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Megan Fox
Megan Fox
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Megan Denise Fox[2] (born May 16, 1986) is an American actress. She made her acting debut in the family film Holiday in the Sun (2001), which was followed by numerous supporting roles in film and television, such as the teen musical comedy Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004), as well as a starring role in the ABC sitcom Hope & Faith (2004–2006). Her breakout role was as Mikaela Banes in the blockbuster action film Transformers (2007), which she reprised in its sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009).

Key Information

Fox also portrayed the titular character in the horror comedy Jennifer's Body (2009), starred as April O'Neil in the superhero action film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014) and its sequel Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2016), and appeared in the fifth and sixth seasons of the Fox sitcom New Girl (2016–2017).

Described as a sex symbol, Fox has made appearances in numerous magazines such as Maxim, Rolling Stone, and FHM.[3][4] She has received two Scream Awards and four Teen Choice Awards.

Early life

[edit]

Megan Denise Fox was born on May 16, 1986,[2][5] in Oak Ridge, Tennessee,[6][7] to parents Gloria Darlene (née Cisson) and Franklin Thomas Fox.[8] She spent her early childhood in nearby Rockwood.[9] Fox's father, a parole officer, and her mother divorced when Fox was three years old.[6] Her mother later remarried, and Fox and her sister[10] were raised by her mother and her stepfather, Tony Tonachio.[11][12][13] She was raised "very strictly Pentecostal," but later attended Catholic school for 12 years.[14][15] She said that her parents were "very strict" and that she was not allowed to have a boyfriend[16] or invite friends to her house.[10] Fox described her stepfather as being "verbally, mentally, and emotionally abusive" until his death.[17] She revealed in an interview that she developed an eating disorder in her adolescence and struggled with manic depression, the latter of which "[ran] in my family, so there was definitely some wrestling with chemical imbalance going on."[18] Fox lived with her mother until she made enough money to support herself.[16]

Fox began her training in dance and drama at age five, in Kingston, Tennessee.[19] She attended a dance class at the community center there and was involved in Kingston Elementary School's chorus and the Kingston Clippers swim team. At age 10, after moving to St. Petersburg, Florida, Fox continued her training.[20][21] When she was 13 years old, Fox began modeling after winning several awards at the 1999 American Modeling and Talent Convention in Hilton Head, South Carolina.[22] Fox attended high school at Morningside Academy in Port St. Lucie[23] until her junior year when she attended St. Lucie West Centennial High School.[24] When she was 17, she tested out of school via correspondence to move to Los Angeles, California.[10][16]

Fox spoke freely about her time in school, stating that in middle school she was bullied and had to eat lunch in the bathroom to avoid being "pelted with ketchup packets." She said that the problem was not her looks, but that she had "always gotten along better with boys" and that "rubbed some people the wrong way."[25] Fox also said that she was never popular in high school, and that "everyone hated me, and I was a total outcast, my friends were always guys, I have a very aggressive personality, and girls didn't like me for that. I've had only one great girlfriend my whole life." In the same interview, she mentions that she hated school and has "never been a big believer in formal education" and that "the education I was getting seemed irrelevant. So, I was sort of checked out on that part of it."[25]

Career

[edit]

2000s: Early roles and breakthrough

[edit]
Fox at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival screening of Jennifer's Body on September 10, 2009

In 2001, Fox made her acting debut in the romantic comedy Holiday in the Sun, as spoiled heiress Brianna Wallace and rival of Alex Stewart (Ashley Olsen), which was released direct-to-DVD on November 20, 2001. In the next several years, she guest-starred on the sitcoms What I Like About You and Two and a Half Men. Fox also appeared as an uncredited extra in the action film Bad Boys II (2003).

In 2004, Fox made her feature film debut opposite Lindsay Lohan in the musical comedy Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, playing the supporting role of Carla Santini, a rival of Lola (Lohan). She was also cast in a regular role on the ABC sitcom Hope & Faith, in which she portrayed Sydney Shanowski, replacing Nicole Paggi. Fox appeared in the second and third seasons, until the series was canceled by ABC in May 2006.[26]

In 2007, Fox won the lead female role of Mikaela Banes in the 2007 live-action film Transformers, based on the toy and cartoon saga of the same name. Fox played the love interest of Shia LaBeouf's character Sam Witwicky. Fox was nominated for an MTV Movie Award in the category of "Breakthrough Performance", and was also nominated for three Teen Choice Awards.[26] She had signed on for two more Transformers sequels,[26][27] reprising her role as Mikaela in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. There was controversy surrounding Fox's appearance while filming the sequel when Michael Bay, the film's director, ordered the actress to gain ten pounds.[28] The film was released worldwide on June 24, 2009, to box office success.[29]

Fox was to star in the third installment, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, but was not included because of her statements comparing working under director Bay to working for Hitler. She confessed on GQ Magazine that she had lost approximately 30 pounds during filming due to consuming a primary diet of water and vinegar,[citation needed] and reportedly had a dispute over her visible loss of weight with the director on set.[30][31] Bay stated in June 2009 that Fox was fired on orders of executive producer Steven Spielberg,[32] a claim Spielberg denied.[33]

In 2009, Fox had her first lead role since the Transformers series; she portrayed the title character in Jennifer's Body, written by Academy Award–winning screenwriter Diablo Cody.[34] The film initially earned mixed to average reviews upon its release, with Fox's performance earning praise.[35] However, the film grew a cult following over time and was critically reassessed as a "forgotten feminist classic".[36] According to Cody, the film was marketed incorrectly by executives who focused their efforts on the young male audience.[37]

In April 2009, she began filming the western superhero film Jonah Hex, in which she portrayed Tallulah Black / Leila, a gun-wielding beauty and Jonah Hex's (Josh Brolin) love interest. The film was released on June 18, 2010.[38] Despite receiving top billing, Fox described her role in the film as being a cameo.[39] Jonah Hex was a critical and commercial failure in the US, with its international distribution canceled after its poor performance.[40] The film was named the "worst picture of the year" by the Houston Film Critics Society.[41]

2010s: Rise to prominence

[edit]
Fox at a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles screening in Sydney on September 7, 2014

Fox starred alongside Mickey Rourke in the drama Passion Play. After premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival, its conventional theatrical distribution was bypassed for a direct-to-video release, with only two screens briefly showing the film to fulfill contractual obligations.[42] Rourke remarked that the film was "terrible. Another terrible movie."[43][44] Fox appeared with Dominic Monaghan in the music video for Eminem and Rihanna's single "Love the Way You Lie".[45] In 2012, Fox appeared briefly in Sacha Baron Cohen's comedy film The Dictator and had a featured role in Judd Apatow's comedy film This Is 40. She voiced the role of Lois Lane in the animated comedy film Robot Chicken DC Comics Special,[46] an episode of the television comedy series Robot Chicken that aired as a one-off special during Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block on September 9, 2012.

