Maxwell Jenkins
Maxwell Jenkins (born May 3, 2005) is an American actor recognized for his performances in science fiction and action genres, most notably as Will Robinson in the Netflix series Lost in Space (2018–2021).[1][2] Jenkins began his acting career with early roles in television series such as Sense8 (2017) and A Family Man (2016), before gaining prominence through his lead role in Lost in Space, where he portrayed the youngest member of a stranded astronaut family across three seasons.[3] His subsequent appearances include the recurring role of young Jack Reacher in Amazon Prime Video's Reacher (2022), highlighting his versatility in depicting resilient young characters in high-stakes narratives.[4] Jenkins has also starred in films like Arcadian (2024) opposite Nicolas Cage, contributing to his reputation as an emerging talent in Hollywood.[5] Beyond acting, Jenkins maintains interests in music, performing as a mandolin player and singer in the band Cowboy Jesus and the Sugar Bums, and acrobatics, influenced by his family's circus background—his father, Jeff Jenkins, was a clown with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey.[6] While studying politics at UCLA and participating in cheerleading, he continues to balance multifaceted pursuits with his professional commitments, including upcoming projects like The Bondsman alongside Kevin Bacon.[7][8]Early life and education
Family background and Chicago upbringing
Maxwell Jenkins was born on May 3, 2005, in Chicago, Illinois, where he spent his formative years on the city's North Side.[1][5] He is the son of Jeff Jenkins, a former clown with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and Julie Greenberg, an actress involved in film and theater.[1][5] His parents co-founded and direct Midnight Circus, a Chicago-based theatrical arts organization that stages free performances in public parks, incorporating acrobatics, music, and storytelling, and has toured internationally to venues including the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.[9][7] Jenkins' upbringing was deeply intertwined with his family's circus heritage, beginning at age three when he debuted performing with Midnight Circus alongside his parents and acrobats from around the world.[1][5] This environment fostered early exposure to live performance disciplines such as juggling, clowning, and aerial acts, conducted amid Chicago's community-oriented outdoor shows.[10][7] To balance this with normalcy, his parents imposed a strict limit of one acting project per year until he reached age 16, allowing him to attend local public schools, including Coonley Elementary, and participate in everyday childhood activities.[5][11] Jenkins is of partial Italian and Russian Jewish descent through his family lines.[1]Development of performance skills
Jenkins first honed his performance abilities through his family's theatrical circus troupe, the Midnight Circus, debuting on stage at age three with acrobatic feats such as handstands performed atop his father's hands.[3] By age 2½, he had developed a comedy and balancing routine alongside his father, incorporating elements like rola-bola and physical comedy that demanded precise timing and audience engagement.[12] Over subsequent years, he expanded his repertoire by practicing and integrating advanced skills including tightwire walking, juggling, and playing the mandolin during live shows, which cultivated discipline in live performance and adaptability under pressure.[9] These circus experiences laid the groundwork for his transition to screen acting, which began somewhat serendipitously at age eight when he auditioned for a role after encouragement tied to his mother's background as a voice-over artist.[11][13] The physical and improvisational demands of circus acts—surrounded by professional artists from an early age—directly shaped his acting methodology, emphasizing presence, storytelling through movement, and resilience in front of live audiences, skills he later credited for enhancing his on-camera work.[13] Unlike traditional acting academies, Jenkins' early training was practical and self-directed, rooted in familial performance traditions rather than formal coursework, allowing him to blend acrobatic precision with narrative delivery from the outset of his professional acting pursuits.[7]Academic path and university studies
Jenkins attended Lane Tech College Prep High School, a selective enrollment magnet school in Chicago's Roscoe Village neighborhood, as part of the Chicago Public Schools system.[8][14] He balanced his early acting commitments with this public education, maintaining enrollment despite a demanding schedule that included roles in productions like Lost in Space.[15] Following high school graduation, Jenkins enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 2023, where he pursues a major in global studies and a minor in film and media studies.[16][17] His coursework emphasizes history, culture, and politics, which he credits for enhancing his approach to character development in acting.[13] At UCLA, Jenkins has also begun exploring screenwriting, integrating these academic pursuits with his professional interests outside acting.[18] As of mid-2025, he remains actively engaged in his studies while based in Los Angeles.[18][19]Professional career
