Hunter Schafer (born December 31, 1998) is an American actress and model. She first made headlines in 2016 with her activism against the North Carolina bill HB2. In 2017, she started modeling for many worldwide fashion brands. She made her acting debut as transgender high school student Jules Vaughn in the HBO teen drama television series Euphoria (2019–present). Since then, she has had roles in Belle (2022), The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023), Cuckoo (2024), and Kinds of Kindness (2024).
Hunter Schafer | |
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Born | Trenton, New Jersey, U.S. | December 31, 1998
Occupations |
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Years active | 2017–present |
Modeling information | |
Hair color | Blonde |
Eye color | Blue |
Agency |
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Early life
Schafer was born on December 31, 1998, in Trenton, New Jersey,[2][3] to parents Katy and Mac Schafer. Her father is a Presbyterian minister, and their family moved between churches and congregations in New Jersey, Arizona, and finally Raleigh, North Carolina,[4][5] where she was raised.[6] She has three younger siblings: two sisters and a brother.[7]
Schafer said she started expressing femininity as a toddler. In seventh grade, Schafer came out to her parents as a gay boy, but started experiencing gender dysphoria in eighth grade. In ninth grade, she came out as a transgender girl and began transitioning after being diagnosed with dysphoria.[8][9][10] She had also questioned if she had a non-binary identity.[6] She stated that the Internet helped her cope with her gender identity, as she turned to YouTube and social media to learn about people's transition timelines.[8]
Schafer first made headlines in 2016 when she became the youngest name listed as a plaintiff on the ACLU and Lambda Legal's lawsuit,[11][12] Carcaño v. McCrory, against North Carolina's bill House Bill 2. The bill prevented trans people from using the bathroom corresponding to their gender identity, instead deciding bathroom usage based on their assigned sex at birth. The lawsuit led to the bill's repeal.[10][13][14] She also made a film protesting the bill, which was released by the online magazine Rookie,[14] and wrote about the bill in a widely-shared essay for Teen Vogue.[15] For her activism, including her activism against HB2, Teen Vogue listed Schafer on its "21 Under 21" list in 2017, and granted her an interview with Hillary Clinton.[16][17]
In early childhood, Schafer developed skills in visual arts, including watercolor painting; in high school, she used these skills to design clothes. The inspirations for her visual style were Tim Burton and Skottie Young. She posted watercolor and photography works on her Instagram account, which became popular. Her clothing designs, which often incorporated political activist messaging, were profiled by Huffington Post in 2017.[18] She contributed illustrations and comic art to Rookie,[14][19] as well as essays.[15] She went to Needham B. Broughton High School and transferred to the North Carolina School of the Arts, where she graduated from their High School Visual Arts program.[20] In 2017, Schafer became a semifinalist in the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program.[21]
Career
Schafer started modeling shortly after high school.[22] She wanted to use the privileges of "looking like a model" to deconstruct ideas regarding gender identity. In 2017, she signed with Elite Model Management after meeting an agent of theirs on Instagram, so she moved to Brooklyn to model in New York City.[11][23] She first worked with Dior and Marc Jacobs, among other brands,[24] and by the end of the year she had modeled for Converse, Gucci, Helmut Lang, and Versus Versace.[25] In early 2018, she walked for nine fashion houses including Marc Jacobs, Miu Miu, and House of Holland. She made her debut at New York Fashion Week, and traveled abroad for the first time to model in Europe.[11][14] She started appearing in fashion magazines around the world; Marie Claire magazine wrote: "the fashion industry embraced Schafer for her ethereal yet edgy look and cool-kid versatility".[23] She has also modeled for Prada, Calvin Klein, Rick Owens, Tommy Hilfiger, Thierry Mugler, Coach, Maison Margiela, Vera Wang, Emilio Pucci, Ann Demeulemeester, and Erdem, among other houses.[26][27][28][29]
After high school, Schafer planned to attend Central Saint Martins, an arts college in London, England where she was accepted, to study clothing design for nonbinary people.[14][23] She also wanted to open a studio and gallery for trans artists in New York, using grant money she had received from Teen Vogue for her 21 Under 21 listing.[11] However, she decided to focus on acting, after she received a role on the HBO series Euphoria.[6][19][30]
In 2019, Schafer was cast in Euphoria as a transgender high school girl, Jules Vaughn, marking her acting debut.[19][31] She joined the show after finding a casting call for transgender girls on Instagram, which required no previous acting experience. A few days later, her modeling agency told her she received the audition.[19][30] She did her final audition in Los Angeles, and filmed the show's pilot there a month later.[32] She then moved to Los Angeles to film the first season.[15] At the time, it was rare for a trans character to be on television (GLAAD found there were 17 trans characters on television in 2017 and 2018), as well as for a trans actor to play them.[14] She worked with show's creator, Sam Levinson, to make sure Jules's trans experiences were accurate.[32] Jules was praised by Vulture for not being a victim of violence like most trans women on screen; she stands up for herself, rather than being a passive victim of the men around her.[33] Schafer also worked with the show's costume designer, Heidi Bivens, to make Jules' wardrobe.[6]
