Pauline Chalamet
Pauline Chalamet (born January 25, 1992) is an American-French actress, writer, director, and producer.[1][2] She is best known for her leading role as Kimberly Finkle in the HBO Max comedy series The Sex Lives of College Girls (2021–present), which marked a breakthrough in her television career.[3] Chalamet made her feature film debut as Pal in Judd Apatow's The King of Staten Island (2020) and has since appeared in projects including the short film Comme des grands (2020), for which she received indie awards for acting.[4][2] A graduate of Bard College and the Studio Théâtre d'Asnières in Paris, she co-founded the production company Gummy Films and focuses on independent short films alongside mainstream roles.[5][6] Born in New York City to UNICEF editor Marc Chalamet and former dancer Nicole Flender, she is the older sister of Academy Award-nominated actor Timothée Chalamet, though she has pursued a distinct path emphasizing writing and directing.[7][6]Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Pauline Chalamet was born on January 25, 1992, in New York City to Nicole Flender, an American former Broadway dancer who later worked as a real estate broker, and Marc Chalamet, a French-born editor for the United Nations and former UNICEF spokesperson.[8][9][10] The family maintained a bilingual household influenced by her father's native French and her mother's proficiency in the language, supplemented by childhood summers spent in southern France.[11] On her mother's side, Chalamet has half-Russian Jewish and half French-Canadian ancestry, while her father is of French Protestant heritage, contributing to a culturally diverse upbringing without strong religious observance.[12] She grew up alongside her younger siblings, brother Timothée Chalamet (born December 27, 1995) and sister Amy Chalamet, in Manhattan Plaza, a federally subsidized housing complex in Hell's Kitchen designed as an artist colony for performing arts families.[6][13] This environment, surrounded by creative professionals, fostered early exposure to the arts, though Chalamet has described feeling somewhat out of place amid the bohemian setting during her youth in New York City.[14]Academic and artistic training
Chalamet attended the School of American Ballet in New York City from 2001 to 2010, receiving intensive classical ballet training during her formative years.[12] She subsequently enrolled at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, graduating in 2010, where she focused on drama as part of the school's performing arts curriculum.[15] [16] For her undergraduate education, Chalamet enrolled at Bard College in Red Hook, New York, earning a bachelor's degree in 2014 with a double major in political studies and theatre & performance.[9] [12] [17] Her theater coursework emphasized experimental approaches, aligning with Bard's interdisciplinary liberal arts environment that integrated performance with political and social analysis.[18] Following graduation, Chalamet relocated to Paris and, in 2016, gained acceptance into France's three-year national acting apprenticeship program, a rigorous government-sponsored initiative designed to train emerging performers through intensive practical immersion.[18] This program reignited her passion for acting, shifting her focus from earlier interests in human rights advocacy toward professional performance, as she later described the experience as transformative in rediscovering the craft.[18]Career
Early roles and development (pre-2020)
Chalamet began her performing career as a child, securing a minor role as Emma Doyle in an episode of the ABC daytime soap opera One Life to Live in 1999.[19] [16] In 2002, at age 10, she performed as a dancer in a Broadway production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.[20] [12] Her early work emphasized dance, aligning with her training at the School of American Ballet starting in 2001, though she maintained ties to acting.[21] By 2009, she appeared as the Lead Ballerina in the Royal Pains episode "There Will Be Food," a guest spot that showcased her dance background within a narrative context.[22] [23] After graduating from Bard College with majors in political studies and experimental theater, Chalamet shifted focus to screen acting, taking the lead role of Jane in the 2018 short film of the same name.[24] This phase involved sporadic small roles and short-form projects, building her resume amid pursuits in writing and directing, such as her 2016 debut directorial effort Between Fear and Laughter.[12] [25] These experiences developed her versatility before securing larger opportunities in 2020.Breakthrough and television prominence (2020-2025)
