Ezra Matthew Miller, born on September 30, 1992, in Wyckoff, New Jersey, is an American actor, singer, musician, and activist.
They identify as non-binary and use they/them pronouns, embracing a fluid approach to gender and identity that has influenced their public persona and creative choices.
Raised in a creative household, Miller’s early exposure to the arts shaped their multifaceted career, blending acting with vocal training and activism.
Their journey into the spotlight began as a teenager, overcoming a childhood speech impediment through opera singing with the Metropolitan Opera, which honed their breath control and performance skills.
Miller dropped out of high school at 16 to pursue acting full-time after their film debut, later briefly attending Bard College before committing entirely to their craft.
Beyond the screen, they have been vocal about environmental causes, joining Greenpeace expeditions to the North Pole, and identifying as Jewish and spiritual.
Siblings
Ezra has two older sisters, Saiya Miller and Caitlin Miller, who grew up alongside them in Wyckoff.
Their mother, Marta Koch, was a modern dancer who instilled a sense of playfulness and curiosity in the siblings through family hikes and creative explorations, often designating a “lead leader” to spot unique sights during outings.
Their father, Robert S. Miller, served as a senior vice president and managing director at Hyperion Books before becoming a publisher at Workman Publishing, providing a stable yet intellectually stimulating environment.
Saiya, the eldest, has carved her own path in the arts as an author, visual artist, webtoon creator, musician, and educator-activist, graduating from The New School’s Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts.
She co-authored the graphic novel Bley with Jesse Lonergan, which was published by Soft Skull Press in 2012 after successful pitches, showcasing her talent for blending narrative and illustration in works that explore personal and social themes.
Career
Miller’s professional trajectory launched in 2008 with a debut in the indie drama Afterschool, directed by Antonio Campos, where they portrayed a boarding school student grappling with the accidental filming of classmates’ drug-related deaths, marking an early showcase of their raw intensity.
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This led to a breakout in 2011 as the chillingly detached Kevin in Lynne Ramsay’s We Need to Talk About Kevin, opposite Tilda Swinton, earning critical acclaim for capturing adolescent alienation and earning nominations at major awards.
The following year, 2012, solidified their indie darling status with the role of the flamboyant Patrick in Stephen Chbosky’s adaptation of The Perks of Being a Wallflower, alongside Logan Lerman and Emma Watson, blending humor, vulnerability, and queer representation in a coming-of-age tale that resonated widely.
Transitioning to broader audiences, Miller appeared in the 2014 period drama Madame Bovary and Judd Apatow’s 2015 rom-com Trainwreck, while delving into psychological depth as a prisoner in The Stanford Prison Experiment that same year.
Their franchise era began in 2016 with the enigmatic Credence Barebone in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, a Harry Potter spin-off, reprising the role in The Crimes of Grindelwald (2018) and The Secrets of Dumbledore (2022), bringing layers of trauma and supernatural intrigue to the wizarding world.
Simultaneously, as DC’s speedster The Flash/Barry Allen, they debuted in cameos in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) and Suicide Squad (2016), took a prominent spot in Justice League (2017), and headlined the multiverse-spanning The Flash (2023), navigating high-stakes action with emotional nuance.
In television, they recurred as the charismatic yet doomed Trashcan Man in the 2020 miniseries The Stand, adapting Stephen King’s epic.
Beyond acting, Miller’s musical talents shone in We Need to Talk About Kevin’s soundtrack and Philip Glass’s opera White Raven.
Accolades
For We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011), Miller received a Critics’ Choice Movie Award nomination for Best Young Performer and a British Independent Film Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, praised for embodying a character’s chilling detachment.
Their portrayal of Patrick in The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012) yielded the Hollywood Film Festival Spotlight Award and the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actor, highlighting their ability to infuse queer joy and heartbreak into a teen ensemble.
In 2013, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival honored them with the Virtuosos Award, acknowledging their rapid ascent and versatile promise.
Additional nods include Independent Spirit Award and Gotham Award nominations for The Perks of Being a Wallflower, underscoring peer and critic admiration.
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