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Anna Chlumsky Today: From *My Girl* Child Star to *Veep* Emmy Nominee Redefining Her Career at 44

How Anna Chlumsky evolved from 90s child star to Veep Emmy-nominated actress, reshaping her Hollywood career in her forties.

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By Marcus Ellis on news

Dec. 01, 2025

More than three decades after winning over audiences as Vada Sultenfuss in My Girl, actress Anna Chlumsky is back in the spotlight, with multiple outlets revisiting her career and celebrating her latest appearances. A fresh profile published today highlights how the former child star navigated the difficult transition out of the Hollywood machine, stepped away to attend college, and then engineered a striking comeback that has made her a familiar face again on prestige television — and a multiple Emmy-nominated performer for her work on HBO’s political satire Veep.

The renewed attention comes as Chlumsky’s breakthrough film My Girl turns 34, prompting new essays about the enduring power of the 1991 coming‑of‑age classic and her defining performance as a morbid, whip-smart tween growing up in 1970s small‑town America. Critics writing today argue that the movie’s blend of sweetness and emotional trauma still resonates with viewers raised on the film — and with younger audiences discovering it for the first time through streaming and repertory screenings.

At the same time, entertainment coverage is zeroing in on Chlumsky’s status as an adult style icon. A new item today notes how the 44‑year‑old drew social media buzz with a polished late‑night appearance on the talk show Good Night New York, where she sported a striped dress and nude stilettos while reflecting on the unusual arc of her career. Commentators framed the moment as proof that Chlumsky has fully outgrown the “former child star” label, embracing a confident, glamorous on‑screen persona that stands apart from her early image.

Fans are also being reminded that Chlumsky has no interest in revisiting her earliest fame through another sequel. A piece published today revisits her recent comments shutting down the idea of a third My Girl movie, where she flatly says she would “never, ever” return to the role of Vada as an adult. For Chlumsky, life is too short to retrace childhood territory, even as nostalgia for the franchise keeps growing.

Instead, the actress is focused on new work. Today’s coverage points viewers toward her recent turns in projects like the Apple TV+ thriller Smoke, as well as her ongoing stage work in New York, underscoring how she’s quietly built a second act rooted in complex, adult characters. For audiences who grew up with her, the current wave of stories offers a clear message: Anna Chlumsky isn’t a relic of ’90s cinema — she’s a working actor in her prime, carefully redefining what her career can look like in middle age.