Margot Robbie
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- In full:
- Margot Elise Robbie
- Born:
- July 2, 1990, Dalby, Queensland, Australia (age 33)
- Notable Works:
- “About Time”
- Notable Family Members:
- daughter of Doug Robbie
- daughter of Sarie Kessler
- married to Tom Ackerley (2016–present)
- sister of Cameron Robbie
- sister of Lachlan Robbie
- sister of Anya Robbie
Recent News
Margot Robbie (born July 2, 1990, Dalby, Queensland, Australia) Australian actress who was known for her scene-stealing magnetism and the depth of her performances in a variety of roles.
Robbie’s parents divorced when she was a small child, and she grew up living with her mother, a physiotherapist, in the Gold Coast area of Australia. She frequently spent time at her grandparents’ farm in Dalby, Queensland. Interested in performing from a young age, she took drama classes at Somerset College, a private school in Mudgeeraba, Queensland. After graduating in 2007 she appeared in two local movies—Vigilante (2008) and I.C.U. (2009)—before moving to Melbourne. There she was cast as a bisexual teen on the daytime soap opera Neighbours, in which she appeared from 2008 to 2011. Planning to pursue a career in Hollywood, she worked with a speech coach to learn an American accent.
Soon after arriving in Los Angeles, Robbie was cast in a major role as a flight attendant in the 1960s-set TV series Pan Am (2011–12), but the show was canceled after a single season. She then had a small part in the British time-travel movie About Time (2013). Her breakthrough came when she was cast as the trophy wife of the title character (Leonardo DiCaprio) in Martin Scorsese’s dark comedy The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).
In 2015 Robbie starred with Chiwetel Ejiofor and Chris Pine in the postapocalyptic drama Z for Zachariah and appeared opposite Will Smith in the caper movie Focus. However, that year she gained the most notice for her uncredited appearance inAdam McKay’s The Big Short, in which she explained subprime loans while taking a bubble bath. In 2016 Robbie played a British TV reporter in Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, set during the Afghanistan War, and portrayed Jane in The Legend of Tarzan. But her most notable role that year—and the one for which she is perhaps most widely known—was that of Harley Quinn, the psychotic girlfriend of the Joker (Jared Leto) in the supervillain movie Suicide Squad.
In I, Tonya (2017) Robbie appeared in her first leading role, playing ill-fated Olympic ice skating star Tonya Harding. For her performance, Robbie received an Academy Award nomination. She also won praise for her portrayal of Elizabeth I in Mary Queen of Scots (2018), starring Saoirse Ronan. Robbie shone as actress Sharon Tate in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood (2019). Also that year she played a bank robber in a Dust Bowl drama, Dreamland, which she produced through LuckyChap Entertainment, a production company that she cofounded in 2014.
For her performance as an aspiring Fox News star in Bombshell (2019), about the revelations of sexual harassment at the conservative news outlet, Robbie earned a second Oscar nod. She then reprised her role as Harley Quinn, now free of the Joker, in Birds of Prey (2020) and later in The Suicide Squad (2021). Both movies earned generally favourable reviews. In 2021 the actress lent her voice to the family comedy Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway. The following year she costarred with Christian Bale and John David Washington in David O. Russell’s Amsterdam, a social satire about a fascist conspiracy to overturn the U.S. government in the 1930s. Also in 2022 she costarred with Brad Pitt in Damien Chazelle’s Babylon, a dramedy set in Hollywood during the 1920s. Robbie’s character was partly based on the actress Clara Bow.
In 2023 Robbie joined an all-star cast in Asteroid City, a dramedy directed by Wes Anderson. Later that year she starred in Greta Gerwig’s highly anticipated Barbie. Robbie was cast as the iconic—and controversial—doll, who undergoes a crisis when she enters the real world. The film, which both celebrates and criticizes the toy, also featured Ryan Gosling as Ken.