Initial acting roles and breakthroughs
Jenkins began his acting career with a guest appearance on the NBC series Chicago Fire in 2012, at the age of seven.[3] He followed this with a recurring role as Oliver on ABC's Betrayal in 2013, marking his first significant on-screen exposure under the direction of Patty Jenkins in the short-lived drama that aired from September 29, 2013, to May 9, 2014.[9][20] Subsequent early television work included guest spots on Chicago Med in 2015 and a recurring role in Netflix's Sense8 that same year, where he portrayed a younger version of a key character in the Wachowskis' sci-fi series.[3][21] His initial film appearances came in 2016 with small roles in A Family Man, playing Ryan Jensen opposite Gerard Butler, and the comedy Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping.[3] These roles helped build his resume amid a series of episodic television gigs.[3] Jenkins achieved his breakthrough with the lead role of Will Robinson in Netflix's Lost in Space reboot, which premiered on April 13, 2018, and ran for three seasons until 2021.[2] The series, a reimagining of the 1960s classic, showcased Jenkins as the intelligent youngest Robinson child navigating survival on an alien planet, earning praise for his performance and exposing him to a global audience.[21] This role solidified his transition from supporting parts to starring status in high-profile streaming content.[22]Key television performances
Jenkins initiated his television career with guest appearances in procedural dramas, including the role of J.J. in Chicago Fire in 2015 and a part in NCIS: New Orleans as Ryan Griggs.[3] He also featured in the short-lived ABC series Betrayal in 2013, portraying a young character in the family drama centered on infidelity and murder.[3] Additionally, Jenkins appeared in the Wachowskis' Sense8 in 2015, contributing to the global ensemble cast exploring interconnected minds across continents.[3] His breakthrough came with the lead role of Will Robinson in Netflix's Lost in Space, a reimagining of the 1960s sci-fi classic, spanning three seasons from 2018 to 2021 with 30 episodes total.[2] As the intelligent and resourceful youngest Robinson child stranded on an alien planet, Jenkins' performance highlighted themes of family resilience and survival, earning him Saturn Award nominations for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series for each season.[3] In subsequent projects, Jenkins played young Jack Reacher in flashback sequences of Amazon Prime Video's Reacher season 1 in 2022, embodying the military police protagonist's formative years marked by discipline and confrontation with bullies.[4] He later portrayed Jordan in the 2023 Apple TV+ series Dear Edward, a drama about a plane crash survivor grappling with grief and identity.[23] These roles demonstrated his versatility in action-oriented and emotionally complex narratives.[3]Film work and collaborations
Jenkins debuted in feature films with a minor role as 10-Year-Old Owen in the 2016 mockumentary Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping, directed by Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone, portraying a young version of Andy Samberg's character. That same year, he portrayed Ryan Jensen, the son of Gerard Butler's protagonist, in the drama A Family Man (also known as The Headhunter's Calling), directed by Mark Williams, which explored corporate ambition and family strain. In 2021, Jenkins starred as Joseph Bell in the biographical drama Joe Bell, directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green, depicting the real-life story of a father's walk across America to honor his late gay son, with Jenkins collaborating alongside Mark Wahlberg as Joe Bell and Connie Britton as the mother.[24] The film, based on true events, highlighted themes of bullying and acceptance, earning mixed reviews for its emotional depth but noted for Jenkins' portrayal of vulnerability. Jenkins took a lead role in the 2024 post-apocalyptic thriller Arcadian, directed by Benjamin Brewer, playing Thomas, one of three brothers surviving nocturnal creature attacks, in collaboration with Nicolas Cage as their father and Jaeden Martell as a sibling, emphasizing familial bonds amid horror elements. The production involved practical effects and location shooting to heighten tension, with Jenkins preparing through physical training for action sequences.[25] Upcoming projects include This Too Shall Pass (2025), where Jenkins stars as Simon in a drama directed by Katie Holmes, focusing on resilience and personal growth, marking another collaboration with established filmmakers.[26] His film selections often pair him with veteran actors like Cage and Wahlberg, facilitating mentorship in dramatic and genre roles while building his profile beyond television.[13]Recent and upcoming projects
