
Birthdate: Oct 5, 1983
Birthplace: New York City, New York, USA
Jesse Eisenberg (birthname: Jesse Adam Eisenberg) is an Oscar nominee for Best Actor for his memorable portrayal of Mark Zuckerberg in David Fincher’s The Social Network (2010). Although he may be one of the most identifiable in the group of “smart” young Hollywood actors (Eisenberg having made his mark depicting smart, or smart-ass, characters), Eisenberg is having a stealth career as an author, filmmaker, and producer, having written a short story collection titled Bream Gives Me Hiccups: And Other Stories (2015) and written and directed his debut feature, When You Finish Saving the World (2022), starring Julianne Moore and Finn Wolfhard, and premiering in Semaine de la Critique at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival.
He has also recently begun to executive produce various movies in which he stars or co-stars or documentaries, including Jeremy Workman’s The World Before Your Feet (2018); Lorcan Finnegan’s sci-fi horror movie, Vivarium (2019), with Imogen Poots; and writer-director Lyle Mitchell Corbine Jr.’s indie drama, Wild Indian (2021), with Michael Greyeyes, Chaske Spencer, and Kate Bosworth, premiering at the Sundance Film Festival. Eisenberg received the Heart of Sarajevo Prize, the Sarajevo Film Festival’s annual award for acknowledgment of a major film career, in August 2022.
Jesse Eisenberg earned plaudits for his debut performance opposite Campbell Scott in Dylan Kidd’s sex comedy, Roger Dodger (2002), with Isabella Rossellini, Elizabeth Berkley, and Jennifer Beals. He had small roles in Michael Hoffman’s The Emperor’s Club (2002) and M. Night Shyamalan’s The Village (2004), before landing the choice role of Walt in writer-director Noah Baumbach’s fine comedy-drama, The Squid and the Whale (2005), with Laura Linney, William Baldwin, and Anna Paquin, and which earned Baumbach the rare awards sweep of the top four American film critics organizations for best screenplay.
Eisenberg’s first genre foray was in Wes Craven’s werewolf comedy, Cursed (2005), with Christina Ricci and Joshua Jackson. Eisenberg’s first starring role (and title) was in Fred Durst’s debut, The Education of Charlie Banks (2007), followed by the wonderful and overlooked indie film directed by Sol Tryon, The Living Wake (2007), featuring a colorful cast that included Jim Gaffigan, Ann Dowd, and Bryan Brown. With Kristen Stewart, Bill Hader, Kristen Wiig, and Ryan Reynolds, Eisenberg enjoyed greater attention in Greg Mottola’s terrific ensemble comedy-drama, Adventureland (2009).
Jesse Eisenberg joined another, more rollicking ensemble, Ruben Fleischer’s zombie comedy debut for Columbia Pictures, Zombieland (2009), with Woody Harrelson, Emma Stone, Abigail Breslin, and Bill Murray, which launched the sequel also directed by Fleischer, Zombieland: Double Tap (2019), with new cast members Rosario Dawson, Zoey Deutch, and Luke Wilson. Eisenberg’s breakthrough came in 2010 with his dazzling, dark portrayal of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg (and a rare and highly unflattering depiction of a living corporate titan) in David Fincher’s The Social Network, alongside Andrew Garfield, Justin Timberlake, Armie Hammer, and Max Minghella.
Eisenberg was nominated for Best Actor across many major awards, including the Oscar, BAFTA, Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild, and a National Society of Film Critics win. In his first voice performance for animation, Eisenberg starred in Blue Sky Studios/20th Century Fox Animation’s Rio (2011) with Anne Hathaway. i.am, Jamie Foxx, and Tracy Morgan (and earning $484 million worldwide); Eisenberg returned to the project’s sequel, Rio 2 (2014), with new cast members Bruno Mars, Andy Garcia, Kristin Chenoweth, and Tracy Morgan, and outgrossing the original with a global box office take of nearly $500 million. Eisenberg reunited with director Fleischer for the true-story comedy thriller, 30 Minutes or Less (2011), with Aziz Ansari and Danny McBride.