Chalamet's breakthrough role came in Judd Apatow's comedy The King of Staten Island, released on June 12, 2020, where she portrayed Joanne, the best friend of protagonist Scott's sister Claire.[26] The film, a semi-autobiographical story starring Pete Davidson as a young man grappling with his firefighter father's death, marked her feature film debut and showcased her comedic timing in a supporting capacity amid an ensemble cast including Marisa Tomei and Bill Burr.[9] In October 2020, Chalamet was cast as one of the four leads in the HBO Max (later Max) comedy series The Sex Lives of College Girls, created by Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble.[6] The series premiered on November 18, 2021, following four freshman roommates at the fictional Essex College in Vermont as they navigate sexuality, identity, and independence.[27] Chalamet played Kimberly Finkle, a naive and anxious overachiever from the small town of Gilbert, Arizona, characterized by her sheltered upbringing, eagerness to fit in, and internal conflicts over family expectations and personal growth.[28] [29] The show ran for three seasons, with Chalamet starring through its conclusion; season 2 aired from November to December 2022, and season 3 from November 21, 2024, to January 2025, before Max canceled it in March 2025 amid efforts to shop the series elsewhere that ultimately failed.[30] [31] Her performance as Kimberly drew attention for mirroring aspects of her own Yale experience, including overachievement and adjustment to a diverse environment, contributing to her rising profile in television comedy.[32] During season 3 filming, Chalamet concealed her pregnancy—welcoming her first child in September 2024—through strategic wardrobe and filming techniques, maintaining continuity for the character's storyline.[33] This role established her television prominence, distinguishing her from familial associations while highlighting her versatility in ensemble-driven narratives.Film roles and producing work
Chalamet made her feature film debut in Judd Apatow's comedy The King of Staten Island (2020), portraying Joanne, the best friend of the character played by Maude Apatow.[26][34] Subsequent film appearances include supporting roles in independent projects such as Adulting (2021), What Doesn't Float (2023), in which she starred as a lead, and Between the Temples (2024).[19][35] She has also taken on roles in upcoming features like Terrestrial (2025), where she plays Maddie, and The Devil Wears Prada 2.[36][35] In 2019, Chalamet co-founded the production company Gummy Films alongside Rachel Walden and Luca Balser to support audacious, independent storytelling.[37][38] Through Gummy Films, she served as producer on What Doesn't Float (2023), a dark comedy in which she also starred, and Lemon Tree (2023).[38][35] Her producing work extends to Terrestrial (2025), combining her dual roles as actor and producer in narratives emphasizing creative autonomy.[35] These efforts reflect her commitment to developing offbeat projects outside mainstream television success.[39]Personal life
Relationships and privacy
Pauline Chalamet has maintained a low profile regarding her romantic relationships, rarely discussing them in interviews or on social media.[40][3] She has emphasized keeping her personal life separate from her public career, with limited details emerging through indirect confirmations or sightings.[41] Chalamet is reportedly in a relationship with filmmaker Rhys Raiskin, though she has not publicly confirmed it.[40][3] The couple welcomed their first child, a daughter, in late September 2024, as shared by Chalamet on social media without naming the partner explicitly in announcements.[42][43] Prior reports from unverified sources suggested a long-term relationship with Dylan Raffin dating back to 2019, but recent accounts align with Raiskin as her current partner.[44] No records indicate Chalamet has been married, and she avoids speculation about her dating history in public forums.[40] This discretion aligns with her broader approach to privacy, where she selectively shares personal milestones only after they occur, often through professional channels rather than personal disclosures.[45]Motherhood and residences
Pauline Chalamet welcomed her first child, a daughter, in September 2024 with her boyfriend, Rhys Raiskin.[42][45] The actress shared the news publicly around September 30, 2024, noting the birth had occurred approximately three weeks prior.[42] Chalamet has described the early stages of motherhood as challenging, including sleep deprivation and a lack of initial empathy from friends, while emphasizing her commitment to the role.[46][45] Chalamet maintains residences in both Paris, France, which she has identified as her primary home, and Los Angeles, California, splitting her time between the two locations to accommodate her professional and personal commitments.[46][12] Following the birth of her daughter, she has been based in Paris, where she navigates the demands of new motherhood amid a routine that includes caring for the infant.[46] Her brother, Timothée Chalamet, has referenced her French residence in interviews, though sometimes in a lighthearted manner.[47]Public image and controversies
Media scrutiny and family dynamics
