Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ youngest son, Charlie, has been cast in Season 2 of “Sex Lives of College Girls.”
Deadline reported Monday that the 25-year-old will have a bow as an Essex College student named Andrew on the HBO Max show, which hasn’t set a premiere date yet.
In addition, the actor will also star in a “Sweethearts” movie with Kieran Shipka and Nico Hiraga, as well as in the “Big Shot” series.
Charlie shared his recent successes on Instagram Stories that same day, writing, “The stuff I’ve been working on lately!”
He joked, “Don’t worry, I’m still fully committed to improving my spikeball game, Lebron James, and seeking out the best fried egg in America.”
Louis-Dreyfus shared the news with her own Story. “That’s my boy!” the “Veep” alum, 61, gushed.
While the meaning of Charlie’s character in “Sex Lives of College Girls” remains unclear, his casting comes five months after Gavin Leatherwood shocked fans by announcing his departure from the series.
Although the 28-year-old “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” was “happy to do the first season” of the show, he won’t “come back” next time, he told Us Weekly in March.
Leatherwood played Reneé Rapp’s character Leighton’s brother and Pauline Chalamet’s character Kimberly’s love interest and before his surprise departure – leaving a possible gap for Louis-Dreyfus’s son to fill.
The actress and her husband, Brad Hall, are also the parents of son Henry, 30.
While the couple’s eldest child has pursued a career in the music industry, his younger brother has been following in their parents’ footsteps since 2019.
Over the years Charlie has had appearances in ‘Moxie’, ‘Bel-Air’, ‘Love, Victor’, ‘Sorry, Charlie’ and ‘Single Drunk Female’.
Before starting his acting career, Charlie made headlines for his basketball skills as he was a walk-on for the Northwestern University team as a freshman.
“We think he is excellent in every way,” Louis-Dreyfus told The Chicago Tribune in January 2017. “We are his biggest fans.”
The proud parents “didn’t miss a game – physically or on TV”, adding: “It’s just a matter of our production schedule. If we can be there, we are.”