In 2024, Jenkins starred as Lucas in the post-apocalyptic horror film Arcadian, directed by Benjamin Brewer and co-starring Nicolas Cage as his father and Jaeden Martell as his brother; the film depicts a family surviving nocturnal monstrous threats in a dystopian world and premiered at South by Southwest on March 11 before a wide theatrical release on April 12.[27][28] Early in 2025, Jenkins portrayed Cade in the Prime Video action-horror miniseries The Bondsman, created by Grainger David, where his character grapples with demonic forces and family strife amid a bounty hunter's resurrection narrative, co-starring Kevin Bacon as the lead Hub Halloran; all episodes became available for streaming prior to April 2025 interviews promoting the blend of music, horror, and supernatural elements.[29][7] Jenkins leads as Simon in the coming-of-age drama This Too Shall Pass, directed by Rob Grant, following a teenager's rebellious road trip from a strict Mormon upbringing to Canada seeking freedom, which won the Audience Award for Best Feature at the 2025 Calgary Underground Film Festival and released theatrically on October 24, 2025.[30][31] Among upcoming projects, Jenkins is attached to star in the World War II drama Rush, reteaming with executive producer Jake Van Wagoner from Arcadian, alongside Thomas Nicholson, with production details announced on October 8, 2025, though no release date has been set.[32]Other talents and pursuits
Musical activities
Jenkins began studying violin at age three and expanded his skills to include drums and guitar by age seven, prompted by peers learning those instruments. He plays multiple instruments proficiently, among them mandolin, guitar, bass guitar, and drums, reflecting a sustained personal commitment to music alongside acting.[13][11] As frontman of the band Cowboy Jesus and the Sugar Bums, Jenkins has performed original and cover material, including a live rendition of "Salty Joe" at Chicago Music Exchange in March 2019. He also fronts The 529s, a group incorporating mandolin, saxophone, and keys for a distinctive sound; the band played a benefit show at UCLA's Sigma Chi fraternity in January 2024 to support the Huntsman Cancer Institute.[33][34][35] Jenkins has shared original compositions and covers online, such as a folk rendition of John Prine's work in January 2022 and self-recorded demos previewing collaborative tracks as early as June 2020. By April 2024, he noted plans to record the first full release with The 529s, emphasizing music's integral role in his creative life.[36][37][38]Acrobatics and circus heritage
Maxwell Jenkins was born on May 13, 2005, in Chicago, Illinois, to parents Jeff and Julie Jenkins, who founded and operate Midnight Circus, a theatrical circus company focused on community-building performances in Chicago parks.[39][40] The troupe, established to raise funds for local parks and featuring international acrobats from places like Montreal and France, emphasizes high-level circus arts including tumbling, hand balancing, juggling, and high wire walking.[10][41] Jenkins' family heritage in circus performance dates back to his parents' involvement, with the company gaining recognition such as being the first American circus invited to the Montréal Complètement Cirque festival in 2014.[42] Jenkins began performing with Midnight Circus at age three, initially fitting both feet into a single performer's hand during early acts, which marked the start of his immersion in circus disciplines.[9] Over the years, he developed a range of skills including tightwire walking, juggling, unicycling, and playing the mandolin onstage, often integrating these into family shows alongside his sister Samantha.[9] By around 2016, at age 11, he made his solo debut with a rola-bola balancing act, a crowd-pleasing routine involving stacking and balancing on cylindrical tubes, which became a signature element of his performances.[9][12] In addition to solo routines, Jenkins honed partnered acrobatics with his father Jeff, executing feats such as handstands atop his father's shoulders, contributing to the troupe's collaborative acts that blend physical prowess with theatrical storytelling.[10] His circus training emphasized discipline and versatility, with ongoing practice in aerial elements like trapeze and rola-bolla under guidance from visiting experts, fostering a foundation that distinguished his physical capabilities from typical child actors.[12] This heritage not only shaped his early career but also informed his approach to roles requiring athleticism, as evidenced by his continued references to circus-honed agility in interviews.[7]Philanthropy and public service
Community involvement initiatives
