
John Travolta's nepo baby daughter Ella Bleu wants to carve out her own career in music, film, and fashion
From her piercing blue eyes to that signature Travolta smile, she is the spitting image of John during his leading man heyday.
But Ella isn't just another celebrity nepo child riding on her parents' fame. She's carving out a career of her own in music, film and fashion.
Born in April 2000 to John and the late actress Kelly Preston, Ella grew up in the spotlight alongside older brother Jett and younger brother Benjamin.
Tragically, Jett passed away in 2009 following a seizure during a family holiday in the Bahamas.
Ella started acting when she was just a kid, and she made her big screen debut in 2009's Old Dogs, starring opposite both her parents.
She later appeared in The Poison Rose in 2019 and recently wrapped filming Get Lost, a modern-day reimagining of Alice In Wonderland.
However, it's music where she seems to have really found her niche.
In 2022, she released her debut single Dizzy, followed by tracks No Thank You and Little Bird.
The latter song is a moving tribute to her mother, who passed away in 2020 after battling breast cancer.
'Little Bird is about holding onto those pure relationships that you have with people that you lost and really just listening to yourself and staying true to that relationship with that person,' Ella told People.
'It's sort of the viewpoint of a mama bird talking to a baby bird and just not letting any other interference get in between it, because your true instincts were there all along.'
She continued: 'It had been a couple years, obviously, since my mom's passing, so I could look at the whole situation and take a step back from it and see what I wanted to communicate on it and what I wanted to communicate to her and what I was feeling in general.'
She's also made waves in the fashion world, landing the cover of Hunger Magazine in 2024, wearing a vintage Chanel look previously worn by Taylor Swift at a Kansas City Chiefs game, per Page Six.
Since then, Ella has been spotted in front rows at fashion week in Madrid and Milan, appearing alongside European royalty like Princess Diana's niece, Lady Kitty Spencer, and Princess Alexandra of Hanover, per Hola.
Ella remains close with her dad as John often shares sweet birthday tributes and throwback videos with her on social media.
In a recent birthday post, he called his daughter 'gracious, generous, funny, beautiful, kind, and deeply talented.'
The actor also loves to celebrate Ella's accomplishments and often posts about her magazine covers and song releases.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
21 minutes ago
- Reuters
Breakingviews - Nintendo can flex its pricing power with Switch 2
HONG KONG, Aug 4 (Reuters Breakingviews) - It's hard to imagine a better start for Nintendo's (7974.T), opens new tab new console: the Switch 2, a direct follow-up to its famously successful Switch, sold 5.8 million units during the first fiscal quarter, a record launch for the industry, per Jefferies. The company also moved 5.6 million units of launch title Mario Kart World, according to its earnings update on Friday, nearly one game sold for every console moved despite concerns that the game's unusually high price of $80 would prove too much. That sales ratio is flattered by Nintendo making the game a pack-in with the console—its most expensive ever, at $450—but underscores the willingness of fans to shell out more cash for both. The hardware for the American market is shipped from Vietnam, yet analysts at JPMorgan estimate that the Donald Trump administration's decision to double tariffs on the country to 20% will have little effect on earnings until next year. Little wonder shares jumped almost 6% on Monday. The $110 billion company nonetheless struck a typically conservative tone in its latest guidance, maintaining its sales forecast of just 15 million Switch 2 units for the current financial year even as it noted tariffs had 'no significant impact'. The more meaningful move came in a separate announcement of price rises for models of the original Switch averaging 14%, which did not mention tariffs but warned price adjustments for the sequel console 'may be necessary in the future'. An equivalent 14% hike to the Switch 2's sticker price would cost consumers more than $510 a pop — well over rival Sony's more powerful PlayStation 5, whose disc-free model also retails for $450. What Sony does not have are entries in longstanding series such as Super Mario, The Legend of Zelda and Pokemon, which have driven steady sales of the Kyoto-based games maker's consoles for decades. High review scores for the Switch 2-exclusive Donkey Kong Bananza also bode well for sales in the second half. Moreover, Sony will lack a blockbuster contender for the holiday season thanks to the delay of Grand Theft Auto VI, which had been expected to boost PS5 sales this year. That gives Nintendo an opening to make gains at the margins, yet there is a risk it could overplay its hand if it raises prices too high too quickly. A recession in the U.S., which accounts for 40% of net sales, could also dent earnings. Even so, the bumper sales so far make a solid case for the company to charge gamers more for its wares, and sooner than later. Follow Hudson Lockett on Bluesky, opens new tab and X, opens new tab.


