What if your biggest fan at school could vanish into thin air… and use it to steal your spot as the queen of creeps? 👻🖤
Wednesday watchers, meet Evie Templeton—the 16-year-old breakout sensation who’s turning heads as Agnes DeMille, Nevermore’s pint-sized stalker with invisibility powers that’s got Enid shaking and Wednesday side-eyeing her shadow. From nailing a Tim Burton audition that “shaped the character” to channeling silent-film spookiness in zombie brawls, Evie’s journey from Barbados stage kid to Netflix nightmare fuel is pure Addams magic. But here’s the eerie twist: her off-screen charm has Jenna and Emma dubbing her “little sis”—will Agnes flip from foe to family in Season 3?
Fans are obsessed—dive into her audition secrets, horror roots, and why she’s the goth girl next door stealing the show. You won’t want to blink… Unlock Evie’s hidden spotlight now 🕸️
Netflix’s Wednesday has a knack for unearthing talent that sticks like cobwebs in a crypt, and Season 2—split into two razor-edged parts that dropped like a guillotine in August and early September—proved no exception. Amid the zombie hordes, cult cash grabs, and werewolf woes, one newcomer clawed her way into the spotlight: Evie Templeton as Agnes DeMille, the red-pigtailed freshman with a vanishing act and a vendetta that turns Nevermore’s halls into a hall of mirrors. At just 16, the Barbados-born Brit has gone from stage kid in London musicals to the pint-sized terror who’s got fans chanting her name louder than Wednesday’s cello solos. With her eerie curtsies, off-kilter stares, and a voice like a porcelain doll on the fritz, Templeton’s Agnes isn’t just a stalker—she’s the uninvited guest who crashes the Addams party and demands a seat at the table. But who is the actress behind the invisibility? From her starstruck audition with Tim Burton to her horror-honed chops, here’s the full, fog-shrouded dossier on the girl who’s making Wednesday‘s world a little weirder.
Templeton’s origin story reads like a script from one of her own gothic gigs: born December 31, 2008, in Barbados to a family that shuffled her to London early on, where the theater bug bit hard. By age 10, she was treading West End boards in Les MisĂ©rables and the UK tour of Nativity!, her big eyes and bigger presence landing her in the Pleasure Island troupe for Disney’s 2022 live-action Pinocchio. “I was the kid who built blanket forts as guillotines,” she quipped in a recent Teen Vogue sit-down, hinting at the macabre streak that would later define her career. But it was 2023’s folk-horror Lord of Misrule—where she played Grace Holland, a girl unraveling in a rural nightmare opposite Tuppence Middleton—that marked her as a scream queen in waiting. Critics at Variety called her “unsettlingly poised,” a far cry from the ensemble filler she’d been typecast as before. Voice work followed suit: voicing Laura in Konami’s Silent Hill 2 remake, a gig she’ll reprise in the upcoming Return to Silent Hill film. “Horror’s my comfort zone,” Templeton told Popternative last week. “It’s where the real monsters hide—in plain sight.”
That poise collided with destiny in early 2024, when casting calls for Wednesday Season 2 went out like ravens from a belfry. The brief? A fresh-faced outcast to idolize—and infiltrate—Wednesday Addams’ orbit, inspired by the Season 1 lore of Crackstone’s defeat turning our braids-wearing anti-hero into campus legend. Showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, fresh off expanding the Addams universe with cults and cryptids, wanted someone who could nail the “creepy cute” tightrope: obsessive enough to unsettle, vulnerable enough to evolve. Templeton, then 15 and knee-deep in Silent Hill sessions, caught wind through her agent and dove in with a self-tape. Sides were coded—Netflix’s paranoia playbook—but the vibe screamed Burton: deadpan delivery, stylized menace, and a gaze that could curdle milk.
She nailed the first round, channeling The Shining‘s twin girls for that dollhouse dread. An in-person callback followed in London, where she improvised a “shadow puppet” routine using her emerging invisibility powers (practical effects wizardry, per production notes). But the real jolt came post-Christmas: a Zoom with the holy trinity—Burton, Gough, and Millar. “They just talked about me as a person, my take on Agnes, and we built her together,” Templeton recalled in Netflix’s Tudum feature. Burton, scouting from his Beetlejuice Beetlejuice wrap, zeroed in instantly. “When I first saw her, it was very clear she was the one,” he told Entertainment Weekly. “Evie’s got this weird, silent-movie actress quality—like a young Louise Brooks in a funhouse mirror. Her casting shaped Agnes; we leaned into that ethereal unease.” Millar echoed the vibe: “She snapped right into our world.” By May 2024, Templeton was locked as a series regular, announced alongside heavy-hitters like Steve Buscemi and Billie Piper. Production kicked off in Romania that summer, but not before a chemistry read that sealed the deal: Templeton facing off with Jenna Ortega and Emma Myers in a mock Prank Day ambush. “It felt surreal,” she said. “Jenna’s eyes? Intimidating genius. Emma’s energy? Pure sunshine chaos.” Ortega dubbed her “Young Evie” on the spot; Myers became the “big sis” dishing post-scene pep talks. “Evie’s a pro,” Myers gushed to People. “She brings this quiet storm—watch out, Nevermore.”