In January 2013, Fox was featured in a Brazilian television commercial for Brahma beer.[47] In February 2013, Fox set aside her differences with her former director Michael Bay and worked again with him on his reboot of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014), starring as the lead human character of April O'Neil.[48]

In 2015, Fox was cast in the role of Amelia Delthanis in the Plarium video game, Stormfall: Rise of Balur.[49] In October 2015, it was confirmed that Fox would be temporarily replacing Zooey Deschanel in the television sitcom New Girl, following Deschanel's maternity leave.[50][51] She starred as Reagan Lucas, appearing in the fifth and sixth seasons of the series. Her performance earned positive reviews from critics.[52][53][54] In 2016, Fox reprised her role as April O'Neil in the sequel Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows.

On September 12, 2018, it was confirmed that Fox would star in the Korean War film The Battle of Jangsari, beside Korean actor Kim Myung-min. She played a lead role as Marguerite Higgins, an American news reporter.[55]

In 2019, Fox starred in the mystery-fantasy film Above the Shadows opposite Olivia Thirlby and Alan Ritchson, directed by Claudia Myers.[56] It was released on July 19, 2019, by Gravitas Ventures.[57] That same year, Fox appeared in Zeroville directed by James Franco, which had been shot in 2014.[58] The film was panned by critics and performed poorly at the box office.[59]

2020s work

[edit]

In 2020, Fox starred opposite Josh Duhamel in the family comedy film Think Like a Dog, which was released on video on demand on June 9, 2020.[60] Also that year, she starred in the lead role of the action film Rogue, which was released on August 28, 2020.[61]

In 2021 she starred in two thrillers: Midnight in the Switchgrass opposite Emile Hirsch and Bruce Willis, directed by Randall Emmett;[62] and Till Death, directed by S.K. Dale.[63]

In 2022 Fox starred in the drama comedy Big Gold Brick, alongside Oscar Isaac, Andy García, Lucy Hale, and Emory Cohen, directed by Brian Petsos.[64][65] Fox also played a role in the film Taurus, a musical drama, alongside Machine Gun Kelly, Naomi Wild, and Lil Tjay.[66]

In 2023, Fox was featured on the cover of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.[67] Fox played crime boss Alana in the 2023 thriller film Johnny & Clyde with Tyson Ritter.[68] Fox played Gina in the fourth Expendables film, Expend4bles, and voiced Nitara in the video game Mortal Kombat 1, both released in September of the same year.

In November 2023, Fox released her first book, titled Pretty Boys Are Poisonous, a collection of her own poetry.[69] Fox starred as Alice, a lifelike artificially intelligent android, in Subservience, which was released in September 2024.[70]

Public image

[edit]

Status and persona

[edit]

Chris Lee of the Los Angeles Times called Fox a "sex symbol of the highest order" and said she was "the first bona fide sex symbol of the 21st century."[3] Craig Flaster of MTV stated, "Transformers broke Fox into the mainstream, immediately turning her into a household name and international sex symbol."[71] She has been featured on various magazine covers and "hottest" and "most beautiful woman" lists throughout the years, such as Maxim's Hot 100 lists and when FHM readers voted her the "Sexiest Woman in the World" in 2008.[3][4][72] People named her one of 2012's and 2017's Most Beautiful at Every Age.[73][74] Scholar Marc DiPaolo stated that Fox achieved instant fame as Mikaela in Transformers because a "highly sexualized, erotically idealized figure draped over a car or motorcycle invariably evokes lust in the heterosexual male onlooker" and Fox did this by leaning over a Camaro while wearing "a flimsy pink belly shirt" and short skirt, which read as "an unequivocal sex invite" to male viewers.[75] The editors of Men's Health also credited the Camaro scene with contributing to Fox's fame.[76]

Fox with two of her tattoos visible
Fox at Spike TV's 2007 Scream Awards on October 19, 2007
Fox at the 7th Annual Hollywood Life Magazine Breakthrough Awards on December 9, 2007

Fox said all women in Hollywood are known and marketed as sex symbols, but this is okay if the woman knows how to use the status.[77][78] She created a character for her public image because she was unwilling to sacrifice her true self to the world.[77][79] Scholars Wheeler Winston Dixon and Gwendolyn Audrey Foster disagreed that every woman in Hollywood is marketed as a sex symbol, and stated that Fox's "celebrity is based on what she admits is an entirely artificial construct designed for dissemination in the Internet age, a 21st-century media personality in every sense of the word."[77] Part of her persona included making outlandish comments,[79][80] which she said helped her reach her level of fame versus being "a typical starlet" who "said all the right things".[79] Her tattoos, which she began getting at age 19 as a form of self-expression,[81] helped popularize tattoo fashion.[82] She had over nine known tattoos, including a picture of Marilyn Monroe's face on her right forearm and a quote on her shoulder.[83] Author John Tehranian argued that Fox's Monroe tattoo enhanced her "implicit claims to Monroe's legacy as Hollywood's leading sex symbol."[84] Fox ended up removing the Monroe tattoo in a series of laser surgeries[85] because she felt that Monroe's life was full of negativity and she did not want to emulate it.[86]

The press often compared Fox to actress Angelina Jolie,[3] dubbing her the "next Angelina Jolie", which also affected her image.[79] Amid this and reports that she was to replace Jolie in a new Lara Croft film,[87] Fox commented that the comparisons indicate a lack of creativity on the part of the press[78] and attributed them to both her and Jolie being brunette, having tattoos, cursing, and mentioning and joking about sex,[88][89] "which people find outrageous".[89] Lynn Hirschberg of The New York Times opined that "the Jolie comparison would probably have been made by the media eventually, but Fox sped up the process" by "linking herself to Jolie" and that she "enjoyed creating entertaining copy" by telling "tales of darkness and lust."[79]

In 2009, Fox's public image came under scrutiny when an unsigned letter from three crew members of Transformers defended director Michael Bay against accusations made by Fox about his on-set behavior, including a comparison with Adolf Hitler.[32][90] In response to the letter alleging that Fox's on-set behavior is unpleasant and differs from her public persona, Bay stated he does not condone the letter or Fox's "outlandish quotes", but that "her crazy quips are part of her crazy charm" and that they still work well together.[32] A production assistant who worked on Transformers also stated that he never saw Fox act inappropriately on set.[90] Fox said the letter's claims were false[79] and that she had spoken privately with the parties involved. She said she was "very fortunate" to be a part of the franchise and was looking forward to continuing her work.[90] DiPaolo concluded that Fox's criticism of the press's sexually objectifying girls and women was in stark contrast to her sex symbol status and that "her defiance of director Michael Bay and frequent outspoken comments" stifled her career.[75]

Media exposure

[edit]
Fox at the premiere of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen in Paris on June 12, 2009