Jenkins has maintained involvement with the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), focusing on animal welfare initiatives. In December 2023, he visited an ASPCA adoption center in Los Angeles to participate in their Storytelling Program, which socializes dogs rescued from abuse, and promoted holiday adoptions for shelter animals.[43] He has also supported the ASPCA's efforts against dog fighting, including public awareness campaigns, and has fostered pit bull dogs personally.[10] In April 2019, his family's Midnight Circus highlighted his ASPCA collaboration to combat dog fighting in Chicago communities.[44] Through his family's Midnight Circus, a Chicago-based performance group, Jenkins contributes to local community projects by performing in benefit shows that raise funds for neighborhood parks and urban green spaces. He began performing with the circus at age three around 2008, participating in annual tours and summer events that support underserved areas on Chicago's North Side.[45] Despite his acting commitments, he continues to join family performances each summer, incorporating acrobatics and music to engage audiences and generate proceeds for these initiatives.[13] The circus's model emphasizes grassroots fundraising without relying on large institutional grants, directing collections directly to park improvements and community events.[9]Recognition for leadership
In 2020, Maxwell Jenkins received the Community Leadership Award from the Young Artist Academy at its 41st annual ceremony, honoring his charitable efforts and community involvement as a young performer.[46] The award specifically recognized Jenkins' dedication to philanthropy, including support for causes benefiting children and families, amid his rising acting career.[47] Presented by Bill Mumy, a veteran of the original Lost in Space series, the accolade highlighted Jenkins' proactive role in community service initiatives, distinguishing him among peers in the entertainment industry.[48] This recognition underscores his leadership in fostering positive impact beyond on-screen roles, with the Young Artist Awards emphasizing contributions that exemplify ethical and civic responsibility in youth artistry.[40]Personal life and public image
Family dynamics and personal grounding
Maxwell Jenkins was born on May 3, 2005, in Chicago, Illinois, to parents Jeff Jenkins, a former clown with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, and Julie Greenberg, an actress and co-founder of the Chicago-based Midnight Circus Opera.[49][1] He has one older sister, Samantha Rae Jenkins, with whom he frequently collaborates in family circus performances involving acrobatics and aerial acts.[1][9] The Jenkins family maintains a close-knit dynamic rooted in their shared circus heritage, performing annually as a unit—alongside their two rescued pit bull dogs and a troupe of professional acrobats—in Midnight Circus productions that blend music, storytelling, and physical feats.[50] This collaborative environment, which began when Jenkins first took the stage at age three, fosters mutual support and emphasizes collective achievement over individual stardom.[5] Jenkins' parents have played a pivotal role in shielding him from the destabilizing effects of early fame, prioritizing normalcy amid his acting pursuits. Jeff Jenkins has described his son as "incredibly humble, and kind," crediting the family's grounded Chicago upbringing for instilling resilience and perspective.[45] In interviews, Jenkins himself attributes his emotional stability to parental guidance that stresses the value of childhood over career acceleration, noting they "made choices that allowed me to keep a balanced and grounded life" despite global travel for roles.[7][51] This approach manifests in family rituals like joint circus shows, which Jenkins views as a return to roots rather than escapism, reinforcing familial bonds and a sense of purpose beyond Hollywood success.[10] The circus-influenced dynamics promote discipline through physical training and creativity via performance, providing Jenkins with a stabilizing counterweight to industry pressures.[18]Lifestyle choices and avoidance of industry pitfalls
Jenkins' parents implemented a strict guideline limiting him to one screen acting project per year until he reached age 16, a measure designed to safeguard his childhood from overexposure to the demands of Hollywood.[5] This approach stemmed from their philosophy that acting opportunities should enhance rather than supplant normal developmental experiences, allowing him to prioritize school, family, and personal pursuits amid early roles starting at age 10.[21] Raised in a family co-founding the Chicago-based Midnight Circus, where he began performing acrobatics at age 3 or 4, Jenkins credits this environment for fostering resilience, adaptability, and a sense of normalcy through public school attendance and home life with pets.[5][52] To maintain balance, Jenkins has consistently integrated non-acting interests into his routine, such as playing mandolin and guitar—skills he showcased in auditions and on-set performances—and engaging in physical activities like snowboarding during breaks from filming Lost in Space in British Columbia from 2018 to 2021.