WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Owen Cooper hasn't had thoughts of EGOT. He's hardly had time to develop that kind of ambition in his short time as an actor. But, presented with the idea, he's intrigued. And amused.
''Is that the Emmy, the Grammy, the Oscar and the Tony?'' he asks, with a laugh. ''I've got E, so I want it.''
Cooper does, in fact, have ''E.'' He won an Emmy Award this year, at 15, for his astonishing-for-any-age performance as a 13-year-old suspected of a killing in Netflix's ''Adolescence.'' It was his first screen appearance, and his first performance that wasn't for parents.
Still just 16, he's now been named one of The Associated Press' Breakthrough Entertainers of 2025.
Speaking to the AP while sitting on a balcony at a West Hollywood hotel, Cooper concedes he has no idea how he'd ever win a Grammy, though he loves music (Oasis, Stone Roses). And a Tony feels daunting, though the one-take episodes of ''Adolescence'' required the work of a play.
''Even an Oscar,'' he says. ''I don't know how I'll win an Oscar.''
But, more broadly, Cooper knows what he does want to do.
''When I first started doing drama lessons, like I was just, I just didn't want to do it,'' he says. ''I didn't want to look like an idiot in front of all these people. Now, I'm like, ‘I want to be one of those actors that are just fearless.'''