The increased media exposure was difficult for Fox, who acknowledged being shy and insecure, to adjust to.[80][91] It also positioned her as a potential role model and later led to her being typecast. She rejected being a formal role model, but said that she could make young girls feel "strong and intelligent and be outspoken and fight for what they think is right"[92] and that she was a different role model for girls that maybe America was not comfortable with.[93] She considered being typecast as attractive an opportunity to surprise people when she gives a good performance in a film,[92][78] but said she is interested in portraying less sexualized characters.[91] MTV's Craig Flaster said that although Fox has "been typecast as the big-budget sex symbol", she has shown comedic range.[71]

Fox's overexposure in the media led several men's websites, such as AskMen, to boycott her on August 4, 2009,[94] although some refused to do so, feeling that the boycott was a publicity stunt and therefore hypocritical.[95][96] In response to the media attention, Fox told magazine Nylon, in September of that year, that "[the studio] wanted to make sure [the film] would make $700 million, so they oversaturated the media with their stars" and that she did not "want to have people get completely sick of [her] before [she's] ever even done something legitimate."[97] She became much less prominent in the media by 2010, after starring in the less commercially successful films Jonah Hex and Passion Play.[98] That same year, Fox said, "My biggest regret is that I've assisted the media in making me into a cartoon character. I don't regret what has happened to me, but I regret the way I have dealt with it."[99] Dixon and Foster stated, "The problem [Fox] faces is that the [image] construct has replaced the real in the minds of the public; and once established, a media persona is hard to recalibrate."[77]

Personal life

[edit]

In 2009, Fox was targeted by a group of fashion-motivated criminals known as the "Bling Ring", who robbed her then-boyfriend Brian Austin Green's home for access to Fox's possessions.[100] In 2013, she said that her Christian faith is still very important to her and she believes it keeps her grounded.[101]

Fox and then-husband Green were supporters of Generosity Water, and funded the creation of over ten water wells for the organization.[102][103]

Regarding relationships and her sexuality, Fox said that she has a general distrust and dislike of men[104] and that the perception of her as a "wild and crazy sexpot" is false because she is asocial; Fox stated that she would rather stay at home instead of going out,[105][106] and emphasized that she cannot have sex with someone she does not love.[99][105] She is bisexual, and said she believes that "all humans are born with the ability to be attracted to both sexes".[107] She stated in 2009, "I have no question in my mind about being bisexual. But I'm also a hypocrite: I would never date a girl who was bisexual, because that means they also sleep with men, and men are so dirty that I'd never want to sleep with a girl who had slept with a man."[108]

Fox told InStyle in July 2021: "A girl would come up to me and be like: 'You had a lot to do with me, like identifying and understanding that I was gay or understanding that I was bisexual...' And that, of course, is by far, like, the most moving, rewarding thing that I have experienced in my life! To be a part of something that helped people figure that out, or helped people deal with that, or feel better about that. One of my favorite things that I get called, is being like, a bi icon and that is one of the things I am the most proud of!"[109]

She has several tattoos, including the Chinese symbol for "strength" drawn on the back of her neck, a quote from the William Shakespeare play King Lear that reads "We will all laugh at gilded butterflies", the yin and yang symbol on her left wrist, and a crescent moon entwined with a star on her ankle. Fox also has a poem tattooed near her breast that reads "There once was a little girl, who never knew love until a boy broke her heart" and another on her back that quotes Friedrich Nietzsche: "And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music." She claimed that she had it drawn in honor of her Passion Play costar Mickey Rourke but later clarified that it is "not necessarily a homage to him."[110] She also once had her ex-husband Brian Austin Green's first name tattooed on her hip, but later had it covered. She removed the portrait of Marilyn Monroe that was tattooed on her right forearm, stating "It is a negative character, as she suffered from personality disorders and was bipolar. I do not want to attract this kind of negative energy in my life."[111][112] She also has a tattoo on her left collarbone that reads "the gunman" in Spanish, as well as numerous flowers and one snake on her abdomen. Fox has numerous smaller tattoos splayed across her fingers, some of which include dots, numbers, and a crescent moon.[113]

Health

[edit]

Fox has a form of brachydactyly called brachydactyly type D,[114] and has discussed her obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), insecurities, and self-harming, and has acknowledged that she has low self-esteem.[115]

In her book Pretty Boys Are Poisonous, Fox revealed that she miscarried her pregnancy with what would have been her fourth child and her first with Machine Gun Kelly.[116] She also shared that she had experienced an ectopic pregnancy in the past.[117]

Relationships

[edit]
Fox and Brian Austin Green at the 70th Golden Globes on January 13, 2013
Machine Gun Kelly and Fox at the 2022 NBA Celebrity All-Star Game on February 18, 2022

Fox began dating actor Brian Austin Green in 2004, after meeting on the set of Hope & Faith; she was 18 years old and he was 30.[118][119] According to Fox, Green was initially hesitant to enter a relationship with her due to the age difference, stating, "I had to convince him that I was slightly more responsible and well-spoken and had other things to bring to the table besides being 18." She disclosed that she has "fallen in love with other people all the time" throughout their relationship since she was 18.[120][121]

Fox and Green became engaged in November 2006.[122] In February 2009, they ended their engagement,[122] but were reported to have become re-engaged on June 1, 2010.[123] Fox maintained that she and Green had been continuously engaged since 2006.[124]

Fox and Green married on June 24, 2010, in a private ceremony at the Four Seasons resort on the island of Hawaii.[125][126][127] Together, they have three sons, born in 2012,[128] 2014,[129] and 2016.[130] Fox also became a stepmother to Green's son from a previous relationship.[131] Fox filed for divorce on August 21, 2015, a few days after she and Green announced their separation.[132][133] By early 2016, they were back together and expecting their third child.[134] On April 25, 2019, Fox filed to dismiss the divorce in Los Angeles, California.[135]

In May 2020, Green announced that he and Fox had separated after nearly 10 years of marriage,[136][137] and in November 2020, Fox filed for divorce from Green for a second time.[138] The divorce was finalized on October 15, 2021.[139]

In June 2020, Fox and singer Machine Gun Kelly went public about their relationship, several weeks after the release of Machine Gun Kelly's song "Bloody Valentine", whose music video features Fox.[140] On January 12, 2022, Fox announced that the two were engaged.[141] However, on March 21, 2024, she announced their engagement had been called off.[142][143] In November 2024, Fox announced on Instagram that she was expecting a child with him.[144][145] On March 27, 2025, Fox gave birth to a daughter.[146][147]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2001 Holiday in the Sun Brianna Wallace Direct-to-video
2003 Bad Boys II Bikini Kid Dancing Under Waterfall Uncredited extra[148]
2004 Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen Carla Santini
2007 Transformers Mikaela Banes
2008 How to Lose Friends & Alienate People Sophie Maes
Whore Lost
2009 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Mikaela Banes
Jennifer's Body Jennifer Check
2010 Jonah Hex Tallulah Black / Lilah
Passion Play Lily Luster
2011 Friends with Kids Mary Jane
2012 The Dictator Herself
This Is 40 Desi
2014 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles[149] April O'Neil
2016 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows
2019 Above the Shadows Juliana
Zeroville Soledad Paladin
The Battle of Jangsari Maggie
2020 Think Like a Dog Ellen Reed
Rogue Samantha O'Hara
2021 Till Death Emma
Midnight in the Switchgrass Rebecca Lombardo
Night Teeth Grace [150]
2022 Big Gold Brick Jacqueline
Taurus Mae [151]
Good Mourning Kennedy [152]
2023 Johnny & Clyde Alana Hart [153]
Expend4bles Gina [154]
2024 Subservience Alice
2025 Five Nights at Freddy's 2 Toy Chica (voice) Post-production

