Andrew Garfield: Films, Awards & Bio 2025

Introduction

If you love actors who can crack your heart open and make it glow again in the very next scene, Andrew Garfield is probably your guy. He’s the one who delivered the slow-burn ache of Eduardo Saverin in The Social Network, brought a tender, kinetic Peter Parker to The Amazing Spider-Man, then surprised everyone with disarming vocals and restless vulnerability in tick, tick…BOOM!. He moves between film, TV, and theatre with uncommon grace — and kept that rhythm going into 2024–2025 with a soft, time-spanning romance (We Live in Time) and a provocative campus drama (After the Hunt).

Quick Facts (2025)

FieldDetail
Full NameAndrew Russell Garfield
NicknameAndy (informal, sometimes used in industry bios)
ProfessionActor (film, TV, stage)
Date of Birth20 August 1983
Age (2025)42
BirthplaceLos Angeles, California, USA; raised in Epsom, Surrey, England
Nationality/CitizenshipDual U.S. and U.K. citizenship
TrainingRoyal Central School of Speech and Drama (London)
ZodiacLeo
BeliefsHas described himself as an “agnostic pantheist” and “a little bit Jewish,” especially around the time of Silence press

Why you can trust those facts:
Britannica confirms his birth date, birthplace, and core career arc. Wikipedia supports his dual citizenship, early life in Epsom, and Royal Central training; the school itself lists him among high-profile alumni. For the “agnostic pantheist… a little bit Jewish” line, see Deseret News’ roundup of his own statements during Silence promotion, and related reporting. 

Who is Andrew Garfield ?

Andrew Garfield is an American-born, British-raised actor with dual citizenship who moves fluently between screen and stage. He began on British stages and television, earned breakout recognition with Boy A, went global with The Social Network and The Amazing Spider-Man, and then built a Reputation for risk-taking choices: Hacksaw Ridge, Silence, tick, tick…BOOM!, and Under the Banner of Heaven. In 2024–2025, he fronted We Live in Time (romance) and After the Hunt (a thorny campus drama). He’s also a Tony Award winner and a two-time Oscar nominee — which is rare air for any actor.

Early Life & Training

Garfield was born in Los Angeles to an American father and a British mother, moved to Surrey at the age of three, and grew up in Epsom. That transatlantic upbringing explains the elastic accent; his rigorous training at London’s Royal Central School of Speech and Drama sharpened the craft. Early UK stage and television credits led to award attention, and Boy A (2007) earned him a BAFTA TV Award — the first big “he’s the real deal” turning point. 

Why it matters: The mix of US birth and UK roots gives him that easy cultural code-switch; the conservatoire training shows up in his emotional precision and stamina onstage and on camera.

Career Journey

2004–2009: UK Stage & TV Foundation

A raft of British TV (including Sugar Rush and a memorable two-parter in Doctor Who) plus steady stage work built his reputation. Boy A (2007) brought the BAFTA TV win and serious critical attention. 

2010–2014: Breakthrough — The Social Network to Spider-Man

Playing Eduardo Saverin in David Fincher’s The Social Network made him instantly recognisable worldwide. Then came The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) and its 2014 sequel, where his open-hearted, quippy Peter Parker gained a devoted fanbase. He eventually returned — secretly — in Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), delivering a crowd-roaring surprise. 

2016–2018: Prestige & Stage Peak

Hacksaw Ridge (2016) nabbed his first Best Actor Oscar nomination; Silence (2016) deepened the contemplative, spiritual side of his screen persona. On Broadway, his turn as Prior Walter in Angels in America became career-defining — and won the 2018 Tony for Best Leading Actor in a Play.

2021–2022: New Heights — tick, tick…BOOM! & Under the Banner of Heaven

As Jonathan Larson, Garfield sang, sprinted, and soul-searched his way to a Golden Globe and a second Best Actor Oscar nomination (tick, tick…BOOM!, 2021). Then came his first Primetime Emmy nomination for Under the Banner of Heaven (2022). 

2024–2025: “What’s New” Era — We Live in Time & After the Hunt

  • We Live in Time (dir. John Crowley): World premiere at TIFF 2024; U.S. release 11 Oct 2024 via A24; U.K. and France release 1 Jan 2025 via StudioCanal. Critics emphasised tenderness and the Garfield–Pugh chemistry.
  • After the Hunt (dir. Luca Guadagnino): World premiere Venice, 29 Aug 2025; NYFF Opening Night (26 Sept); U.S. limited 10 Oct, wide 17 Oct (Amazon MGM). The film stirred debates about its intentionally ambiguous ending and a final fourth-wall moment; performances — including Garfield’s — drew notice.