[5][21] After graduating from Lane Tech College Prep High School in Chicago, he enrolled at UCLA to major in global studies with an emphasis on international politics and cultural diplomacy, while participating in the university's cheer squad as a base for three years and joining a band.[5][18] These commitments reflect his deliberate choice to cultivate identities beyond acting, including annual returns to perform with his family's circus when schedules permit, which he says helps sustain perspective amid industry pressures.[5] Jenkins advises aspiring young performers to prioritize a "normal life" with diverse interests outside the industry to mitigate risks like burnout or disconnection from peers, a strategy he attributes to his sustained well-being as he transitioned from child roles.[5] By forming familial bonds with co-stars—such as viewing Lost in Space ensembles as surrogate siblings—while retreating to routine activities post-production, he has avoided the isolation and overwork that plague many former child actors.[21] His circus heritage, emphasizing perseverance without the glamour of stardom, further reinforced habits of grounded preparation, such as resuming schoolwork and AP test prep even during filming hiatuses.[52][21]Reception
Critical responses to performances
Jenkins' early performance as young Jeff in the ABC series Betrayal (2013) occurred amid a production that received widespread critical derision, earning a Metacritic score of 19 out of 100 based on 18 reviews, with critics such as Brian Lowry of Variety decrying the show as "wholly predictable and badly acted."[53] As an 8-year-old newcomer in a minor role, Jenkins was not individually critiqued, though the ensemble's shortcomings were attributed to weak scripting and execution.[54] His breakthrough as Will Robinson, the youngest child in Netflix's Lost in Space (2018–2021), drew mixed professional assessments within an otherwise favorably reviewed series holding an 84% Rotten Tomatoes approval rating from 92 critics.[55] Variety's Caroline Framke faulted the Robinson family portrayals, stating that "most members... are bland or annoying (or both)," implicitly including Jenkins' depiction of the introspective, robot-bonding prodigy, while acknowledging occasional "smart schemes" from the younger characters.[56] Uproxx critic Alan Sepinwall highlighted the narrative parallel to The Iron Giant in Will's arc with the Robot, suggesting competent handling of the emotional core without praising or condemning Jenkins' execution explicitly.[57] Audience reception contrasted sharply, with IMDb users frequently lauding Jenkins as "amazing" for conveying vulnerability amid sci-fi peril.[58] In subsequent supporting roles, such as young Jack Reacher in Amazon's Reacher (2022), Jenkins' flashbacks earned incidental approval for embodying the character's nascent stoicism, aided by collaboration with lead Alan Ritchson, though formal reviews focused more on the adult ensemble than his brief appearances.[59] For Arcadian (2024), a post-apocalyptic thriller, the ensemble including Jenkins as one of Nicolas Cage's sons contributed to a 78% Rotten Tomatoes score from 117 reviews, with the critic consensus emphasizing "strong performances" blending family tension and horror, and outlets like JoBlo noting the young actors as "pretty good" despite effects critiques.[60][61] Overall, Jenkins' work has evaded singular scrutiny, often subsumed into ensemble evaluations where adequacy prevails over standout acclaim or censure in major outlets.Achievements versus industry challenges
Jenkins achieved prominence with his portrayal of Will Robinson in the Netflix series Lost in Space (2018–2021), spanning three seasons and earning him three Saturn Award nominations for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Streaming Presentation (2019), Television Series (2021), and Streaming Series (2022).[46] These nominations highlighted his ability to anchor a major sci-fi production amid a competitive field. Subsequent roles, including young Jack Reacher in Amazon Prime's Reacher Season 1 (2022), Nicolas Cage's son in the survival thriller Arcadian (2024), and Cade Halloran opposite Kevin Bacon in The Bondsman: Hell and Back (Premiering April 3, 2025, on Prime Video), demonstrate a successful pivot to more mature, ensemble-driven projects.[3][5] The entertainment industry poses formidable barriers for child actors, with over 20,000 auditioning annually in Hollywood yet 95% failing to secure even one role, and far fewer sustaining careers into adulthood due to factors like typecasting, burnout, and personal instability.[62] Jenkins has defied these odds through deliberate strategies emphasizing balance, including parental limits on one project per year until age 16 to safeguard his childhood, rooted in his family's circus heritage with Chicago's Midnight Circus.[5] He maintains normalcy by pursuing studies at UCLA, participating in cheer squad, and cultivating interests in music and acrobatics beyond acting, advising others to "keep living a normal life and have interests outside of the industry."[5] This grounded approach, informed by mentorship from veterans like Bacon and Cage—who Jenkins credits as "incredible teachers"—has enabled his transition without the scandals or derailments plaguing many peers, positioning him as a rare success amid Hollywood's high attrition for former child performers.[5]Filmography and discography