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2002–2003 Ocean Ave. Ione Starr Main role
2003 What I Like About You Shannon Episode: "Like a Virgin (Kinda)"
2004 Two and a Half Men Prudence Episode: "Camel Filters and Pheromones"
The Help Cassandra Ridgeway 3 episodes
Boss Girl Candace Television film
2004–2006 Hope & Faith Sydney Shanowski 48 episodes (Season 2–3)
2009 Saturday Night Live Herself / Host Episode: "Megan Fox / U2"
2011 Robot Chicken Herself / Lois Lane (voice) Episode: "The Core, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover"
2012 Robot Chicken DC Comics Special Lois Lane (voice) Television film
Wedding Band Alexa Jordan Episode: "I Love College"
2016–2017 New Girl Reagan Lucas 15 episodes (Season 5–6)
2018 Legends of the Lost with Megan Fox Herself / Host 4 episodes; also co-creator and executive producer
2023 Dave Herself Episode: "Met Gala"
2025 Overcompensating 4 episodes

Video games

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2007 Transformers: The Game Mikaela Banes
2009 Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
2023 Mortal Kombat 1 Nitara Voice and Facial model

Music videos

[edit]
Year Title Artist Role Notes
2009 "New Perspective" Panic! at the Disco Jennifer Check Clips from Jennifer's Body
2010 "Love the Way You Lie" Eminem (featuring Rihanna) Kimberly Scott
2020 "Bloody Valentine" Machine Gun Kelly Herself[155]
2024 "Lonely Road" Machine Gun Kelly and Jelly Roll Herself

Awards and nominations

[edit]

Fox has received numerous awards and nominations, including four Teen Choice Awards and two Scream Awards.

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Megan Fox is an American actress and model, best known for her roles in action films including the Transformers franchise. Born Megan Denise Fox on May 16, 1986, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to parents Gloria Darlene (née Cisson) and Franklin Thomas Fox, she spent her early childhood in nearby Rockwood before moving to St. Petersburg, Florida, at age 10. Fox began training in dance and drama at age five and entered modeling competitions as a teenager, winning several awards by age 13. She dropped out of high school at 16 to pursue acting in Los Angeles. Fox made her film debut in 2001 opposite Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in the comedy Holiday in the Sun. She gained early television experience with guest roles on shows such as What I Like About You (2003–2004) and a recurring role as Sydney Shanowski on Hope & Faith (2004–2006), earning a Young Artist Award nomination in 2005. Her breakthrough came in 2007 when she portrayed mechanic Mikaela Banes, the love interest of Shia LaBeouf's character, in Michael Bay's blockbuster Transformers, which grossed over $709 million worldwide. She reprised the role in the 2009 sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Subsequent leading roles included the horror-comedy Jennifer's Body (2009), opposite Amanda Seyfried, and April O'Neil in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles reboots (2014 and 2016). Fox has continued working in genre films, appearing in The Expendables 4 (2023), the sci-fi thriller Subservience (2024), and voicing a character in Five Nights at Freddy's 2 (upcoming). In her personal life, Fox was married to actor Brian Austin Green from 2010 to 2021, with whom she shares three sons: Noah Shannon (born 2012), Bodhi Ransom (born 2014), and Journey River (born 2016). She began a relationship with musician Machine Gun Kelly (Colson Baker) in 2020, becoming engaged in 2022 before briefly calling it off; the couple welcomed a daughter, Saga Blade, in March 2025 and reconciled shortly thereafter. Fox has been open about her experiences with postpartum challenges following her fourth pregnancy.

Early life

Childhood and family background

Megan Fox was born Megan Denise Fox on May 16, 1986, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to parents Gloria Darlene Cisson and Franklin Thomas Fox. Her mother, who went by Darlene, held multiple jobs to support the family before later working as a real estate manager, while her father served as a parole officer. The couple married in the 1970s and divorced in 1989, when Fox was three years old. Fox has an older sister, Kristi Branim Fox, born in 1974, who has largely stayed out of the public eye and works as a school guidance counselor. The family lived modestly in Rockwood, a rural community near Oak Ridge, with limited financial resources during her early years. Fox's ancestry includes English, Scottish, German, French, Scots-Irish, and Powhatan Native American heritage. Following her parents' divorce, Fox had limited contact with her father initially but reconnected with him in adulthood, later describing him as supportive of her career. Her mother remarried Tony Tonachio, and the family relocated to St. Petersburg, Florida, when Fox was 10. Raised in a strict household influenced by her stepfather's religious beliefs, Fox attended a Pentecostal church and later a Catholic school for 12 years. She has recalled her stepfather as particularly rigid, leading to frequent groundings throughout her childhood and fostering a rebellious streak. Fox has described her overall childhood as relatively happy despite the divorce's emotional toll, noting a sense of missing her father's presence. She began drama and dance classes at age five in Kingston, Tennessee, which marked the start of her interest in performing arts. However, she faced bullying in middle school, often eating lunch alone to avoid harassment, and felt like an outcast during her high school years, preferring the company of boys.

Education and early training

Fox began her training in drama and dance at the age of five in Kingston, Tennessee, where she attended dance classes at a local community center and participated in the school chorus and swim team at Kingston Elementary School. Fox and her family later relocated to Port St. Lucie, Florida, where she continued her dance and drama training while enrolling in local schools. She attended Morningside Academy, a private Christian school, for her freshman and sophomore years of high school, during which she was involved in cheerleading and faced bullying from classmates over her aspirations in performing arts. Fox later transferred to St. Lucie West Centennial High School for her junior year but, at age 17, completed her high school education through correspondence courses to pursue her career full-time, allowing her to relocate to Los Angeles, California. Around age 13, she began modeling after winning awards at the 1999 American Modeling and Talent Convention, which marked her entry into professional pursuits alongside her ongoing self-directed training in performance arts.