Essential Movies & Roles

  • The Social Network (2010) — Eduardo Saverin. A quiet storm of loyalty and heartbreak in a modern classic.
  • The Amazing Spider-Man (2012) & TASM 2 (2014)Peter Parker. An open-hearted superhero turn that built a passionate fanbase and set up his 2021 MCU return.
  • Hacksaw Ridge (2016) — Desmond Doss. Earned his first Best Actor Oscar nod.
  • Silence (2016) — Rodrigues. A searching, spiritually inquisitive performance.
  • tick, tick…BOOM! (2021) — Jonathan Larson. Golden Globe win, Oscar nomination; proof he can sing and devastate.
  • Under the Banner of Heaven (2022, TV) — Jeb Pyre. Earned his first Emmy nomination.
  • We Live in Time (2024 / UK 2025) — Tobias. A time-hopping romance with tactile warmth and positive notices.
  • After the Hunt (2025) — Hank. A conversation-starter with deliberate ambiguity; performances singled out even in mixed reviews. 

Filmography Snapshot

YearTitleRoleNotes
2025After the HuntHankVenice world premiere 29 Aug 2025; U.S. limited 10 Oct / wide 17 Oct (Amazon MGM). 
2024 (US) / 2025 (UK)We Live in TimeTobiasTIFF premiere; U.S. 11 Oct 2024 (A24); U.K. 1 Jan 2025 (StudioCanal).
2022Under the Banner of Heaven (TV)Jeb PyreEmmy-nominated performance.
2021tick, tick…BOOM!Jonathan LarsonGolden Globe win; Best Actor Oscar nomination. 
2016Hacksaw RidgeDesmond DossBest Actor Oscar nomination.
2016SilenceRodriguesScorsese drama; spiritually probing. 
2012 / 2014The Amazing Spider-Man 1 & 2Peter ParkerFranchise lead; later, a secret 2021 MCU return.
2010The Social NetworkEduardo SaverinBreakout acclaim. 

Stage & Television Highlights

  • Stage — Angels in America (2017–2018)
    Garfield’s Prior Walter on Broadway remains a towering stage performance and won the 2018 Tony for Best Leading Actor in a Play (official winners list).
  • Television — Under the Banner of Heaven (2022)
    His first Primetime Emmy nomination arrived for this haunting limited series. 

Awards & Recognition

Major AwardWin(s)Notable Nominations
Academy Awards (Oscars)Best Actor: Hacksaw Ridge (2016), tick, tick…BOOM! (2021)
Golden Globes1Best Actor (Film, Musical/Comedy): tick, tick…BOOM! (win)
BAFTA (Television)1Additional BAFTA nominations across film/TV
Tony AwardsBest Leading Actor in a Play (Angels in America, 2018)
EmmysOutstanding Lead Actor (Limited Series): Under the Banner of Heaven (2022)

Receipts: Tony win confirmed on the official site; Wikipedia’s consolidated awards view tracks Oscar/Globe/BAFTA/Emmy tallies and nominations over time.

Summary line: Tony + BAFTA (TV) + Golden Globe winner with two Oscar nominations and one Emmy nomination — genuine cross-medium credibility.

What’s New (2024–2025): Releases, Red Carpets, Headlines

We Live in Time keeps the emotions flowing (in a good way)

  • Release: U.S. on 11 Oct 2024 (A24); U.K. & France on 1 Jan 2025 (StudioCanal).
  • Reception: Many critics highlighted the film’s tenderness and the Garfield–Pugh chemistry; the UK rollout included holiday previews and New Year’s Day bookings.

After the Hunt sparks debate

  • Premieres & Dates: Venice premiere (29 Aug 2025), NYFF Opening Night (26 Sept 2025), U.S. limited 10 Oct / wide 17 Oct (Amazon MGM).
  • Conversation: Luca Guadagnino has stressed the film’s political, discussion-provoking design. Entertainment Weekly’s explainer walks through the ambiguous ending and that final fourth-wall “cut.”

Spider-Man secrecy became the story.

