Emma Charlotte Duerre Watson was born on April 15, 1990, in Paris, France, to Chris Watson, a barrister, and Jacqueline Luesby, also a lawyer. Her parents divorced when she was five, and she was primarily raised by her mother in Oxford, England. She attended Dragon School in Oxford and later Headington School, while attending the Oxford branch of Stagecoach Theatre Arts on weekends from age six. When casting director Janet Hirsch's daughter mentioned that her drama teacher was exceptional at finding child actors, the search that eventually produced the core Harry Potter cast found Emma Watson — already at Stagecoach — and cast her as Hermione Granger at age nine. She had no prior professional film experience. The role would consume the next decade of her life.
Emma Watson's portrayal of Hermione Granger across all eight Harry Potter films (2001-2011) is one of the most significant child-to-adult acting journeys in cinema history. She began as a nine-year-old and ended as a twenty-one-year-old, and the character grew with her in ways that were both planned and organic. Hermione became one of the defining fictional role models of a generation — the brilliant, principled, occasionally insufferable rule-follower who turns out to be right about most things and is prepared to face genuine danger in service of what she believes — and Watson's embodiment of the character was so complete that the two remain inseparable in public consciousness. She managed extraordinary public scrutiny throughout her teen years with a composure that was part deliberate cultivation and part genuine temperament, and she became increasingly vocal about her feminist commitments as she aged into adulthood.
Watson enrolled at Brown University in 2009, taking a semester off during production of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — an act of deliberate self-differentiation that she described as a need to develop an identity independent of the character who had defined her entire public existence. She graduated with a degree in English Literature in 2014 — returning for her graduation ceremony despite having already been working professionally for years — and continued to take roles that demonstrated range beyond the Hermione template: the damaged Sam in The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012), Nicki in Sofia Coppola's The Bling Ring (2013), Belle in Disney's Beauty and the Beast (2017). She was appointed a UN Women Goodwill Ambassador in 2014 and launched the HeForShe campaign, which invited men to commit to gender equality — a speech that she delivered at the UN General Assembly with remarkable composure and earned significant global attention.
Watson stepped back significantly from acting in the late 2010s, describing a need for personal space and questioning whether the industry as a whole was the right fit for her longer-term. She has been involved in sustainable fashion advocacy, co-founded an ethical fashion platform, studied feminist theory formally, and remained engaged with environmental and gender equity issues. Her public persona is one of the most carefully considered in contemporary celebrity: she clearly thinks seriously about the relationship between her platform and her responsibilities, about the tension between the commercial demands of celebrity and the social commitments she wants to honor, and about the difficulty of maintaining genuine intellectual and personal integrity in an industry structured around image rather than substance. She announced a partial return to acting beginning with the 2025 release of Mira, indicating that her relationship with the profession is ongoing rather than concluded.