Pedro Pascal
Who Is Pedro Pascal?
Pedro Pascal is a critically acclaimed Chilean-American actor. His full name is José Pedro Balmaceda Pascal. He was born on April 2, 1975, in Santiago, Chile.
His story is not just one of talent. It is one of survival. It is one of perseverance. It is one of a man who waited nearly two decades for his moment — and then seized it with both hands.
He is known for his portrayals of parental figures and has starred in some of the world’s most beloved television series and blockbuster films. His accolades include a SAG Award, in addition to nominations for a Golden Globe Award and four Primetime Emmy Awards. Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2023.
Today, Pedro Pascal is one of Hollywood’s most in-demand stars. Moreover, he is one of the very few actors who simultaneously leads both a Star Wars and a Marvel franchise.
Early Life: A Family That Fled a Dictatorship
Born in Santiago, Chile
Pedro Pascal was born on April 2, 1975, in Santiago, Chile. His father is José Balmaceda Riera, a fertility doctor. His mother was Verónica Pascal Ureta, a child psychologist.
His parents were supporters of Salvador Allende and fled Chile in 1976 with Pedro and his older sister, Javiera, due to the Pinochet dictatorship.
Pedro was only nine months old at the time. He had no choice in the matter. But the courage of his parents would shape everything.
Hiding, Asylum, and a New Beginning
“They came looking for my parents, and so then my parents had to go into hiding for about six months,” Pascal later recalled on the SmartLess podcast in 2023.
His parents eventually sought refuge in the Venezuelan embassy before receiving political asylum in Denmark. The family then settled in the United States. They lived first in San Antonio, Texas. Then, when Pedro was eleven, they relocated to Orange County, California.
Pedro has always been candid about this chapter of his life. Furthermore, he addressed it directly during his Saturday Night Live monologue in 2023. “I was born in Chile, and nine months later my parents fled Pinochet and brought my sister and me to the U.S. They were so brave, and without them I wouldn’t be here in this wonderful country,” he told the audience.
Growing Up Between Two Cultures
His father would take his children to the movies every week, or buy scalped tickets to San Antonio Spurs games. Pedro grew up immersed in American culture. However, he never lost his connection to Chile. By the time he was eight, his family regularly visited Chile to see his 34 cousins.
The move to California proved challenging. He has described those as “really, really rough years” due to bullying. Despite this, his passion for acting only grew stronger.
The Tragic Loss of His Mother
In 1999, his mother, Verónica, passed away by suicide. Following her death, Pedro changed his professional name from Balmaceda to Pascal in her honor.
He has spoken openly about this loss throughout the years. “She was always incredibly supportive, never a stage mom,” he told People in 2020. “I always felt like she knew something that I didn’t. None of my success would be real if it weren’t for her.”
The name Pedro Pascal is therefore not just a stage name. It is a tribute. It is a promise kept to a mother he loved deeply.
Education: From Orange County to New York
Pedro developed his passion for theatre in his youth. He pursued this passion seriously and went on to study at New York University, where he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.
His training at NYU gave him the technical foundation that would eventually power a career spanning three decades.
Career Journey: Nearly Two Decades of Small Roles Before Stardom
The Long Road to Recognition (1996–2013)
Pedro Pascal began his acting career in 1996. However, recognition did not come quickly. For nearly two decades, he took small roles on stage and television.
He appeared in guest roles on shows including Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Good Wife, Graceland, and Homeland. He also built a strong stage career in Los Angeles. His theatre work earned him the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award and the Garland Award for his performance in the play Orphans.
He was building his craft. He was paying his dues. And he was waiting.
The Breakthrough: Oberyn Martell in Game of Thrones (2014)
Then, everything changed.
Pascal’s breakout role came as Oberyn Martell in the fourth season of the HBO fantasy series Game of Thrones in 2014.
The Red Viper of Dorne became an instant fan favourite. His fearless performance, combining charisma, menace, and tragedy, introduced Pedro Pascal to a worldwide audience in a single season. The character’s shocking end in the show only deepened the emotional impact of the performance.
Narcos: Javier Peña (2015–2017)
Success followed success. He then starred as Javier Peña in the Netflix crime series Narcos from 2015 to 2017.
His portrayal of the DEA agent hunting Pablo Escobar was gritty, nuanced, and deeply human. Furthermore, it demonstrated that his Game of Thrones performance was no fluke. Pedro Pascal was here to stay.