Career

2001–2009: Early roles and breakthrough

Fox made her acting debut at age 15 in the 2001 direct-to-video romantic comedy Holiday in the Sun, portraying the spoiled heiress Brianna Wallace, a rival to the Olsen twins' characters. She followed this with guest appearances on television series, including a role on the WB's What I Like About You in 2003 and an episode of CBS's Two and a Half Men in 2004. In 2004, she also had a supporting role as Carla Santi, a mean girl, in the teen comedy Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen opposite Lindsay Lohan. From 2004 to 2006, Fox gained more visibility with a recurring role as Sydney Shanowski, the rebellious teenage daughter, on the ABC sitcom Hope & Faith, appearing in 47 episodes across seasons two and three. Her performance earned her a nomination for Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) – Supporting Young Actress at the 2005 Young Artist Awards. During this period, she continued modeling and took on smaller film roles, building her resume in the industry. Fox's breakthrough came in 2007 when she was cast as Mikaela Banes, the tough and resourceful love interest to Shia LaBeouf's character, in Michael Bay's blockbuster action film Transformers. The movie grossed over $709 million worldwide, propelling her to international fame and earning her an MTV Movie Award nomination for Breakthrough Performance. She reprised the role in the 2009 sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, which also achieved massive commercial success with $836 million in global box office earnings. In 2008, Fox starred as the manipulative starlet Sophie Maes in the British comedy How to Lose Friends & Alienate People. She capped the decade with a lead role as the demonic Jennifer Check in the horror comedy Jennifer's Body, directed by Karyn Kusama and written by Diablo Cody, for which she won a 2009 Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actress: Horror/Thriller.

2010–2019: Rise to prominence and challenges

Following her high-profile role in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009), Megan Fox faced significant professional setbacks early in the decade, most notably her dismissal from the Transformers franchise ahead of Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011). In a 2009 interview, Fox compared director Michael Bay to Adolf Hitler, describing his on-set behavior as authoritarian and stating he was "self-absorbed" and "out of control." This led to tensions, and executive producer Steven Spielberg reportedly urged Bay to replace her, citing her comments as disrespectful. Bay confirmed the split in a 2011 GQ interview, noting that Fox's public criticisms contributed to her exit, after which her character, Mikaela Banes, was written out of the series. The incident marked a pivotal challenge, amplifying perceptions of Fox as difficult to work with and hindering her momentum as a leading actress. In 2010, Fox starred as Tallulah Black, a gun-slinging love interest, in the Western action film Jonah Hex, directed by Jimmy Hayward and co-starring Josh Brolin and John Malkovich. The film received poor critical reception, with a 11% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and underperformed commercially, grossing only $10.9 million domestically against a $47 million budget. She followed this with the independent drama Passion Play (2011), playing the enigmatic Lily opposite Mickey Rourke, a role that received largely negative reviews, with a 33% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 33 reviews, for its surreal narrative but failed to revitalize her career trajectory. Seeking to break from action-heavy typecasting, Fox took on more comedic and dramatic parts, including Lauren in the ensemble romantic comedy Friends with Kids (2011), directed by and starring Jennifer Westfeldt, which earned a 66% critics' score and showcased her in a supporting role focused on friendship and modern relationships. In 2012, she appeared as Desi, a brief but memorable antagonist, in Judd Apatow's This Is 40, a sequel to Knocked Up exploring middle-aged marital strife, further demonstrating her versatility beyond sex-symbol roles. Fox's prominence rebounded commercially with her casting as April O'Neil in the Michael Bay-produced reboot Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014), a live-action adaptation of the popular comic series directed by Jonathan Liebesman. Portraying the intrepid reporter alongside the CGI-rendered turtles voiced by Alan Ritchson, Noel Fisher, Jeremy Howard, and Pete Ploszek, the film emphasized high-octane action and grossed $485.9 million worldwide, marking a significant box-office success despite a 20% Rotten Tomatoes score criticizing its visual effects and plot. She reprised the role in the sequel Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2016), directed by Dave Green, which introduced new characters like Bebop and Rocksteady but earned lower returns of $246.1 million globally and a 38% critics' rating, partly due to audience fatigue with the franchise. These roles solidified her as a bankable star in blockbuster franchises, though they reinforced her association with Bay's production style, which she later described as exploitative. Throughout the decade, Fox grappled with the industry's misogynistic undercurrents, which she publicly addressed as early as 2009 but faced ridicule for predating the #MeToo movement. In a 2022 Glamour UK interview, as reported by Variety, she reflected on enduring "abusive, misogynistic, patriarchal things" in Hollywood during the late 2000s and 2010s, including being sexualized on sets like Transformers where Bay allegedly treated her as an object, such as demanding she gain 10 pounds for the part. Fox noted in a 2024 El País profile that the era felt like a "misogynistic hell," where her outspokenness about discomfort—such as in Jennifer's Body (2009), whose promotional tour objectified her—led to backlash and career sabotage rather than support. This typecasting as a "bad girl" archetype limited diverse opportunities, prompting her to pursue edgier projects like the fantasy drama Above the Shadows (2019), where she played Juliana, a vigilante seeking humanity, the delayed indie Zeroville (2019), as aspiring actress Soledad Paladin, and a supporting role as U.S. Army sergeant Maggie Sweeney in the Korean War drama The Battle of Jangsari (2019). By the end of the decade, these efforts highlighted her push toward more substantive roles amid ongoing industry challenges.

2020–present: Recent projects and diversification

Following the challenges of the previous decade, Megan Fox shifted toward a mix of action, thriller, and horror projects, often embracing independent and genre-driven roles that allowed for more physical and dramatic intensity. In 2020, she starred as Samantha O'Hara, a battle-hardened mercenary leading a team on a hostage rescue mission in war-torn Africa, where they confront poachers and a man-eating lion in the survival thriller Rogue, directed by M.J. Bassett. The film highlighted Fox's action chops in a narrative inspired by real-world issues like South African lion farming, marking a departure from her earlier high-profile blockbusters. That same year, Fox appeared in the family-friendly comedy Think Like a Dog, playing Ellen, the mother of a boy who gains the ability to communicate with animals through a supercomputer, providing a lighter contrast to her intensifying genre work. The year 2021 saw Fox delve deeper into thrillers, beginning with Till Death, where she portrayed Emma, a woman handcuffed to her deceased husband in a remote lake house as assassins close in, in a directorial debut by S.K. Dale that emphasized her resourcefulness and vulnerability. The film, produced by Millennium Media, received praise for Fox's committed performance in its tense, isolated premise, earning a 90% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. She followed this with Midnight in the Switchgrass, starring as FBI agent Rebecca Lombardo alongside Bruce Willis in a crime drama based on real-life serial killer cases, directed by Randall Emmett, though it drew mixed reviews for its procedural pacing. Later that year, Fox embraced supernatural horror in Netflix's Night Teeth, voicing the seductive vampire Grace in a story about a chauffeur entangled in a nocturnal underworld, expanding her presence in streaming content. By 2022, Fox increasingly gravitated toward independent cinema, starring as Mae, the girlfriend of a struggling musician, in the biopic Taurus directed by Tim Sutton, which chronicled the final days of rock icon Scott Weiland and earned her acclaim for a nuanced supporting role. She also featured in the dark comedy Big Gold Brick as Jacqueline, part of an ensemble exploring deception and absurdity, and the buddy comedy Good Mourning, co-starring Machine Gun Kelly, reflecting her willingness to collaborate on smaller-scale, character-focused narratives. This period underscored her diversification into edgier, auteur-driven projects amid a selective approach to roles. In 2023, Fox returned to ensemble action with Expend4bles, the fourth installment in the franchise, playing Gina, a tech-savvy operative alongside Sylvester Stallone and Jason Statham in a globe-trotting mission to thwart a nuclear threat; the film, while criticized for formulaic execution, grossed $51 million worldwide. She also led the horror-heist Johnny & Clyde as casino owner Alana Hart, facing off against serial killer lovers in a bloody robbery gone wrong, further cementing her affinity for genre blends. Fox continued this trajectory in 2024 with Subservience, a sci-fi thriller directed by S.K. Dale reuniting her with the Till Death filmmaker, where she played Alice, a lifelike AI android that turns possessive and dangerous while assisting a family. The film, produced by Millennium Media and released on Netflix, explored themes of artificial intelligence and domestic invasion, with Fox's portrayal of the evolving robot drawing attention for its eerie intensity. In 2025, she made a guest appearance in the Prime Video comedy series Overcompensating. Looking ahead, she expanded into voice acting by joining the cast of Five Nights at Freddy's 2 as the animatronic Toy Chica, voicing the character in the Blumhouse horror sequel set for December 5, 2025 release. This evolution from mainstream stardom to versatile genre work and indie endeavors has allowed Fox to reclaim creative control, prioritizing roles that challenge stereotypes and align with her interests in suspense and the supernatural.

