Hollywood has a habit of casting older actors in younger roles, so it should come as no surprise that Jennifer Lawrence found herself in that exact position when she was cast in The Hunger Games.
The $2.9 billion franchise based on Suzanne Collins’ young adult trilogy is one of the staple franchises of the early 2010s, right up there with Harry Potter and Twilight. Lawrence, then an Oscar-nominated actress still finding her footing in Hollywood, was launched into international stardom and placed on a path that would see her win both the coveted Oscar for Silver Linings Playbook and the hearts of moviegoers everywhere thanks to her oddly refreshing self-deprecating humor.
It’s hard to believe that over a decade has passed since Katniss Everdeen volunteered as tribute in 2011 (and Lawrence infamously stumbled on the Oscar steps two years later in 2013). In fact, you’d be forgiven for taking one look at Lawrence today and feeling like no time has passed at all. The actress’ naturally plump cheeks and round face have always had a way of masking her age, which begs the question of how old she was when she first shouted those famous four words ⏤ “I volunteer as tribute!”
Jennifer Lawrence’s age in The Hunger Games
Characters in YA novels always teeter around those pesky teenage years, but their on-screen counterparts hardly ever do. Even the cast of Harry Potter veered slightly from their fictional counterparts, with Tom Felton being several years older than Draco Malfoy despite Daniel Radcliffe basically being the real-life version of the Boy Who Lived.
In The Hunger Games book, Katniss Everdeen is supposed to be 16 years old when she takes her sister’s place as the female tribute for District 12 in the 74th Hunger Games. The whole series occurs within the timespan of just a couple of years, and believe it or not, so did the filming process.
Lawrence was 20 years old The Hunger Games began filming in May 2011, but the four-year age gap between her and Katniss never hindered her ability to bring the character to life. In fact, her maturity was something Suzanne Collins famously said was necessary to do the character justice.
By the time the series wrapped filming in Sept. 2013 with The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, Lawrence was 23 years old, an Academy Award-winning actress, and well on her way to a stream of back-to-back projects that put her at the center of the public eye until her final X-Men movie in 2019, Dark Phoenix. At that point, she finally took a step back from Hollywood to center herself and raise a family.
Nowadays, Lawrence is back and better than ever with a plethora of projects in the pipeline, all of which she owes, in some shape or form, to the stardom she received from playing that hot-headed girl from District 12 way back when.