Film Career Begins to Expand (2016–2022)
After Narcos, Pascal expanded steadily into film. His credits during this period include The Great Wall (2016), Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017), The Equalizer 2 (2018), and Triple Frontier (2019) alongside longtime friend Oscar Isaac.
He also appeared in Wonder Woman 1984 (2020), We Can Be Heroes (2020), and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent (2022) alongside Nicolas Cage.
Additionally, he made his Broadway debut in 2019, playing Edmund in a critically praised production of King Lear.
The Mandalorian: Global Superstar (2019–2023)
In 2019, Pedro Pascal stepped into the role that would make him a household name across the world.
He began starring as Din Djarin in The Mandalorian, the first live-action Star Wars television series, a role that brought him international recognition.
The show was a cultural phenomenon. Pedro’s portrayal of the armoured bounty hunter — a lone father figure protecting a small, mysterious child — resonated with audiences worldwide. His ability to convey enormous emotion through a helmet that never came off became the defining achievement of the show’s early seasons.
The Last of Us: Joel Miller (2023–2025)
If The Mandalorian made Pedro Pascal a star, The Last of Us elevated him to a different level entirely.
In 2023, he starred as Joel Miller in HBO’s post-apocalyptic drama series The Last of Us, earning widespread critical acclaim. His portrayal of a grief-stricken father figure protecting a young girl named Ellie across a post-apocalyptic America was hailed as one of the finest television performances in recent memory.
His performance as Joel in The Last of Us Season 1 earned him a SAG Award in 2024. He was also nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series and a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Television Drama Series.
Season 2 premiered on April 13, 2025. His portrayal of Joel Miller in The Last of Us Season 2 earned him another Emmy nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.
SNL, Time 100, and Cultural Ubiquity (2023)
In 2023, Pascal hosted Saturday Night Live, appeared in Strange Way of Life, narrated Patagonia: Life on the Edge of the World, and was named to Time’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world.
He also became the subject of multiple beloved internet memes. He is the star of viral moments including “Pedro Pascal Eating a Sandwich” and “Pedro Pascal Leaning Forward.” This warmth and accessibility online reflects a genuine quality in the man himself — a superstar who feels approachable.
Gladiator II and Voice Acting (2024)
In 2024, Pascal played Roman general Acacius in Ridley Scott’s Gladiator II. He also voiced the character Fink in the critically adored animated film The Wild Robot (2024).
Both projects demonstrated his range. He could command a Roman arena. He could also voice an animated villain in a children’s film with equal conviction.
2025: The Fantastic Four, Eddington, and Materialists
2025 was perhaps Pedro Pascal’s busiest year yet.
In 2025, he appeared in Materialists, Eddington, and debuted as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic in The Fantastic Four: First Steps.
In Materialists, directed by Celine Song (Past Lives), he starred opposite Dakota Johnson and Chris Evans in a romantic comedy centred on a love triangle. In Eddington, directed by Ari Aster (Hereditary, Midsommar), he played a liberal mayor in New Mexico at odds with a conservative sheriff played by Joaquin Phoenix. The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.
Most significantly, he made his MCU debut as Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic in The Fantastic Four: First Steps, co-starring Vanessa Kirby as Sue Storm/Invisible Woman, Ebon Moss-Bachrach as Ben Grimm/The Thing, and Joseph Quinn as Johnny Storm/The Human Torch.
The film became one of the top 10 highest-grossing films of 2025 globally.
2026 and Beyond: The Biggest Year in Hollywood History?
Pedro Pascal’s 2026 slate is unlike anything in modern Hollywood.
The Mandalorian & Grogu (May 2026)
Pedro Pascal returns to the Star Wars universe in The Mandalorian & Grogu, the franchise’s first theatrical movie since 2019’s The Rise of Skywalker, arriving in theatres on May 22, 2026. He reprises his role as Din Djarin, the Mandalorian bounty hunter and surrogate father to the beloved Grogu.
Avengers: Doomsday (December 2026)
Pascal is also set to appear in Avengers: Doomsday (December 2026), which will introduce Robert Downey Jr.‘s Doctor Doom villain. As Reed Richards — Doctor Doom’s greatest nemesis — Pedro Pascal is expected to have a significant role.