Although he once provoked a cease-and-desist order from Woody Allen’s attorneys for a screenplay he wrote about Allen’s life, Jesse Eisenberg co-starred in two Woody Allen movies, starting in 2012 with the rom-com To Rome with Love (2012), with Alec Baldwin, Roberto Benigni, Penelope Cruz, Judy Davis, Greta Gerwig, and Elliot Page; and continuing in 2016 with Café Society, with Jeannie Berlin, Steve Carell, Blake Lively, Parker Posey, and Kristen Stewart.
Each film world premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and earned a combined worldwide gross of $116 million. Eisenberg led a starry ensemble in one of his most successful commercial ventures, Now You See Me (2016), with Mark Ruffalo, Woody Harrelson, Melanie Laurent, Common, Michael Caine, and Morgan Freeman, totaling $352 million for Lionsgate, which also released the sequel starring Eisenberg, Now You See Me 2 (2016), with new cast members Jay Chou and Sanaa Lathan and earning $334 million worldwide.
Eisenberg joined the strong cast of Dakota Fanning and Peter Saragaard for Kelly Reichardt’s superb eco-thriller, Night Moves (2013), co-written by Jonathan Raymond, and premiering in competition at the 70th edition of the Venice Film Festival and winning the Grand Prix at the Deauville Film Festival. Tackling Dostoevsky, Eisenberg portrayed the Russian novelist’s title character in The Double (2013), directed and co-written by Richard Ayoade and co-starring Mia Wasikowska, and then turned to the complex literary world of the late novelist David Foster Wallace in James Ponsoldt’s/Donald Margulies’ The End of the Tour (2015), with Jason Segal as Wallace and Eisenberg as Rolling Stone reporter David Lipsky.
The brilliant Norwegian writing-directing team of Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier’s only English-language film, Louder Than Bombs (2015), starred Eisenberg with Isabelle Huppert, Gabriel Byrne, Amy Ryan, and David Strathairn, and competed in the 2015 edition of the Cannes Film Festival. Eisenberg reunited with Kristen Stewart for the third time in Nima Nourizadeh’s comedy, American Ultra (2015), with Topher Grace, Walton Goggins, John Leguizamo, and Bill Pullman. In an odd move, Eisenberg took on the unlikely role of DC Comics arch-nemesis Lex Luthor in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) and Justice League (2017), directed by Zack Snyder.
The exotic topic of high-frequency trading was the subject of writer-director Kim Nguyen’s The Hummingbird Project (2018), starring Eisenberg and co-starring Alexander Skarsgård and Salma Hayek, and which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival. Eisenberg starred in Riley Stearns’ black comedy with a martial arts twist, The Art of Self-Defense (2019), premiering at the South by Southwest Film Festival, with Alessandro Nivola and Imogen Poots. Eisenberg tackled one of his occasional real-life portrayals (as mime artist Marcel Marceau, battling Nazis) in writer-director Jonathan Jakubowicz’s little-seen biopic, Resistance (2020), for IFC Films.
Eisenberg co-starred with Adrien Brody and Odessa Young in South African director/writer John Trengove’s U.S./U.K.-produced thriller, Manodrome (2023), with Salieu Sesay, Philip Ettinger, Ethan Suplee, and Evan Jonigkeit, and released by Lionsgate/Universal Pictures after premiering in competition at the Berlin Film Festival. Eisenberg was a producer and also co-starred with Riley Keough (who was a producer on Manosphere) in co-director/producer/co-editor/actor Nathan Zellner’s and co-director/writer/producer/co-editor David Zellner’s absurdist fantasy, Sasquatch Sunset (2024), premiering at the Sundance Film Festival and released to a $1 million return by Bleccker Street.
Eisenberg had his biggest personal artistic triumph to date as co-star/director/writer/producer of the comedy-drama, A Real Pain (2024), co-starring Oscar-winning Kieran Culkin, with Will Sharpe and Jennifer Grey, and with Emma Stone as part of the team of lead producers, and which launched at the Sundance Film Festival (where it won Eisenberg the Waldo Salt Best Screenplay Award) before grossing a knockout $25 million return (based on an estimated $3 million budget) via distributor Searchlight Pictures.