Public image

Persona and cultural status

Megan Fox emerged as a prominent sex symbol in the late 2000s, largely due to her role as Mikaela Banes in the Transformers film series, where her portrayal of a confident, alluring mechanic contributed to a cultural obsession with her image. This led to her being dubbed the first bona fide sex symbol of the 21st century, emblematic of an era defined by bold, unapologetic femininity in Hollywood. Her public persona at the time was characterized by a sultry confidence, with Fox herself acknowledging, "I know I’m seen as a sex object... I’m just really confident sexually, and I think that sort of oozes out of my pores." This image was amplified by media portrayals and magazine features, often emphasizing her physical allure over her acting depth, which she later described as making her feel "overexposed and hunted by media." Over time, Fox's persona evolved into one of playful provocation and self-awareness, particularly as she navigated the pressures of objectification. In a 2022 interview, she reflected on being reduced to a "topic of conversation and gossip and punch lines," noting that her unfiltered personality and intelligence were often overlooked in favor of her sex symbol status. She has since embraced a more metaphysical and boundary-pushing identity, incorporating elements like tarot and astrology into her public narrative, while playfully engaging with her iconic image—stating, "Me just being free and having fun with how I am and my personality is very provocative for people." In 2025, Fox shared openly about her postpartum health struggles following the birth of her daughter, highlighting challenges like sleep deprivation and emotional recovery, further emphasizing her candid approach to personal vulnerabilities. This shift marked a departure from the early 2000s archetype, positioning her as someone who critiques the very role that defined her, including the emotional toll it took, such as a breakdown following the release of Jennifer's Body in 2009. Culturally, Fox holds a lasting status as a millennial-era icon, comparable to predecessors like Farrah Fawcett in the 1970s and Pamela Anderson in the 1990s, representing a blend of sensuality and empowerment that influenced perceptions of female desirability in pop culture. Her roles and image have contributed to discussions on feminism and sexualization in Hollywood, with Jennifer's Body gaining cult status for its subversive take on female rage and queer undertones, now celebrated a decade later as a forward-thinking horror-comedy. Despite controversies, such as her outspoken comments that occasionally alienated industry figures, Fox's influence endures through her redefinition of celebrity romance and authenticity in the social media age, solidifying her as a figure who challenges traditional sex symbol tropes.

Media exposure and endorsements

Megan Fox has garnered significant media exposure through high-profile magazine covers and appearances, often highlighting her status as a fashion and beauty icon. She appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit in 2023, marking her as one of four cover models alongside Martha Stewart, Kim Petras, and Brooks Nader, which underscored her enduring appeal in modeling circles. Earlier, she graced the cover of Rolling Stone in October 2009, featuring a provocative photoshoot that solidified her image as a sex symbol during her Transformers era. Fox has also been featured on covers of GQ (2008 and 2009), Esquire (February 2013), and Interview Magazine (June/July 2010, with a revisit in December 2021), where she discussed personal and professional insights in in-depth interviews. These appearances, spanning outlets like Maxim, FHM, Cosmopolitan, and Harper's Bazaar UK, have collectively positioned her as a staple in fashion media. Her red carpet presence has further amplified her media footprint, with notable moments including the 2022 Dolce & Gabbana Fall/Winter menswear show in Milan, where she attended as a guest alongside Machine Gun Kelly, showcasing bodycon silhouettes and high-slit gowns that align with her signature style. Fox's appearances at events like the 2023 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit launch and various film premieres have been widely covered, emphasizing her influence on contemporary fashion trends. In October 2025, she made a rare public outing at a Los Angeles screening and Q&A for Jennifer's Body, drawing attention amid personal life headlines. In terms of endorsements, Fox has partnered with luxury and lifestyle brands, leveraging her image for campaigns in fashion, beauty, and accessories. She served as the face of Emporio Armani Underwear, Armani Jeans, and Giorgio Armani Cosmetics from 2009 to 2010, starring in global ad campaigns that highlighted her as a seductive brand ambassador. In 2016, she became a brand ambassador, stakeholder, and creative partner for Frederick's of Hollywood, contributing to the revival of the lingerie line through marketing and design input, a role she continued into 2021. Fox expanded into fast fashion with Boohoo, co-designing her first collection in October 2021, which included 28 pieces inspired by her personal style, followed by a second summer line in June 2022 featuring over 40 vibrant, Y2K-influenced items like slip dresses and mini skirts. These partnerships have generated substantial media buzz, with the Boohoo collaborations alone achieving over 200 million social media impressions.

