Julia Garner Is Perfecting the Complex Woman


“I want to make people feel uncomfortable,” Julia Garner says of her work as an actor. It’s a blunt statement from the 30-year-old, but it’s not surprising when you consider her celebrated body of work—a lengthy résumé portraying some of the most nefarious, deviant, and criminally minded characters on our screens today. Intensity, as I come to learn, is not something the actress shies away from. In fact, Garner thrives in this space. She adds, “I’m interested in things that are a little bit scary that people are intrigued by at the same time.”

So far, Garner has accomplished exactly what she’s set out to do. The Bronx native, three-time Emmy winner, and face of Gucci is known for her dark and mercurial roles—from Ozark‘s Ruth Langmore, for which she won a Golden Globe, to Inventing Anna’s Anna Delvey, the infamous fake heiress who scammed her way through elite New York society in the mid-2010s, to a struggling young dancer in the psych thriller and Rosemary’s Baby prequel Apartment 7A. Perhaps what is most noteworthy is the level of curiosity and nuance Garner brings to each of these roles that makes you question whether characters as unsavory as hers might be worthy of redemption after all. It’s in this discomfort where art is most effective and impactful, Garner insists. “I like when people can walk away and change their perspective on something. A film or TV show should be an experience,” she says.

When I meet the actress via Zoom on a quiet mid-December afternoon, she’s fresh off the heels of a particularly grueling period of work that started with filming Wolf Man, the horrifying werewolf thriller out this month, in New Zealand followed by The Fantastic Four: First Steps in London before wrapping production on a third project, the horror epic Weapons that’s slated for early 2026.