
Photo: Dublin International Film Festival / CC BY 3.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
My Take
I have a soft spot for actors like Chloe Pirrie, who build a career through accumulation rather than spectacle. The Edinburgh-born Scot keeps her private life genuinely private and lets the work speak, quietly threading through prestige series like The Crown, War & Peace, The Queen's Gambit and Under the Banner of Heaven. She is the kind of performer who anchors a scene without demanding it, and her rising profile on Dept. Q in 2025 suggests her patient approach is paying off. I respect performers who never shout yet never disappear, and Pirrie strikes me as one worth following for the long haul.
Overview
Chloe Pirrie (born 1987) is a Scottish actress. She is known for her performance in the 2012 film Shell, and more recently in the TV series Under the Banner of Heaven (2022) and Dept. Q (2025). Other credits include the TV series The Game (2014), War & Peace (2016), The Living and the Dead (2016), Brief Encounters (2016), The Crown (2017), The Queen's Gambit (2020), Carnival Row (2020–2023), Hanna (2021), and Industr…
Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
1. Profile
- Name (English)
- Chloe Pirrie
- Name (Japanese)
- クロエ・ピリー
- Reading
- くろえ・ぴりー
- Born
- August 25, 1987 (age 38)
- Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
- Virgo / Rabbit
- Origin
- Edinburgh, United Kingdom
- Blood type
- Private
- Height
- Private
- Agency
- Private
- Occupation
- actor
2. Background
- Elementary school
- Private
- Junior high
- Private
- High school
- Private
- University
- Private
3. Relationships
- Spouse
- Private
- Children
- Private
- Parents
- Private
- Siblings
- Private
4. Personality
Motto
Private
6. Links
- Xhttps://x.com/ChloePirriePie
- Wikipedia (Japanese)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chloe%20Pirrie
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7. About this entry
Tags
- Last updated
- 2026-06-02
Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.