What is Odessa A’zion’s Net Worth?
Odessa A’zion is an American actress who has a net worth of $1 million.
ODessa A’zion first gained wider attention with roles on the CBS sitcom “Fam” and the Netflix teen drama “Grand Army,” then moved into film with projects including “Hellraiser,” “The Inhabitant,” “Sitting in Bars with Cake,” “Fresh Kills,” and “Until Dawn.” A member of a Hollywood family that includes her mother, actress, writer, and producer Pamela Adlon, Odessa has worked to build a career on her own terms, often choosing roles that emphasize intensity, emotional volatility, humor, and a slightly offbeat screen presence. Her profile rose further through the HBO comedy “I Love LA” and the A24 film “Marty Supreme,” which positioned her as one of the more interesting young actresses of her generation. Rather than following a conventional teen-star path, A’zion has leaned into messy, complicated, unpredictable characters across streaming drama, horror, indie film, and comedy.
Early Life
Odessa Zion Segall Adlon was born on June 17, 2000, in Los Angeles, California. She is the daughter of actress, writer, and producer Pamela Adlon and German writer, producer, and director Felix O. Adlon. Her sisters, Gideon Adlon and Valentine “Rocky” Adlon, are also actors. Her paternal grandfather was German filmmaker Percy Adlon, best known for directing “Bagdad Cafe.”
Growing up in Los Angeles, A’zion was surrounded by the entertainment business from an early age, but she later shortened her professional name from Odessa Adlon to Odessa A’zion. The change helped separate her public identity from her family name and gave her a more distinctive screen credit.
Television Breakthrough
A’zion began landing television roles as a teenager. One of her earliest credits came on “Nashville,” where she appeared in a recurring role as Liv. She later appeared in episodes of shows including “Better Things,” the FX series created by and starring her mother Pamela Adlon.
Her first major series-regular role came in 2019 on the CBS sitcom “Fam.” A’zion played Shannon, a teenage half-sister who moves in with her older sister and disrupts her carefully ordered life. The show lasted one season, but it gave A’zion her first broad network-TV exposure.
In 2020, she had a more dramatic breakthrough as Joey Del Marco on Netflix’s “Grand Army.” The series followed students at a Brooklyn public high school and dealt with class, race, sexuality, trauma, and adolescence. A’zion’s performance as Joey, a confident and socially powerful student whose life changes after a traumatic assault, became one of the show’s central storylines. Although “Grand Army” was canceled after one season, it helped establish her as a young actress capable of carrying emotionally heavy material.
(Photo by James McCauley/Variety via Getty Images)
Film Career
A’zion moved steadily into film after “Grand Army.” She appeared in “Mark, Mary & Some Other People” and “Supercool,” then starred in the 2022 horror film “Hellraiser,” a reboot of the franchise based on Clive Barker’s work. In the film, she played Riley, a young woman whose addiction and family struggles draw her into the world of the puzzle box and the Cenobites. The role introduced her to horror fans and gave her one of her first major film leads.
She continued in the genre with “The Inhabitant,” a horror-thriller built around the legend of Lizzie Borden. In 2023, A’zion appeared opposite Yara Shahidi in the Prime Video drama “Sitting in Bars with Cake,” playing Corinne, a young woman whose friendship and illness shape the film’s emotional core.
Her later film work included “Fresh Kills,” written and directed by Jennifer Esposito, and “Until Dawn,” based on the popular horror video game. Those roles reinforced her connection to genre projects and independent character-driven stories.
“I Love LA” and “Marty Supreme”
A’zion’s profile rose again with the HBO comedy “I Love LA,” created by and starring Rachel Sennott. The series gave A’zion a sharper comic platform and placed her in a contemporary ensemble built around friendship, ambition, social media, and young-adult life in Los Angeles.
She also appeared in “Marty Supreme,” the A24 sports drama directed by Josh Safdie and starring Timothée Chalamet. The role placed her in one of the more high-profile film projects of her career and helped push her from familiar young streaming actress into a more closely watched Hollywood name.
Public Image and Style
A’zion has developed a public image that is more candid and unconventional than highly polished. She is known for her tattoos, curly hair, personal style, and unfiltered interviews. She has also spoken about wanting to work with distinctive directors and take roles that feel emotionally real rather than overly controlled.
That looseness is part of her appeal. A’zion often plays characters who are funny, chaotic, wounded, or hard to categorize. Whether in teen drama, horror, indie film, or comedy, she tends to bring a naturalistic quality that makes her characters feel less manufactured than many young Hollywood archetypes.
Personal Life
A’zion comes from a creative family but has increasingly built a career independent of that connection. Her sister Gideon Adlon is also an established actress, with roles in “Blockers,” “The Society,” and “The Craft: Legacy.” Her mother, Pamela Adlon, is best known for “Better Things,” “Californication,” “Louie,” and as the voice of Bobby Hill on “King of the Hill.”
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