On set, Templeton’s transformation was Burton-esque alchemy. She built a mood board of black lace, taxidermy, and Edward Gorey sketches to slip into Agnes’ skin—a 13-year-old (in-show) invisible girl whose powers stem from a family curse tied to Nevermore’s founding. Agnes debuts in Episode 2 of Part 1, slinking into the dining hall with fire-engine pigtails (a deliberate Wednesday riff) and a notebook scrawled with Addams fanfic. “Happy Prank Day, Wednesday,” she chirps, vanishing mid-sentence to swipe Enid’s spot at the table. It’s stalker 101 with supernatural flair: Agnes turns invisible to eavesdrop on Wednesday’s visions, mimics her braids in a botched dye job, and escalates to near-fatal pranks, like rigging a chandelier drop on Enid during the gala. “Don’t bother, pup,” she sneers in one gut-punch scene, claws out as a temporary wolf illusion (prosthetics gold). Templeton infused her own quirks—a fluttering curtsy borrowed from Les Mis bows, a stylized whisper echoing Silent Hill‘s ghosts. Burton directed her debut with tweaks: “Stare longer, respond slower—let the silence unsettle.” The result? A villain who’s equal parts pest and pathos, her insecurity bubbling under the obsession. “Agnes slips into shadows because she feels invisible,” Templeton explained. “I connected to that hunger for approval—it’s universal, even for creeps.”
Viewers ate it up. Part 1’s August 6 drop clocked 250 million hours in week one (edging Season 1’s record), but Templeton’s 22 minutes across five episodes sparked a fandom frenzy. X lit up with #AgnesDeMille at 1.8 million impressions, edits syncing her vanishes to Billie Eilish drops. Reddit’s r/Wednesday crowned her “scene-stealer supreme,” with threads dissecting her Enid rivalry as “Wenclair’s evil twin.” TikTok’s #YoungEvie tag? 900 million views, fan cams of her curtsy going viral faster than a Hyde rampage. Critics piled on: The Hollywood Reporter hailed her “eerie poise that out-Burtons Burton,” while Forbes pegged Agnes as the “glue” binding Season 2’s splintered plots—from principal Barry Dort’s (Buscemi) scam to Isadora Capri’s (Piper) wolf whispers. Part 2, dropping September 3, flips the script: Agnes evolves from antagonist to uneasy ally, her invisibility key to infiltrating the Morning Song cult’s inner sanctum. A mid-season body-swap twist (no spoilers) has her trapped in Wednesday’s mind, forcing a psychic heart-to-heart. “She’s now part of Nevermore’s firmament,” Millar teased post-finale. Leaks hint at Season 3 teases: Agnes tagging along on the Enid rescue, her powers clashing with Xavier’s sketches.
Off-screen, Templeton’s as grounded as Agnes is unhinged. At Tring Park School for the Performing Arts—alum factory for Daisy Ridley and Lily James—she juggles GCSEs with sister Jessica, a pro ballerina who’s her “first audience.” Barbados roots linger: she craves flying fish and credits island storytelling for her narrative flair. Horror remains her jam—Lord of Misrule director William Brent Bell called her “a natural chiller”—but Wednesday unlocked rom-com potential; whispers of a Disney+ lead have agents buzzing. Fashion’s calling too: She hit London Fashion Week in Richard Quinn couture last weekend, turning heads in lace that screamed Agnes chic. “Embrace your weird,” she posted on Insta, a mantra echoing Burton’s ethos. No dating scandals or diva dips—just a kid who binges The Office (early seasons, randomized) to unwind and dreams of directing her own Addams spin-off.
The buzz isn’t dying. Wednesday‘s Season 2 finale—chandelier crashes, zombie howls, and a Fester sidecar exit—left Agnes’ arc dangling like a noose, primed for Ophelia’s family feud. Templeton’s Emmy whispers? Early, but Variety‘s young performers list has her slotted. As Netflix eyes a 2027 Season 3 greenlight, one thing’s clear: Evie Templeton’s no flash in the fog. She’s the shadow that sticks, the stalker who becomes staple. In a series built on misfits, she’s the perfect fit—creepy, captivating, and climbing. Nevermore’s got a new ghost, and she’s here to haunt.