Television credits
| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Betrayal | Oliver | Recurring role, 13 episodes[3][63] |
| 2015 | NCIS: New Orleans | Ryan Griggs | Episode: "I Do" (Season 2, Episode 4)[64] |
| 2015 | Sense8 | Young Will Gorski | Recurring in flashbacks[3][65] |
| 2015–2016 | Chicago Fire | J.J. | Guest role, including Season 4, Episode 20 |
| 2021 | Chicago Med | E.J. Daniels | Guest role, Season 7, Episode 7[3] |
| 2018–2021 | Lost in Space | Will Robinson | Main role, 3 seasons[2] |
| 2022 | Reacher | Young Jack Reacher | Flashback scenes, Season 1[3][66] |
| 2023 | Dear Edward | Jordan | Main role[23] |
Film credits
Maxwell Jenkins began his feature film career with supporting roles in comedies and dramas during the mid-2010s.[67] His early credits include portraying a young version of the protagonist in the mockumentary Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping (2016), directed by Akiva Schaffer and Jorma Taccone, and the son of Gerard Butler's character in the family drama A Family Man (2016).[68] In 2017, he appeared as Tommy in the thriller The Headhunter's Calling.[67]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping | 10-Year-Old Owen |
| 2016 | A Family Man | Ryan Jensen[68][3] |
| 2017 | The Headhunter's Calling | Tommy[67] |
| 2021 | Joe Bell | Joseph Bell[69][68] |
| 2024 | Arcadian | Thomas[70][26] |
| 2025 | This Too Shall Pass | Simon[26] |
Music contributions
Jenkins began studying violin at age three, later transitioning to mandolin at seven due to its fretted design aiding intonation while retaining violin tuning, and subsequently learned guitar, bass guitar, and drums.[13][7][11] He performs primarily on mandolin and provides lead vocals as a member of the Chicago-based band Cowboy Jesus and the Sugar Bums, alongside guitarist and vocalist Caden Shapiro, guitarist Sam Mortensen, and bassist Chase Wilkins.[71] The group, active during Jenkins's youth, has delivered live covers including "Salty Joe" at Chicago Music Exchange in 2019, "Life During Wartime," "We Got the Beat" at Elbo Room in 2016, and "I Got You (I Feel Good)."[33][72] Beyond band performances, Jenkins has shared original compositions, such as an untitled acoustic track posted on Facebook on June 15, 2020, which he described as a work-in-progress intended for collaboration with other musicians.[37] He co-wrote the protest song "Ready to Drop" with Bill Mumy, original portrayer of Will Robinson from the 1960s Lost in Space series, addressing generational burdens.[11] Jenkins has also recorded covers, including a folk rendition of John Prine's work shared on YouTube in 2022, and performed mandolin solos for charitable events, such as a 2020 virtual concert for Pathway to Living seniors.[36][73] His music appears on platforms like SoundCloud, though no full-length albums or commercial singles have been released as of 2025.[74]Awards and honors
Nominations and wins
Jenkins earned three nominations from the Saturn Awards for his portrayal of Will Robinson in Lost in Space (2018–2021), recognizing his performance across the series' seasons.[46][40] In 2019, he was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in a Streaming Presentation for the first season.[75] The 2021 nomination was for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series, covering the second season.[76] For the third and final season, he received a 2022 nomination for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Streaming Series.[46] He also garnered nominations from the Young Artist Awards for his work in Lost in Space, though specific categories beyond performance recognition are not detailed in primary records.[75] In addition to acting accolades, Jenkins won the 2020 Young Artist Award for Community Leadership, honoring his off-screen contributions rather than on-screen roles.[46][40] No competitive wins for acting performances have been recorded as of 2025.[46]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Saturn Award | Best Supporting Actor in a Streaming Presentation | Lost in Space (Season 1) | Nominated[75] |
| 2019 | Young Artist Award | Best Performance in a Streaming Series | Lost in Space | Nominated[75] |
| 2020 | Young Artist Award | Community Leadership Award | N/A | Won[46] |
| 2021 | Saturn Award | Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series | Lost in Space (Season 2) | Nominated[76] |
| 2022 | Saturn Award | Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Streaming Series | Lost in Space (Season 3) | Nominated[46] |