ALEXI PAPPAS

OLYMPIAN | AUTHOR | ACTOR | FILMMAKER

Alexi Pappas has become one of the most fascinating athletes of her generation, known for blending art, film and writing into a stunningly wide-ranging athletic career.

Her work as a filmmaker includes three feature films: 2016's Tracktown (starring Rachel Dratch and Andy Buckley), 2020's Olympic Dreams (starring Nick Kroll and made in conjunction with the International Olympic Committee's "Artist in Residence" program) and 2023’s Not an Artist (starring Haley Joel Osment, Matt Walsh, RZA and GaTa).

As a writer, Alexi is the author of bestselling memoir, Bravey, and has received guest columnist invitations from the New York Times, Lena Dunham’s Lenny Letter, Women’s Running Magazine and Cosmopolitan.

Most notable are Alexi’s ardent supporters, who New York Magazine calls a “cult following.” Alexi is at the forefront of the modern athlete revolution. She has the single-minded focus to become a world-class athlete but captivates fans with her eclectic interests and free spirit. In this delicate balance, Alexi is a model for how athletes can connect with fans in the digital age.


“Imagination, at the very least, brings us joy; at the very most, it empowers us to suspend disbelief and chase the impossible.”

NPR's Ari Shapiro spoke with Pappas about her new book for All Things Considered.

"Growing up, I often chased outward-facing words and labels like strong, fierce, fast, funny. And I realized that they describe an energy you project in the world," she says. "But this word 'bravey' felt different. It felt like a choice about the relationship you have with yourself."

Listen to the full interview here:

When “Renaissance runner” (New York Times) Alexi Pappas—Olympic athlete, actress, filmmaker, and writer—was four years old, her mother died by suicide, drastically altering the course of Pappas’s life and setting her on a search for female role models. When her father signed his bereaved daughter up for sports teams as a way to keep her busy, female athletes became the first women Pappas looked up to, and her Olympic dream was born. At the same time, Pappas had big creative dreams, too: She wanted to make movies, write, and act. Despite setbacks and hardships, Pappas refused to pick just one lane. She put in a tremendous amount of hard work and wouldn’t let anything stand in her way until she achieved all of her dreams, however unrelated they may seem to outsiders. In a single year, 2016, she made her Olympic debut as a distance runner and wrote, directed, and starred in her first feature film. 

But great highs are often accompanied by deep lows; with joy comes sorrow. In Bravey, Pappas fearlessly and honestly shares her battle with post-Olympic depression and describes how she emerged on the other side as a thriving and self-actualized woman. Unflinching, exuberant, and always entertaining, Bravey showcases Pappas’s signature, charming voice as she reflects upon the touchstone moments in her life and the lessons that have powered her career as both an athlete and an artist—foremost among them, how to be brave. 

Pappas’s experiences reveal how we can all overcome hardship, befriend pain, celebrate victory, relish the loyalty found in teammates, and claim joy. In short: how every one of us can become a bravey.

run like a bravey 
sleep like a baby 
dream like a crazy 
replace can’t with maybe


Kelia Anne MacCluskey/Penguin Random House

Photo via Kelia Anne MacCluskey/Penguin Random House


ACTOR | FILMMAKER

Olympic Dreams (2019) is a poetic exploration of the Olympic values through narrative film, blending fiction with reality to open a unique, never-before-seen window into the Olympic Games. Starring Alexi Pappas as Penelope, a fictional cross-country skier, Nick Kroll as Ezra, a fictional volunteer dentist, and athletes who participated in the PyeongChang Games. Directed by Jeremy Teicher.


In Tracktown (2016), twenty-one-year-old Plumb Marigold (Pappas) is a famous but lonely distance runner and has lived her entire life surrounded by coaches, teammates and fans while training to be an Olympic distance runner. Though she excels in her sport, she's always felt like an outsider, as her schedule has kept a normal life at bay. Everything changes when Plumb is ordered to take a day off from running to recover for the finals of the Olympic trials. Her forced downtime, including a surprise connection with a boy who works at the bakery, sets her on a new path.