Personal life

Relationships and marriages

Fox has publicly identified as bisexual. In a 2009 interview with Esquire, she stated, "I think people are born bisexual and then make subconscious choices based on the pressures of society," elaborating, "I have no question in my mind about being bisexual." In a 2021 interview, Fox expressed pride that her role in Jennifer's Body has helped bisexual women recognize and embrace their sexuality, noting that one fan credited the film with realizing she was bisexual. Fox began her first notable romantic relationship in high school with Ben Leahy, dating from 1998 to 2001 until it ended due to the long-distance challenges after her move to Los Angeles. In 2004, she dated actor David Gallagher for approximately one year following their meeting at the premiere of Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen. Fox's most prominent early relationship was with actor Brian Austin Green, whom she met in 2004 while guest-starring on his series Hope & Faith. Their romance was on-and-off for several years, including a brief engagement in 2006 and a split in 2009, before they reconciled and married in a private ceremony at the Four Seasons Resort in Hawaii on June 24, 2010. The couple welcomed three sons: Noah Shannon Green on September 27, 2012; Bodhi Ransom Green on February 12, 2014; and Journey River Green on August 4, 2016. They separated in 2020 amid growing distance, with Green citing their individual career paths as a factor, and their divorce was finalized in February 2022 after multiple prior filings and dismissals. During her intermittent separations from Green, Fox had a brief romance with co-star Shia LaBeouf while filming the Transformers series from 2007 to 2009, which both later confirmed. In May 2020, shortly after her separation from Green, Fox began dating musician Colson Baker, known professionally as Machine Gun Kelly, after meeting on the set of Midnight in the Switchgrass. They made their red carpet debut together in November 2020, and Fox described their connection as that of "twin flames" in a 2020 Instagram post. The pair became engaged in January 2022 when Baker proposed with a custom-designed ring incorporating Fox's blood, though they called off the engagement in February 2023 before reconciling later that year. Fox announced her pregnancy in November 2024, but the couple split weeks later; they welcomed daughter Saga Blade Fox-Baker on March 27, 2025. Following the birth, they experienced another breakup in late 2024 but reconciled by October 2025, focusing on co-parenting while navigating trust issues, though they have not officially relabeled their relationship.

Family and children

Megan Fox was born Megan Denise Fox on May 16, 1986, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to parents Gloria Darlene Cisson and Franklin Thomas Fox, who married in 1977 and divorced in the late 1980s. Her mother, who went by her middle name Darlene, worked as a paralegal and later remarried Tony Tonachio, a shipping manager for a trucking company; the family relocated multiple times during Fox's childhood, including stints in Tennessee, Florida, and Missouri. Fox has described her upbringing as strict and influenced by her family's Pentecostal faith, which emphasized modesty and limited exposure to secular media, though she later distanced herself from organized religion. Fox has one older sister, Kristi Branim Fox, born in 1974, who works as a school guidance counselor in Tennessee and has occasionally supported her sister publicly, including during personal challenges like Fox's pregnancy in 2024. The sisters share a close bond, with Kristi providing emotional support amid Fox's high-profile relationships and family expansions. Fox is a mother of four children. She shares three sons with her ex-husband, actor Brian Austin Green, whom she married in 2010 and with whom she finalized their divorce in February 2022: Noah Shannon Green (born September 27, 2012), Bodhi Ransom Green (born February 12, 2014), and Journey River Green (born August 4, 2016). The couple has maintained an amicable co-parenting relationship, with Fox emphasizing the importance of joint custody and family unity, including blended outings with Green's other children from subsequent relationships. Fox has been vocal about supporting her sons' self-expression, particularly Noah's interest in gender-fluid fashion choices like wearing dresses since age two, which she has defended against public criticism as a form of empowerment. In March 2025, Fox welcomed her first daughter, Saga Blade Fox-Baker, with musician Colson Baker (known professionally as Machine Gun Kelly), following a brief separation before the birth; the couple announced the pregnancy in November 2024, reconciled by October 2025, and continues to co-parent while working on their relationship without an official label. Fox has described motherhood as transformative, crediting her children with fostering her personal growth and resilience, though she keeps much of their lives private to shield them from media scrutiny.

Health and personal beliefs

Megan Fox has been open about her struggles with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), which she has experienced since childhood and for which she sought therapy as a young girl. In a 2010 interview, she described how her OCD manifests in an intense fear of germs, leading her to avoid physical contact and maintain strict cleanliness routines. She has also spoken about an aversion to certain textures and a compulsion for order, noting that the condition significantly impacts her daily life. In addition to OCD, Fox has discussed her battle with body dysmorphic disorder, a condition that causes her to perceive her appearance in a distorted, negative way despite external perceptions. During a 2023 interview with Sports Illustrated, she revealed that she has never loved her body and struggles with deep insecurities, stating, "There is never a point in my life where I loved my body." This disorder has contributed to her avoidance of mirrors and dissatisfaction with her physical self, even after multiple pregnancies and career demands. Following the birth of her fourth child, Saga Blade, with Machine Gun Kelly in early 2025, Fox shared details of her postpartum challenges, including severe sleep deprivation and persistent brain fog seven months after delivery. In an October 2025 interview, she emphasized the physical and mental toll of motherhood, noting that she had not slept through the night since the birth and was navigating recovery amid her demanding schedule. Fox maintains a rigorous diet and fitness regimen focused on health and wellness, emphasizing gluten-free and organic foods to support her active lifestyle. Earlier in her career, around 2011, she followed a strict raw vegan diet consisting primarily of fruits and vegetables, which she later abandoned after it led to excessive weight loss and made her feel too thin. She has since incorporated more balanced nutrition while prioritizing clean eating to manage her conditions and prepare for roles. Raised in a strict Pentecostal Christian household in Tennessee, Fox was immersed in charismatic practices from a young age, including speaking in tongues and witnessing faith healings, which she described as grounding experiences. She attended Catholic school for 12 years during her upbringing, blending influences from both traditions. In a 2013 interview with Esquire, she affirmed that her Christian faith remains important to her, helping her stay centered amid fame. As an adult, Fox has evolved toward a more eclectic spirituality, incorporating metaphysical elements such as astrology, tarot card reading, and personal rituals while maintaining an identification with Christ. She has clarified that these practices are not satanic or part of any cult, debunking rumors in a 2024 podcast appearance where she stated she has never participated in Illuminati or occult rituals. In 2021, she and Machine Gun Kelly participated in an ayahuasca ceremony in Costa Rica as part of her spiritual exploration. Fox has expressed that her beliefs now form a personal mix of Christianity and mysticism, prioritizing inner peace over organized religion.