Media reports in April 2025 alleged a rift between Pauline Chalamet and her brother Timothée Chalamet stemming from his relationship with Kylie Jenner, with unnamed sources close to the family claiming Pauline "can't stand" Jenner and views her as emblematic of superficiality, media-driven fame, and unearned wealth—contrasting with the Chalamets' artistic, merit-based upbringing.[48][49] These claims, echoed across outlets like The US Sun and Yahoo Entertainment, suggested escalating tension, including Pauline reportedly urging Timothée against deeper commitment, though neither sibling publicly confirmed the discord.[50][51] Contributing to the scrutiny, Pauline's social media activity drew interpretation as veiled criticism of Jenner; in March 2025, she posted about "insane wealth disparity" and in January 2025 critiqued billionaire lifestyles, posts fans and reports linked to Timothée's partner amid their high-profile appearances together.[52][53] Such coverage amplified family dynamics under public gaze, highlighting Pauline's role as the elder sibling in a household emphasizing creative authenticity over celebrity excess, as described in prior interviews where she praised mutual support among siblings despite fame's pressures.[9] The reports, reliant on anonymous insiders, underscore tabloid interest in contrasting the Chalamets' bohemian roots—parents Nicole Flender (former dancer) and Marc Chalamet (UN journalist)—with Jenner's billionaire lineage, though unverified claims risk sensationalism given the family's historical reticence on personal matters.[11] Broader media attention has occasionally probed sibling comparisons, with Pauline addressing in 2021 how Timothée's breakthrough roles post-2017 intensified family visibility, yet she stressed collaborative dynamics, such as joint appearances and shared bilingual heritage fostering resilience against Hollywood nepotism narratives.[54] Positive anecdotes, like the family viewing her The Sex Lives of College Girls episodes together in 2022, counterbalance rift stories, illustrating a dynamic of encouragement amid selective privacy.[55] Overall, scrutiny reflects fame's spillover effects, with unconfirmed tensions revealing ideological frictions between grounded artistry and ostentatious wealth, as sourced in gossip-heavy reporting rather than direct statements.Social media statements and public perceptions
Pauline Chalamet maintains an active Instagram presence under the handle @pauline.chalamet, where she primarily shares professional updates related to her acting and producing work, such as promotions for The Sex Lives of College Girls, amassing over 363,000 followers as of late 2025.[56] Her posts and stories occasionally venture into social commentary, including reposts of political figures' statements on economic inequality. In January 2025, shortly after Donald Trump's inauguration, Chalamet reposted a tweet from Senator Bernie Sanders decrying billionaires' influence, which media outlets and fans interpreted as an indirect criticism of Kylie Jenner, the billionaire cosmetics entrepreneur dating her brother Timothée Chalamet.[57][53] This post, later deleted, fueled speculation of familial tension, with sources close to the family alleging a rift between Pauline and Timothée over his relationship with Jenner.[48] In March 2025, Chalamet shared an Instagram Story highlighting "insane wealth disparity" in the United States, again prompting accusations from Jenner's supporters that it targeted her partner's girlfriend, whose net worth exceeds $1 billion from her business empire.[58][59] A July 2025 post promoting a rival beauty brand was similarly viewed by observers as a subtle jab at Jenner's Kylie Cosmetics line.[60] These instances reflect Chalamet's expressed concerns over economic divides, echoed in a 2023 Flaunt interview where she critiqued both conservative policies and Democratic inaction on wealth concentration, though she has not directly addressed the interpretations linking her posts to Jenner.[61] Public perceptions of Chalamet's social media activity are polarized, with supporters praising her as an authentic voice against elite excess amid her own proximity to Hollywood wealth, while detractors, including online commentators, label her hypocritical for socializing in circles that include billionaires and for her brother's ties to Jenner's family.[62] Coverage in tabloid sources amplified these views, portraying her statements as intentional shade rather than general advocacy, contributing to narratives of sibling discord despite a lack of confirmation from Chalamet herself.[59] Overall, her online commentary has positioned her as outspoken on class issues, contrasting with her otherwise low-profile personal branding, though interpretations often prioritize celebrity gossip over policy substance.[63]Reception and legacy
Critical reception and awards
Chalamet's portrayal of Kimberly Finkle, a studious Midwestern freshman navigating college life, in the HBO Max series The Sex Lives of College Girls (2021–2025) formed part of an ensemble praised for its chemistry and authenticity in depicting young adulthood.[64] The series received a 73% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 53 critic reviews, with outlets like The Hollywood Reporter highlighting the characters' relatable awkwardness and the cast's effective dynamic in early episodes.[65][66] The New York Times noted the show's exploration of self-discovery through interpersonal "mirrors," aligning with Chalamet's character's arc of personal growth amid romantic and academic challenges.