Reneé Rapp Is So Over It
New York magazine|Jul 31 - Aug 13, 2023
She paused her Hollywood and Broadway careers to go pop. It’s working way too well
Maggie Lange
Reneé Rapp Is So Over It

It’s a hazy early-June day in Santa Monica, and Reneé Rapp is drinking a muddy purple smoothie—the strawberry probiotic from the notoriously healthful, exorbitantly priced grocer Erewhon. The 23-year-old actress and singer moved from New York to Los Angeles in 2021 to film the Max series she is now preparing to exit early. This is where her “white woman shines,” she says. “Not the real, amazing, beautiful, culturally dense Los Angeles. I mean Erewhon. I work solely so I can go to Erewhon.”

This is the blasé take-it-or-leave-it attitude that has become Rapp’s signature in her two short years in Hollywood. Her permanently skeptical eyebrows are often deployed to withering heights as a performer, attracting praise and pockets of fandom in every medium she has tried. Someone who can barely deign to be there? That’s glossy apex predator Regina George of Broadway’s Mean Girls, whom Rapp played as disdainful, bored, bossy, and drowning in her own confidence. That’s absolutely Leighton Murray, the deliciously caustic, closeted fan-favorite rich girl in Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble’s The Sex Lives of College Girls (Rapp’s first TV role). That’s the no-filter pop singer on the verge of releasing her first album. And that’s Rapp on TikTok, where she posts things like a video with a redacted list of the “grudges I hold and why” to her 1.4 million followers.

This story is from the Jul 31 - Aug 13, 2023 edition of New York magazine.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the Jul 31 - Aug 13, 2023 edition of New York magazine.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM NEW YORK MAGAZINEView All
What Did Brooklyn Bridge Park Get So Right?
New York magazine

What Did Brooklyn Bridge Park Get So Right?

Nearly 20 years after we broke ground, it's more impressive than ever.

time-read
3 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
No Man's Land
New York magazine

No Man's Land

Rachel Cusk's gender fundamentalism fully surfaces in her latest novel, Parade.

time-read
10+ mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
Faust Goes to Fidi
New York magazine

Faust Goes to Fidi

The producers of Sleep No More are back with the whirlwind immersive-theater project Life and Trust.

time-read
3 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The Renegade
New York magazine

The Renegade

June Squibb has the perfect first lead role: a granny gone rogue.

time-read
8 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The Empty Seat
New York magazine

The Empty Seat

At Paris Couture Week, one question everyone's lips: Who will lead Chanel?

time-read
8 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The Hidden Dutch Colonial
New York magazine

The Hidden Dutch Colonial

When Nicholas Howey and his late husband, Gerard Widdershoven, bought this 1925 house tucked away behind the hedges in Bridgehampton, they did little more than paint it-and fill it with art.

time-read
2 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The Next Shishito?
New York magazine

The Next Shishito?

Jimmy Nardello peppers, long beloved by chefs, are set to break out.

time-read
2 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The Shrimp Show
New York magazine

The Shrimp Show

San Sabino makes maximalist seafood for the social-media age.

time-read
3 mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
The WEIGHT of a BOEING 787
New York magazine

The WEIGHT of a BOEING 787

Mitch Barnett spent years fighting one of the world's largest aircraft manufacturers. It cost him his life.

time-read
10+ mins  |
July 1-14, 2024
By age 43, I'd come up with many explanations for my perpetual strangeness with other people. - Then the autism diagnosis arrived.
New York magazine

By age 43, I'd come up with many explanations for my perpetual strangeness with other people. - Then the autism diagnosis arrived.

SIX YEARS AGO, my now-husband, Sam, asked my father if he could marry me.

time-read
10+ mins  |
July 1-14, 2024