Filmography and accolades

Film roles

Megan Fox began her film career with minor supporting roles in the early 2000s, debuting as the antagonist Brianna Wallace, a spoiled heiress, in the family comedy Holiday in the Sun (2001). She followed with a brief uncredited appearance as a dancing girl in the action comedy Bad Boys II (2003), directed by Michael Bay, and gained her first prominent on-screen part as the mean-spirited high school rival Carla Santini in the teen musical comedy Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004), opposite Lindsay Lohan. These early roles established her in light ensemble casts within family-oriented and action genres. Fox achieved widespread recognition with her breakout performance as Mikaela Banes, a tough mechanic and romantic lead opposite Shia LaBeouf's Sam Witwicky, in Michael Bay's blockbuster science fiction action film Transformers (2007), which emphasized her as a capable action heroine amid explosive set pieces involving alien robots. She reprised the character in the sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009), further solidifying her association with high-octane franchises, though the role drew scrutiny for its sexualized portrayal. In the same year, Fox took on her first starring lead outside the series as Jennifer Check, a seductive high school cheerleader possessed by a demon, in the feminist horror-comedy Jennifer's Body, directed by Karyn Kusama and written by Diablo Cody; the film initially underperformed but later gained cult status for its sharp satire on female objectification. Transitioning from franchise dominance, Fox explored varied supporting parts in the early 2010s, including the brothel owner Tallulah Black in the Western superhero film Jonah Hex (2010), a mysterious winged woman named Lily in the surreal drama Passion Play (2011), and the sharp-tongued friend Mary-Jane in the ensemble romantic comedy Friends with Kids (2011). She made a brief cameo as herself in the political satire The Dictator (2012) and appeared as the flirtatious Desi in Judd Apatow's midlife crisis comedy This Is 40 (2012). These roles highlighted her range in both indie-leaning projects and mainstream comedies, often portraying confident, edgy women. In 2014, Fox assumed the iconic role of intrepid reporter April O'Neil in the reboot of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, directed by Jonathan Liebesman, where she served as the human ally to the titular heroes in a CGI-heavy action spectacle; she returned for the sequel Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2016), directed by Dave Green, balancing investigative journalism with high-stakes combat sequences. Following a career pause for personal reasons, Fox shifted toward independent and genre thrillers in the late 2010s, exemplified by her role as Juliana, the ex-girlfriend of the MMA fighter, in the supernatural drama Above the Shadows (2019) and a young actress in the satirical Zeroville (2019). Her post-2016 output increasingly featured lead performances in mid-budget action and horror, such as the mercenary mother Samantha O'Hara in the wildlife thriller Rogue (2020), where she leads a rescue mission against a rogue lioness. In Till Death (2021), Fox starred as Emma, a woman chained to her deceased husband's body in a remote cabin, delivering a physically demanding portrayal of survival and revenge that critics noted for elevating the film's pulpy premise. She expanded into streaming with the vampire action film Night Teeth (2021) on Netflix, playing a mysterious enforcer, and voiced a character in the family adventure Think Like a Dog (2020). More recent roles underscore Fox's pivot to ensemble action and character-driven indies, including the unstable girlfriend Mae in the music biopic-inspired drama Taurus (2022) about a fictionalized rock star, and the casino owner Jacqueline in the dark comedy Big Gold Brick (2022). She played the ruthless casino owner Alana Hart in the action thriller Johnny & Clyde (2023), in which a pair of serial killers target her establishment for a heist. In 2023, she joined the mercenary team in Expend4bles (also known as The Expendables 4) as the skilled operative Gina, bringing a rare female presence to the franchise's testosterone-fueled narrative. Fox continued with the AI thriller Subservience (2024), portraying Alice, a wife whose household android turns dangerously autonomous, blending domestic tension with sci-fi horror. Looking ahead, she is set to voice a character in the horror sequel Five Nights at Freddy's 2 (2025).

Television and other media

Fox began her television career with a main role as Ione Starr in the soap opera Ocean Ave., appearing in the series from 2002 to 2003. This early role marked her entry into acting, where she portrayed a character in the low-budget production filmed in Canada. In 2003, she made a guest appearance as Shannon in the episode "Like a Virgin (Kinda)" of the teen sitcom What I Like About You. The following year, Fox starred as Candace in the ABC Family television movie Crimes of Fashion, a comedy about a fashion student inheriting a crime syndicate. Fox gained prominence with a recurring role as Sydney Shanowski, the rebellious daughter, in seasons 2 and 3 of the ABC sitcom Hope & Faith from 2004 to 2006, appearing in 37 episodes. During this period, she also guest-starred as Prudence, the granddaughter of Berta, in the 2004 episode "Camel Filters and Pheromones" of Two and a Half Men. She provided voice work for the Adult Swim animated series Robot Chicken, voicing characters including herself and Lois Lane across multiple episodes starting in 2005, and notably as Lois Lane in the 2012 special Robot Chicken DC Comics Special. In 2016, Fox reprised her film role as April O'Neil by voicing the character in the video game Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows. From 2016 to 2017, Fox portrayed Reagan Lucas, a confident pharmaceutical sales representative, in a recurring capacity across 15 episodes of seasons 5 and 6 of the Fox comedy New Girl. This role showcased her comedic timing and served as a temporary subletter in the series' loft dynamic. In 2018–2019, Fox hosted the Travel Channel docuseries Legends of the Lost with Megan Fox, a six-episode production where she explored ancient mysteries at sites like Stonehenge and Viking warrior locations. Beyond television, Fox has appeared in music videos, including as the love interest in Eminem's "Love the Way You Lie" featuring Rihanna in 2010, which depicted a tumultuous relationship and garnered over 1.5 billion views. She later featured in three Machine Gun Kelly videos: "Bloody Valentine" (2020), "Drunk Face" (2020), and "Lonely Road" with Jelly Roll (2024), often portraying romantic partners in narrative-driven clips. In video games, Fox voiced the vampire Nitara in Mortal Kombat 1 (2023), a role she described as aligning with her persona, and appeared as Captain Amelia Delthanis in the mobile game Stormfall: Saga of Survival (2016).

Awards and nominations

Megan Fox has garnered a mix of accolades and nominations across her career, primarily from fan-voted awards celebrating her roles in action, horror, and science fiction films, as well as satirical honors critiquing certain performances. Her wins often reflect her status as a sex symbol and breakout star in the 2000s, with three Teen Choice Awards recognizing her popularity among younger audiences. She has also received two Scream Awards for science fiction roles. Conversely, Fox holds the distinction of multiple Golden Raspberry Award (Razzie) nominations and wins, totaling at least three victories in acting categories, frequently for supporting roles in blockbuster franchises. These span from early nominations for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) to recent dual wins in 2024. The following table summarizes select major awards and nominations, focusing on wins and significant nods that highlight her career trajectory:
YearAwardCategoryWorkOutcome
2009Scream AwardsBest Science Fiction ActressTransformers: Revenge of the FallenWon
2009Teen Choice AwardsChoice Female HottieN/AWon
2010Teen Choice AwardsChoice Movie Actress: Horror/ThrillerJennifer's BodyWon
2010Teen Choice AwardsChoice Female HottieN/AWon
2015Golden Raspberry AwardsWorst Supporting ActressTeenage Mutant Ninja TurtlesWon
2024Golden Raspberry AwardsWorst ActressJohnny & ClydeWon
2024Golden Raspberry AwardsWorst Supporting ActressExpend4blesWon
Fox's nominations extend to other ceremonies, including MTV Movie & TV Awards for breakthrough moments like the "WTF" scene in Jennifer's Body (2010 nomination) and Kids' Choice Awards for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2017 nomination). Her Razzie history includes eight prior nominations before her 2024 sweep, often tied to high-profile action films, underscoring the polarized reception of her performances.

References

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