[67] Her supporting role as a friend in Judd Apatow's The King of Staten Island (2020) marked her feature debut in a dramedy that earned mixed-to-positive ensemble reviews, though specific commentary on her performance remained limited. In independent shorts, Chalamet's work garnered niche recognition; for instance, her role in Adulting (2021) earned her a shared Best Acting Duo award at the 2020 October Awards.[68] She also received Best Actress honors at the IndieXFilmFest portion of the 2020 Los Angeles International Film Festival for a lead performance in a short film.[12] Beyond acting accolades, Chalamet was honored with a Humanitarian Award by the Creative Coalition at its 2023 Television Humanitarian Awards for contributions to the industry and advocacy, alongside figures like Lena Waithe and Billy Eichner.[69] As of 2025, she has not received major industry awards such as Emmys or Golden Globes, with critical focus primarily on her ensemble contributions rather than solo breakthroughs. Her role as Maddie in the sci-fi comedy Terrestrial (2025) drew descriptions of her character as a "bubbly blonde" in Variety's review of the film's trippy group dynamics.[70]Influence and independent achievements
Chalamet co-founded the production company Gummy Films in 2019 alongside Rachel Walden and Luca Balser, with a focus on developing offbeat narrative shorts and features rooted in New York City experiences.[37][71] The company has produced projects such as the short film The Appraisal (2023), in which Chalamet starred as lead actor and served as associate producer, depicting a couple's home tour disrupted by a neighboring domestic dispute.[72][73] Gummy Films' debut feature, the dark comedy anthology What Doesn't Float (2023), directed by Luca Balser, features Chalamet in a lead role among vignettes of New Yorkers facing personal crises, often tied to urban waterways.[74][75] The film premiered in 2023 and secured U.S. distribution through Circle Collective, highlighting themes of frustration and decision-making under pressure.[74] Critics praised its vignette structure for evoking relatable city humiliations, with reviews noting Chalamet's contribution to its authentic portrayal of modern New Yorker struggles.[76][77] Beyond producing, Chalamet has garnered accolades for independent short film performances, including a First Prize win at the Top Indie Film Awards for I'm Fine! (2020).[68] Her multifaceted role in indie projects underscores a commitment to creative autonomy, enabling her to direct, write, and act in works that prioritize audacious storytelling over mainstream appeal.[39] These efforts have positioned her as an emerging force in New York's indie film scene, fostering collaborations that amplify underrepresented urban narratives.[38]Filmography
Film credits
Chalamet's feature film debut came in Judd Apatow's semi-autobiographical comedy The King of Staten Island (2020), where she portrayed Joanne, the best friend of the character played by Maude Apatow.[34] She followed with supporting roles in the French comedy Adulting (original title: Comme des grands, 2021), as Marion, and the horror film After Dark (2021), as Ronnie.[19] In 2023, Chalamet starred as Alex in the anthology dark comedy What Doesn't Float, which she also co-produced under her company Gummy Films; the film explores interconnected stories of New Yorkers facing personal crises.[78] That same year, she appeared in the short-form drama Lemon Tree and the thriller The Appraisal.[35] Her role expanded in the 2024 indie comedy-drama Between the Temples, directed by Nathan Silver, in which she played Leah, a figure connected to the protagonist's romantic entanglements amid themes of grief and Jewish ritual.[79] Chalamet has several upcoming projects, including Terrestrial (2025), where she portrays Maddie, and appearances in major studio films such as A Minecraft Movie (2025) and The Devil Wears Prada 2 (2026).[36]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | The King of Staten Island | Joanne | Feature debut[80] |
| 2021 | Adulting (Comme des grands) | Marion | [19] |
| 2021 | After Dark | Ronnie | [19] |
| 2023 | What Doesn't Float | Alex | Also producer[78] |
| 2024 | Between the Temples | Leah | [79] |
| 2025 | Terrestrial | Maddie | [36] |
Television credits
Chalamet's early television appearance was as Emma Doyle in the ABC soap opera One Life to Live in 1999.[19] She portrayed Lead Ballerina in an episode of the USA Network series Royal Pains in 2009.[19][81] In 2021, she appeared as Sveta in the French series Les Engagés.[19] That same year, Chalamet began starring as Kimberly Finkle, a naive Midwestern freshman navigating college life, in the HBO Max comedy series The Sex Lives of College Girls, which ran for three seasons through 2025.[4][19] She also voiced a character credited as "actress" in an episode of the animated series American Dad! around this period.[81] Additional credits include the role of Paola in the 2023 miniseries Split.[19] Her television work has primarily consisted of supporting or guest roles prior to her lead in The Sex Lives of College Girls.[4][19]| Year(s) | Title | Role | Network/Platform |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | One Life to Live | Emma Doyle | ABC |
| 2009 | Royal Pains | Lead Ballerina | USA Network |
| 2021 | Les Engagés | Sveta | French TV |
| 2021–2025 | The Sex Lives of College Girls | Kimberly Finkle | HBO Max |
| 2023 | Split | Paola | N/A |