
Jodie Marie Comer (born March 11, 1993) is an English actress of screen and stage. She began her career in an episode of The Royal Today in 2008. Comer gained recognition for appearing in the series My Mad Fat Diary (2013–2015), with Sharon Rooney, Claire Rushbrook, Ian Hart, Dan Cohen, and Nico Mirallegro; and Doctor Foster (2015–2017), with Suranne Jones, Bertie Carvel, Tom Taylor, Adam James, Victoria Hamilton, and Robert Pugh; and starred in the drama miniseries Thirteen (2016), with Aneurin Barnard, Valene Kane, and Richard Rankin.

She won a BAFTA Television Award and Primetime Emmy Award for her role in the BBC America spy thriller series Killing Eve (2018-2022), with Sandra Oh, Fiona Shaw, Darren Boyd, Owen McDonnell, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, David Haig, Kim Bodnia, Sean Delaney, Nina Sosanya, Edward Bluemel, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, Adrian Scarborough, Adeel Akhtar, and various others. She won a second BAFTA Television Award for the TV movie Help (2021), with Stephen Graham, Hart, Sue Johnston, Lesley Sharp, Angela Griffin, David Hayman, and Cathy Tyson.

Other TV movies and miniseries include Remember Me (2013), with Michael Palin and Mark Addy; Lady Chatterley’s Lover (2015), with Holliday Grainger, Richard Madden, and James Norton; Rillington Place (2016), with Tim Roth, Samantha Morton, and Nico Mirallegro; and The White Princess (2017), with Rebecca Benson, Jacob Collins-Levy, Kenneth Cranham, Essie Davis, Rossy de Palma, Richard Dillane, Anthony Flanagan, Patrick Gibson, Caroline Goodall, Amy Manson, Adrian Rawlins, Vincent Regan, Suki Waterhouse, Joanne Whalley, Andrew Whipp, and Michelle Fairley.

She made her film debut in Mark Gill’s England Is Mine (2017), with Jack Lowden Jessica Brown Findlay, and Laurie Kynaston; followed by a cameo in J.J. Abrams’s Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), with Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Anthony Daniels, Naomi Ackie, Domhnall Gleeson, Richard E. Grant, Lupita Nyong’o, Keri Russell, Joonas Suotamo, Kelly Marie Tran, Ian McDiarmid, and Billy Dee Williams.

Films in the 2020s include Sean Levy’s Free Guy (2021), with Ryan Reynolds, Lil Rel Howery, Utkarsh Ambudkar, Joe Keery, and Taika Waititi; Ridley Scott’s The Last Duel (2021), with Matt Damon, Driver, and Ben Affleck; Jeff Nichols’s The Bikeriders (2023), with Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, Michael Shannon, Mike Faist, Boyd Holbrook, Damon Herriman, Beau Knapp, Emory Cohen, Karl Glusman, Toby Wallace, and Norman Reedus; Mahalia Belo’s The End Where We Start From (2023), with Benedict Cumberbatch, Katherine Waterston, and Mark Strong; and Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later (2025), with Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes.
Each review will be linked to the title below.
(*seen originally in theaters)
(**seen rereleased in theaters)
- In T’Vic (2013) – directed by Brady Hood – short
- Remember Me (2014) – directed by Ashley Pearce – miniseries
- Lady Chatterley’s Lover (2015) – directed by Jed Mercurio – TV movie
- Thirteen (2016) – directed by Vanessa Caswill & China Moo-Young – miniseries
- Rillington Place (2016) – directed by Craig Viveiros – miniseries
- The White Princess (2017) – directed by Jamie Payne & Alex Kalymnios – miniseries
- England Is Mine (2017) – directed by Mark Gill
- Either Way (2019) – directed by Benn Northover – short
- Star Wars: Episode IX -The Rise of Skywalker (2019)* – directed series J.J. Abrams – cameo
- Free Guy (2021)* – directed by Shawn Levy
- The Last Duel (2021) – directed by Ridley Scott
- Help (2021) – directed by Marc Munden – TV movie
- National Theatre Live: Prima Facie (2022) – directed by Justin Martin
- The Bikeriders (2023) – directed by Jeff Nichols
- The End We Start From (2023) – directed by Mahalia Belo – also executive producer
- 28 Years Later (2025) – directed by Danny Boyle
- The Last Disturbance of Madeline Hynde (202-) – directed by Kenneth Branagh
- The Death of Robin Hood (202-) directed by Michael Sarnoski
