[20]Works
Film roles
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Dan in Real Life | Lilly's Dance Partner[1] |
| 2012 | Moonrise Kingdom | Redford[1] |
| 2012 | Arthur Newman | Kevin[1] |
| 2013 | The Zero Theorem | Bob[1] |
| 2014 | Kill the Messenger | Ian Webb[1] |
| 2016 | Manchester by the Sea | Patrick Chandler[1] |
| 2017 | Lady Bird | Danny O'Neil[1] |
| 2017 | Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri | Robbie Hayes[1] |
| 2018 | Mid90s | Ian[1] |
| 2018 | Boy Erased | Jared Eamons[1] |
| 2018 | Ben Is Back | Ben Burns[1] |
| 2019 | Honey Boy | Young Shia LaBeouf[1] |
| 2019 | Waves | Luke Wright[1] |
| 2020 | Let Them All Talk | Tyler[1] |
| 2021 | French Exit | Malcolm Price[1] |
| 2024 | Shirley | Robert Gottlieb[1] |
| 2025 | Sorry, Baby | Gavin[1] |