Before she was the telekinetic, nose-bleeding, Eggo-loving queen of Hawkins, Indiana, Millie Bobby Brown was just a bright-eyed girl with a British accent and dreams bigger than her tiny shoes. What started as a childhood passion quickly turned into one of the most talked-about glow-ups in Hollywood.
2013–2015: Pre-Stranger Things, Pre-Fame, Pure Talent
Millie was born in 2004 in Marbella, Spain, and yes—she speaks fluent Spanish. (Already cooler than most of us.) Her family later moved to Bournemouth, England, before making the pilgrimage to Hollywood, where dreams go to be crushed or ignited.
She started acting in guest roles around 2013. You might’ve blinked and missed her on Once Upon a Time in Wonderland or NCIS, but the talent was undeniable. Her breakout moment was intriguing but quiet. That is, until…


2016: Eleven Arrives (and So Does Stardom)
Millie was 12 when Stranger Things exploded onto Netflix and blew up faster than a Demogorgon with a grudge. Shaved head? Check. Blank stare? Check. Mysterious powers and monosyllabic lines that would become cultural catchphrases? Absolutely.


Suddenly, the world couldn’t stop talking about this mysterious British girl who could act with just her eyes and an occasional “Mike.” She was nominated for an Emmy at 13, which most people don’t even achieve with a fully grown brain.
But behind the fame was a kid navigating insane media attention, internet scrutiny, and growing up… all while being styled in ‘80s jumpers.

2017: Red Carpets, Roles, and Reality Checks
At 13, Millie was already a red carpet staple—serving fashion moments that screamed “Hollywood It-Girl in Training.” She also bagged her first modeling deal with IMG Models, proving she wasn’t just a one-hit Netflix wonder.

This year was also her first major awards circuit. Picture it: a teenager in custom Calvin Klein gowns rubbing elbows with Meryl Streep. No pressure!
But things weren’t all sparkles and sequins. Millie began facing the very adult reality of being hyper-analyzed online. Every look, every expression, every outfit—dissected. It’s the downside of child stardom: everyone’s watching, even when they shouldn’t be.


2018: Power Moves & Puberty
Fourteen, rich, and already running the show. In 2018, Millie became the youngest person ever to be appointed a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. She was also ranked among Time magazine’s 100 most influential people. You know, just standard teen stuff.



She began to speak out against bullying, which she herself had experienced both before and after fame. The trolls? Ruthless. But Millie? Resilient. She stayed grounded, even as her career skyrocketed.
Also worth noting—this was peak puberty. The days of shaved heads were long gone. Hair: grown. Makeup game: strong. Style: blossoming. She wasn’t just Eleven anymore. She was Millie Bobby Brown.


2019: Business Brains and Movie Star Ambitions
This was the year Millie went full mogul. She founded Florence by Mills, a beauty and skincare brand aimed at Gen Z and entirely vegan and cruelty-free. (Because being an actress, activist, and model clearly wasn’t enough.)

She also made her feature film debut in Godzilla: King of the Monsters, which marked her arrival in Big Budget Hollywood. And despite the overwhelming nature of press tours, Millie held her own next to fire-breathing lizards and industry legends.
Off-screen, though, the struggle was real. The media’s obsession with her “growing up too fast” became a tabloid trend, and fans weren’t always kind. She clapped back—not with drama, but with dignity.


2020: The Year of Chaos and Control
Ah yes, the global pandemic. While the rest of us were learning how to make banana bread and cry into sourdough starters, Millie was starring in Enola Holmes. A hit. A triumph. And guess what? She co-produced it.
At just 16.

That’s right—Millie wasn’t just learning lines; she was calling the shots behind the scenes. Enola was witty, fierce, and clever. Sound familiar?
Also, let’s not forget that 2020 was a rough year emotionally. Isolation, anxiety, the general pressure of being a teenager magnified by fame. But Millie spoke candidly about mental health, normalizing vulnerability and proving that even icons struggle sometimes.


2021–2022: Reclaiming Her Narrative
At 17 and 18, Millie finally started fighting back publicly. She began setting clearer boundaries with the media, actively controlling what parts of her life were shared and what wasn’t. And who could blame her?
This was also when she went Instagram official with boyfriend Jake Bongiovi—yes, the son of Jon Bon Jovi. Power couple alert. The internet swooned, and Millie looked happier than ever.


Career-wise, she continued killing it. The sequel to Enola Holmes was greenlit, Stranger Things season 4 was in production hell (thanks, COVID), and she dabbled more in producing and activism. We love a multifaceted queen.