Eisenberg then revived his role as J. Daniel Atlas in the sequel and third movie in the series, Now You See Me: Now You Don’t (2025), co-starring returning cast members Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco, Isla Fisher and Morgan Freeman, with newcomers Justice Smith, Dominic Sessa, Ariana Greenblatt and Rosamund Pike, and released wide by Lionsgate via producers Summit Entertainment/Secret Hideout.
Eisenberg was director/writer/producer of the provisionally titled Untitled Musical Comedy Jesse Eisenberg (date to be announced), co-starring Julianne Moore and Paul Giamatti, with Halle Bailey, Havana Rose Lu, and Bernadette Peters, with Eisenberg partnering again with Emma Stone’s Fruit Tree production company as well as Topic Studios, and with A24 as distributor.
Eisenberg continued to support film projects as executive producer, including director/producer Brendan Walsh’s indie comedy, I’ll Be Right There (2023), starring Edie Falco, Jeannie Berlin, Charlie Tahan, Michael Rapaport and Bradley Whitford and released by Brainstorm Media; and Eoisenberg’s second collaboration with director/producer/co-cinematographer/co-editor Jeremy Workman for his non-fiction film, Secret Mall Apartment (2024), about an actually true urban legend, premiering at the South by Southwest Film Festival.
Jesse Eisenberg is a prolific writer, as the author of four plays (Asuncion in 2011, The Revisionist in 2013, The Spoils and A Little Part of All of Us in 2015); a short story collection (Bream Gives Me Hiccups: And Other Stories) published by Grove Press in 2015; twenty contributions to the literary journal McSweeney’s (including several stories published in Bream Gives Me Hiccups); eighteen contributions to the New Yorker Magazine’s “Shouts & Murmurs” column, many of them focused on the New York Knicks.
Jesse Eisenberg was born in Astoria, Queens in New York City, and raised in East Brunswick, New Jersey by parents Amy and Barry Eisenberg. His sisters are Kerri Eisenberg, a former actor turned artist, and former child actor Hallie Eisenberg. Jesse Eisenberg attended Frost School, Hammarskjold Middle School, Churchill Junior High School, and East Brunswick High School, all in his hometown of East Brunswick, N.J. Eisenberg transferred to Professional Performing Arts School in Manhattan for acting training as well as to finish his high school education.
Eisenberg attended The New School in lower Manhattan, specializing in democracy and cultural pluralism. While schooling, Eisenberg was cast in professional stage productions in the New York area, including a Broadway revival of Tennessee Williams’ Summer and Smoke, a Broadway revival of A Christmas Carol starring Tony Randall, and (at 16), an off-Broadway staging of Arje Shaw’s The Gathering. Eisenberg married Anna Strout in 2017; the couple has one son, Banner, born in 2017. His height is 5’ 7¼”. Eisenberg’s net worth is $12 million.
Nominee, Best Actor, Academy Awards (2011); Two-time Nominee, Best Actor/Rising Star Award, BAFTA Awards (2010, 2011); Nominee, Camera d’Or (Best First Film), Cannes Film Festival (2022); Winner, Male Star of the Year, CinemaCon Awards (2016); Nominee, Best Supporting Male, Independent Spirit Awards (2006); Nominee, Best Actor, Golden Globes Awards (2011); Winner, Best Actor, National Society of Film Critics Awards (2011); Two-time Nominee, Best Actor/Best Motion Picture Cast, Screen Actors Guild Awards (2011).
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Audiobook Maven: One of Jesse Eisenberg’s talents is as an audiobook narrator, including Janet Tashjian’s young adult novels, The Gospel According to Larry (2004) and Vote for Larry (2004), as well as his short story collection, Bream Gives Me Hiccups: And Other Stories (2015), and the novelization of his screenplay When You Finish Saving the World (2020).
Website Creator: With his cousin (who worked at Facebook), Eisenberg created a website-based wordplay game designed to interact with Facebook OneUpMe. Eisenberg claims he spends extremely little time on social media, especially Facebook.
Indiana University Fan: Even though he never attended the university, Jesse Eisenberg is a major supporter of the University of Indiana and its city of Bloomington, donating to the city’s Middle Way House and supporting the Bloomington Playwrights Project.
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