Combining The Mandalorian & Grogu with Avengers: Doomsday, Pascal is set to star in both a Star Wars and a Marvel movie in 2026 — which could make him the biggest movie star on the planet.
Future Projects: Avengers: Secret Wars, Behemoth!, and Broadway
He is set to reprise his role as Reed Richards in Avengers: Secret Wars in 2027. He is also reportedly in talks to star in Behemoth! from filmmaker Tony Gilroy (Andor, Michael Clayton).
Additionally, he is reportedly set to star alongside Sarah Paulson in a 2027 Broadway revival of Edward Albee’s The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?, directed by James Lapine.
Complete Filmography Highlights
| Year | Title | Role | Platform/Studio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Game of Thrones (S4) | Oberyn Martell | HBO |
| 2015–2017 | Narcos | Javier Peña | Netflix |
| 2016 | The Great Wall | Commander Tovar | Universal |
| 2017 | Kingsman: The Golden Circle | Agent Whiskey | 20th Century Fox |
| 2018 | The Equalizer 2 | Dave York | Sony |
| 2019 | Triple Frontier | Francisco Morales | Netflix |
| 2019–2023 | The Mandalorian | Din Djarin | Disney+ |
| 2019 | King Lear (Broadway) | Edmund | Broadway |
| 2020 | Wonder Woman 1984 | Maxwell Lord | Warner Bros. |
| 2022 | The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent | Himself | Lionsgate |
| 2023–2025 | The Last of Us | Joel Miller | HBO |
| 2023 | Strange Way of Life | Silva | Pedro Almodóvar |
| 2024 | Gladiator II | General Acacius | Paramount |
| 2024 | The Wild Robot | Fink (voice) | DreamWorks |
| 2025 | The Fantastic Four: First Steps | Reed Richards | Marvel/Disney |
| 2025 | Eddington | Ted Garcia | A24 |
| 2025 | Materialists | Harry | A24 |
| 2026 | The Mandalorian & Grogu | Din Djarin | Lucasfilm/Disney |
| 2026 | Avengers: Doomsday | Reed Richards | Marvel/Disney |
| 2027 | Avengers: Secret Wars | Reed Richards | Marvel/Disney |
Awards and Nominations
| Year | Award | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | SAG Award | Outstanding Male Actor — Drama Series (The Last of Us) | Won |
| 2024 | People’s Choice Award | Male TV Star of the Year | Won |
| 2025 | Critics’ Choice Super Award | Best Actor — Horror Series (The Last of Us) | Won |
| 2023 | Primetime Emmy Award | Outstanding Lead Actor — Drama Series (The Last of Us S1) | Nominated |
| 2025 | Primetime Emmy Award | Outstanding Lead Actor — Drama Series (The Last of Us S2) | Nominated |
| 2024 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actor — TV Drama Series (The Last of Us) | Nominated |
| — | LA Drama Critics Circle Award | Theatre (Orphans) | Won |
| — | Garland Award | Theatre (Orphans) | Won |
Family: The Pascals of Hollywood
Siblings
Pedro Pascal comes from a close-knit family of four children.
His older sister, Javiera Balmaceda Pascal, is an executive at Amazon Studios, heading content for Latin America, Canada, and Australia. His younger brother, Nicolás Balmaceda Pascal, is pursuing a career in pediatric neurology. His younger sister, Lux Pascal, is an actress and a transgender activist. Pascal has been a vocal and supportive public ally of Lux since she publicly came out as transgender.
Famous Family Connections
Pedro Pascal is related to the late Chilean president Salvador Allende on his mother’s side. His relatives include Laura Allende (great-aunt) and Andrés Pascal Allende (second cousin). His family belongs to Chile’s Castilian-Basque aristocracy on his father’s side.
Personal Life: Private, Present, and Purposeful
Pedro Pascal has kept his romantic life largely private throughout his career. He has no confirmed public relationships.
What he does speak openly about is his values. His experience as a child refugee shapes his perspective on immigration, community, and belonging. He has spoken publicly and compassionately about LGBTQ+ rights in support of his sister Lux.
He is a long-time friend with Oscar Isaac — a relationship built during their Triple Frontier collaboration and rooted in their shared Latin American heritage and artistic sensibility.
He is known for his warmth on set, his self-deprecating humour on social media, and an ability to make every co-star feel seen. As his The Last of Us co-star, Bella Ramsey noted warmly: “I loved it when you came back to set. I missed you.”