Acting
Hari Nef (born October 21, 1992) is an American actor, model, and writer. Nef's breakthrough role was Gittel in the Amazon original series Transparent, for which he was nominated for a SAG award in 2016. He lives and works in New York City.
An atheist actress attempts to convert to Judaism to marry the man she loves.
A weekend getaway for a few friends at a snowy hotel becomes a psychological tailspin and bloody nightmare.
Barbie and Ken are having the time of their lives in the colorful and seemingly perfect world of Barbie Land. However, when they get a chance to go to the real world, they soon discover the joys and perils of living among humans.
This 20-minute short has everything—frisky green mermaids, a giggling nude woman dressed as the sun, and murderous scantily clad blue waves. What more could you want? To top it all off, actress Hari Nef plays a scheming, pink supervillain named Clamindia (who has chlamydia).
Candy’s rise from childhood in Long Island beauty pageantry to her years alongside Holly Woodlawn and Jackie Curtis as a member of the East Village experimental theater group, La Mama Etc., to starring in Warhol’s groundbreaking film, Women In Revolt.
In a collaboration with i-D magazine, this montage goes through the alphabet with many artists and their incredible hairstyles.
A wildly inventive deconstruction of the romantic comedy built around the question: What would you do if you could travel to your loved ones’ past, heal their traumas, fix their problems, and change them into the perfect partner?
A diminished gallery girl finds a way to silence her toxic boss.
Commutes, characters and cold reads; this is Hari Nef's New York Minute.
After an anonymous hacker begins leaking the private data of thousands living in a small American town, the townspeople spiral into madness, with four high school seniors at the center of the maelstrom.
A performance artist and her former partner and lover begin rehearsing their final piece. When the latter's new partner joins them and secrets of their past emerge, the gap between their work and reality blurs.