
Zendaya in “Challengers”
Zendaya is widely celebrated as one of the most striking and influential figures in contemporary entertainment and fashion. Her appeal is a mix of striking natural features, confident presence, versatility, and thoughtful styling that goes beyond trends.
Zendaya’s beauty is often described as timeless, elegant, and multifaceted, drawing comparisons to old Hollywood glamour while feeling modern and inclusive.
And, she also happens to be a ridiculously talented and accomplished actress.
Some careers follow a recognizable path. Zendaya’s does not. She went from Disney Channel sitcom star to one of the most critically respected actresses of her generation in what felt like a single, confident stride, and she made the transition look less like a reinvention and more like an inevitability.
Zendaya spent her early teens in the Disney ecosystem, which tends to produce two kinds of outcomes: a smooth crossover or a slow unraveling. She managed neither, instead taking her time and moving only when the work warranted it. The crossover started in earnest with “Spider-Man: Homecoming” in 2017, where she played MJ with a deadpan wit that stood out in a franchise crowded with personality. She has returned to that role across multiple Marvel entries and holds her own every time. Then came “Dune” in 2021, Denis Villeneuve’s visually stunning adaptation in which she plays Chani, a role that expanded significantly in the 2024 sequel and confirmed that she belongs in the conversation for Hollywood’s most bankable actors. Throw in her turn as a competitive tennis player’s former coach and complicated love interest in “Challengers,” and the range becomes impossible to dismiss.
Outside of acting, Zendaya has become one of the most influential figures in fashion, routinely dominating conversation at major events in a way that goes well beyond red carpet coverage. She works closely with her longtime stylist Law Roach, and their collaboration has produced some of the most talked-about fashion moments of the last decade. It’s a cultural presence that doesn’t feel calculated because it isn’t. We were quite surprised to learn she’s tall at 5′ 10″ as she doesn’t come across that way in many of her roles, but her long, lean, and graceful build photographs exceptionally well and allows her to command space on red carpets.
Iconic Role – Rue Bennett
Rue Bennett arrives in “Euphoria” in the middle of a relapse. She’s sharp, self-aware, funny in that specific way that people use humor to avoid everything important, and already losing a battle she barely has the energy to fight. She is, by her own narration, not a particularly reliable person. She knows it. The audience knows it. And yet you can’t look away.
The character is a 17-year-old recovering addict navigating the chaos of suburban American high school, which sounds like the setup for a hundred lesser shows. What Euphoria does differently, and what Zendaya does differently, is refuse to make the addiction a story beat. It’s not a problem to be solved or a lesson to be learned. It’s a way of being, woven so deeply into Rue’s sense of self that pulling it out would mean excavating the entire person.
Rue’s intelligence makes her situation harder, not easier. She understands what she’s doing to the people who love her. She can articulate it clearly. She simply cannot stop. That gap between knowing and doing is where the character lives, and Zendaya plays it with a precision that is genuinely uncomfortable to watch in the best possible sense.
The relationship with Jules, played by Hunter Schafer, gives the series its emotional spine. It’s a friendship that becomes something more intense and more codependent than either of them has the tools to handle. Rue pours so much of her need for survival into that connection that when it fractures, the consequences cascade through everything. The show is honest about the fact that love, even real love, is not a treatment plan.
There are episodes of “Euphoria” built almost entirely around Zendaya’s performance, and they are some of the most demanding single-actor television work of the last decade. The Season 2 episode in which Rue unravels through a house party and into the street, running, screaming, completely undone, is the kind of scene that appears on awards highlight reels because nothing else can compete with it. Frankly, these episodes are a tough watch due to the realism, but you can’t take your eyes off Zendaya.
She won the Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series at 24, becoming the youngest person to do so. She won it again for Season 2. Both are deserved. Neither fully captures what she actually pulls off across the full run of the show, which is a performance so inhabited it stops feeling like acting and starts feeling like documentation.
Rue Bennett is one of those rare television characters who expands what the medium can do. The fact that she’s played by someone who was promoting a Disney movie a decade ago makes it all the more remarkable.
Interviews and Quotes
Zendaya on The Graham Norton Show
She discussed “Euphoria” and winning the Emmy.