Schafer's performance was widely praised. Paper magazine wrote that Euphoria being her acting debut "will be hard for viewers to tell from the get-go."[34] For the role, she received a Shorty Award, an MTV Movie & TV Award, and a Dorian Award.[35][36][37] The Advocate wrote that she was one of many transgender actors not nominated at the 2020 Primetime Emmy Awards who should have been.[38] In 2020, Queerty named her among the 50 queer people "leading the nation toward equality, acceptance, and dignity for all people".[39] In 2021, Schafer co-wrote an episode of Euphoria that was released between its first and second seasons, titled "Fuck Anyone Who's Not a Sea Blob". The episode, which features Jules in therapy describing her experiences in womanhood, was critically acclaimed.[40][41][42]
In 2021, Time named her to its Next list of "100 emerging leaders who are shaping the future", with a tribute written by Euphoria co-star Zendaya.[43] Also in 2021, Prada announced Hunter as their new house ambassador, and in 2022, she became the global brand ambassador for Shiseido Makeup.[44][45] In 2022, Schafer starred in the English dub of the Japanese animated film Belle.[46] She also made her directorial debut[47] when making the music video for Girl in Red's song Hornylovesickmess,[48] and then directed the video for Anohni and the Johnsons' song "Why Am I Alive Now?".[49] She became the new face of Mugler's Angel perfume in 2023.[22]
Schafer starred in the 2023 The Hunger Games prequel, The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes,[50] for which her performance as Tigris Snow was praised.[51][52][53] In 2024, she was in Tilman Singer's horror movie Cuckoo,[54][55] where she plays an American teenager who reluctantly visits a creepy, remote resort in Germany with her family.[56] It was her first lead role in a feature film.[57] Also in 2024, she was in one scene of Yorgos Lanthimos' anthology film Kinds of Kindness.[58][59] She has upcoming roles in David Lowery's film Mother Mary,[60] Hideo Kojima and Jordan Peele's horror video game OD,[61] and the Amazon science fiction television series Blade Runner 2099.[62]
Personal life
In 2019, Schafer said that she was "closer to what you might call a lesbian",[63] and in 2021, she stated she was "bi or pan or something".[64] She was in a brief relationship with Spanish singer Rosalía for about five months in 2019, which she confirmed after speculation with GQ in 2024. They remained close friends and Schafer considers Rosalía to be "family no matter what".[65] Schafer dated her Euphoria co-star Dominic Fike from February 2022 to c. July 2023.[66][67] She claims their relationship ended after she found out he cheated on her.[68][69]
In 2019, Schafer said she used she/her pronouns, but also used the title of "Mx. Schafer."[14] In 2016, she stated, "I do like people to know that I'm not a cis girl because that's not something that I am or feel like I am."[9] However, in 2024, she said she would like to talk about her trans identity less, as she had moved on from the most difficult parts of her transition and just wanted to "be a girl"; she lamented that her identity had become the centerpiece of her career, giving her offers for "tons of trans roles", which she started declining.[70] In an interview with Rolling Stone, when asked about being considered a transgender activist, Schafer said: "No. I'm just a tranny who's famous, you know?"[71]
In August 2022, Schafer liked and commented "!!!!!" on an Instagram post that blamed non-binary people who "fought to have trans identities no longer considered a medical condition that requires dysphoria" for negative social attitudes and legislation targeting the trans community. This prompted backlash from queer fans, with many accusing Schafer of endorsing transmedicalism.[72][73] Commenting on a later Instagram post, Schafer denied being a transmedicalist or holding hatred towards non-binary people, saying that she merely felt there was "an in-balance [sic] in the visibility and space-taken up between non-binary folks and binary trans women (particularly those of color and/or those who have resulted [sic] to sex work as a means of survival) that i think deserves attention/ re-evaluation (as far as resources and platforms go) within the LGBTQ+ community".[74]
On February 27, 2024, Schafer was arrested in New York City while at a Jewish Voice for Peace protest advocating for a ceasefire in the Israel–Hamas war.[75][76]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Belle | Ruka "Ruka-chan" Watanabe (voice) | English dub | [46] |
2023 | The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes | Tigris Snow | [50] | |
2024 | Cuckoo | Gretchen | [54] | |
Kinds of Kindness | Anna | [58] | ||
TBA | Mother Mary | Hilda | Post-production | [60] |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019–present | Euphoria | Jules Vaughn |
|
[77] |
TBA | Blade Runner 2099 | TBA | Filming | [62] |
Music videos
Year | Title | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Girl in Red – "Hornylovesickmess" | — | Director | [48] |
2023 | Anohni and the Johnsons – "Why Am I Alive Now?" | [49] |
Video games
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
TBA | OD | TBA | [61] |
Awards and nominations
Year | Organisation | Award | Work | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics | We're Wilde About You! Rising Star of the Year | Euphoria | Nominated[78] |
Shorty Awards | Actor | Longlisted[79][80] | ||
2022 | MTV Movie & TV Awards | Best Kiss (Shared with Dominic Fike) |
Nominated[81] |
References
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