Garfield’s No Way Home return was kept so under wraps he even fibbed to Emma Stone about it (playfully). That cloak-and-dagger approach became a fan-favourite story retold in interviews and coverage.

Personal Background & Identity

Garfield holds dual U.S./U.K. citizenship and has long described himself as feeling at home in both countries. He’s also been candid about faith and doubt: during Silence-era conversations, he called himself an “agnostic pantheist” and “a little bit Jewish”, later speaking about the impact of Ignatian spiritual exercises. 

Lifestyle coverage over the years has placed him in North London near Hampstead Heath, which tracks with interviews where he’s waxed lyrical about the ponds and theatregoing. (As with all residence info for public figures, treat it as historical context rather than live tracking.) 

Net Worth (2025): Reality Check

The most-quoted figure is about US$16 million, an estimate widely repeated by lifestyle outlets (usually citing Celebrity Net Worth). Treat any exact number as a ballpark, not a filing.

Income mix: studio films (with the occasional back-end on bigger titles), prestige TV, stage (higher prestige, lower pay), and brand relationships — e.g., he’s been covered as a Friend of the Brand in watch press. (Again, endorsements evolve.)

Relationships & Personal Life (Publicly Reported)

  • 2025: Multiple outlets linked Garfield to Monica Barbaro. They were photographed at Wimbledon in synchronised Ralph Lauren looks and later spotted arriving hand-in-hand at Venice for the After the Hunt premiere window. Neither has offered on-record confirmation beyond being seen together — consistent with his preference for privacy.
  • Past: His relationship with Emma Stone is well documented; they’ve remained friendly, and the No Way Home secrecy anecdote is now practically modern myth.

Social Media Handles (Official)

Garfield is not active on official personal social media as of 2025. Articles have repeatedly noted he avoids running public accounts; many visible profiles are fan-run. If you see an “official” @AndrewGarfield handle, be sceptical. 

Strengths & Common Critiques

Strengths

  • Emotional transparency. He lets thought and feeling register moment to moment — you can read the weather in his eyes.
  • Cross-medium credibility. Film, prestige TV, and theatre — backed by a Tony, a BAFTA (TV), a Golden Globe, two Oscar nominations, and an Emmy nomination.
  • Risk appetite. He ricochets from tentpoles to intimate dramas, often elevating ensembles with alive, generous work.

Common critiques/challenges

  • Intensity scale. Some viewers feel his emotional amplitude can be “big” for close-up naturalism (very taste-dependent).
  • Spider-Man shadow. The web-slinger fame can drown out smaller achievements; he’s often tasked with re-centering the discourse on craft.
  • Deliberate ambiguity factor. With After the Hunt, many praised the acting while debating the design-choice ambiguity and tone; the ending is engineered to keep conversations going.
Andrew Garfield
“Andrew Garfield’s 2025 career snapshot — new films, quick facts, and award highlights in one clean visual. Save this if you’re planning your watchlist.”

“We Live in Time” — What to Know (2-Minute Brief)

What it is: A nonlinear, time-hopping romance about two people whose lives interlock after a slightly chaotic meet-cute, then deepen into family and bittersweet choices.

Why people love it: Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield have palpable chemistry, and the screenplay balances laughs with lump-in-throat moments, leaving many viewers a bit misty after the credits.

Where to start: Watch the UK trailer, then plan a cosy watch or a cinema trip if it’s re-screening locally.

Proof & dates: TIFF premiere in Sept 2024; U.S. 11 Oct 2024 via A24; U.K./France on 1 Jan 2025 via StudioCanal.

“After the Hunt” — What to Know (2-Minute Brief)

What it is: A campus-set psychological drama starring Julia Roberts, Ayo Edebiri, and Andrew Garfield as colleagues whose lives intersect around a thorny accusation.

Why it’s buzzy: The film avoids easy answers, jumps five years in an epilogue, and ends by breaking the fourth wall — an intentional Guadagnino flourish that invites debate.

Release path: Venice world premiere (29 Aug 2025) → NYFF Opening Night (26 Sept) → U.S. limited 10 Oct → U.S. wide 17 Oct (Amazon MGM). 

Critical talk: Reviews are mixed overall, but performances (Roberts and Garfield included) were frequently singled out; the ethics-lab ambiguity is the point, not a bug.

Comparison: Two Recent Headliners

FeatureWe Live in Time (2024 / UK 2025)After the Hunt (2025)
GenreRomance / DramaPsychological Drama
DirectorJohn CrowleyLuca Guadagnino
Co-StarsFlorence PughJulia Roberts, Ayo Edebiri
Release (UK/US)UK 1 Jan 2025; US 11 Oct 2024US 10 Oct (limited) / 17 Oct (wide); Venice premiere 29 Aug 2025
Critical BuzzChemistry and tenderness praisedPerformances praised; ending debated; fourth-wall final shot
Why WatchA heart-first, time-skipping love story with genuine warmthA “talk-with-friends” movie; morally thorny, discussion-ready

At-a-Glance Awards Timeline

YearProjectMajor Recognition
2008Boy A (TV)BAFTA TV Award (Best Actor)
2010The Social NetworkGlobal breakout
2016Hacksaw RidgeBest Actor Oscar nomination
2018Angels in America (Broadway)Tony Award (Best Leading Actor)
2021tick, tick…BOOM!Best Actor Oscar nomination; Golden Globe win
2022Under the Banner of HeavenFirst Emmy nomination

Extended Bio

Growing up. Andrew Russell Garfield was born in Los Angeles on 20 August 1983, moved to Surrey as a small child, and grew up in Epsom. He did youth theatre, A-level theatre studies, and then three concentrated years at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London. That cocktail — early curiosity plus conservatoire discipline — shows up in his ability to jump from swagger to softness without losing authenticity. 

Early break. His TV film Boy A turned heads and won him a BAFTA TV Award, resetting industry expectations from “promising” to “proven.” 

Global spotlight. David Fincher cast him as Eduardo Saverin in The Social Network. Garfield made Eduardo feel human — loyal, wounded, quietly strategic — in a story moving at broadband speed. That performance opened the door to The Amazing Spider-Man, where he offered a more vulnerable, wryly romantic Peter Parker. Years later, the clandestine No Way Home return (and the ninja-level secrets he kept) gave fans a collective cinema-screen meltdown.

Prestige run. In 2016, he went two for two with Hacksaw Ridge (faith-anchored courage under fire) and Silence (spiritual trial under pressure). On stage, he took on Angels in America — a mammoth marathon of a part — and won the Tony. 

Recent wave. With tick, tick…BOOM! he proved he could carry a musical biopic with verve, taking home a Golden Globe and earning his second Best Actor Oscar nomination. Under the Banner of Heaven followed, bringing his first Emmy nomination. 

Today. Garfield balances films that make people cry (We Live in Time) with films that make people argue (After the Hunt) — all while keeping private life private and social media minimal.

UK-Focused Release Notes

  • We Live in Time: U.K. cinemas from 1 Jan 2025 via StudioCanal (many chains hosted member previews in December). If it’s back for repertory or special screenings, check local listings.
  • After the Hunt: U.S. rollout in Oct 2025 (limited then wide) after Venice/NYFF buzz. U.K. distribution can vary; check your local cinema sites or festival line-ups close to the date.

Frequently Asked Questions

How old is Andrew Garfield in 2025?

He turned 42 on 20 August 2025.

How tall is he?

About 5′10½″ (1.79 m) in industry listings (approximate).

Is Andrew Garfield on Instagram or Twitter/X?

He’s widely reported to avoid official personal accounts; many profiles are fan-run.

Will he return as Spider-Man again?

He appeared in 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home. Future returns are unconfirmed; he’s politely non-committal.

What are his latest films?

We Live in Time (U.S. Oct 2024; U.K. Jan 1, 2025) and After the Hunt (2025).

Conclusion

Andrew Garfield in 2025 is a case study in how to build a cross-Atlantic career with craft, curiosity, and care. From the bruised loyalty of Eduardo in The Social Network, to the steady conviction of Desmond Doss in Hacksaw Ridge, the spiritual wrestling of Silence, the heart-forward musicality of tick, tick…BOOM!, the humane quiet of Under the Banner of Heaven, the romantic ache of We Live in Time, and the morally thorny debate of After the Hunt, he keeps choosing roles that stretch him — and us. Add a Tony, a BAFTA (TV), a Golden Globe, two Oscar nominations, and an Emmy nomination, and you’re looking at one of the most respected transatlantic actors working today. Watch the We Live in Time / After the Hunt one-two punch as a guidepost — it signals where he might be headed next, both with heart and with edge.

Leave a Comment