The Guardian
40 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Siobhán McSweeney tells a truly surreal tale: best podcasts of the week
For this spin-off of the BBC World Service's unusual life stories series, Derry Girls and Amandaland actor Siobhán McSweeney narrates the tale of a crew who found themselves confined to a Caribbean-bound cargo ship during the Covid pandemic in 2020. It takes a little while to warm up but, once it gets going, the tale of ship cook Giulia and the 'zombie vibe' that she encountered at sea becomes increasingly surreal. Hannah J DaviesWidely available, episodes weekly There's a strong chance that this podcast will sound a little familiar. Not only is it from the team behind Who Shat on the Floor at My Wedding, it kicks off with another faecal felony. If you could stomach that show and its low-stakes investigations, you'll love this speedier version, AKA 'part detective show, part gameshow, part panicky race'. HJD Widely available, episodes weekly After her hit series following the Sean 'Diddy' Combs case, journalist Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty returns with the latest on another lawsuit: the allegations against Kanye West by his former chief of staff, Lauren Pisciotta (which West denies). Hollie Richardson Widely available, episodes weekly Doyens of the true-crime podcast, Wondery, offer something slightly different here, with a tense show about environmental malfeasance. It kicks off with an episode about a Montana coalmine dubbed a 'den of thievery', where – Zach Goldbaum reports – fraud, embezzlement and even links to Putin were just the tip of the iceberg. HJDWidely available, episodes weekly Sign up to What's On Get the best TV reviews, news and features in your inbox every Monday after newsletter promotion In words that will be relatable to many, Alex Sujong Laughlin describes herself as 'terrified, uncomfortable and uneasy'. Gladly, the Normal Gossip co-creator has channelled this nervous energy into a charming, gentle series about people trying to do new things. First up is Mattie, a trans woman who finds exercising in public excruciating but would love to visit her local yoga studio. HJDWidely available, episodes weekly


The Guardian
40 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Can you solve it? Ambigrams – you won't believe these flipping words!
Douglas Hofstadter is probably best known as the author of Gödel, Escher Bach, a classic of popular science writing published in 1979. In 1983, he coined the word 'ambigram', meaning a piece of text that can be read in more than one way, an art form pioneered in the 1970s by the typographers Scott Kim and John Langdon. Typically, an ambigram is a word or phrase that has left-right mirror symmetry, or reads the same upside down. Hofstadter, aged 80, is professor of cognitive science and comparative literature at Indiana University, and has produced thousands of ambigrams over the decades. Here's one that is pleasingly self-referential, taken from his latest book, Ambigrammia. It has a vertical line of symmetry through the 'g', which means you can read it left to right, and also in a mirror. The 'ambi' when reflected reads 'rams'. Here's another one, geographically appropriate, that has 180 degree rotational symmetry. (It reads the same upside down.) Isn't it clever? The dots underneath the 'r' and the 't' do not distract from the letters, but when upside down are clearly the dots on two 'i's. Hofstadter describes each ambigram as a 'pocket-sized creativity puzzle.' So I thought they would make a perfect challenge for this column. Flipping words Design an ambigram for the following words: 1. DAVE 2. OHIO 3. UTAH 4. RED 5. Your own name The aim in an ambigram is legibility. You want the word to be as readable as possible. Usually an ambigram has perfect symmetry (mirror or rotational) as in the the two examples above, but not always, as in 'GREEN' in the top image. You can use upper case, lower case, or a mixture of the two. You will need to experiment at first. How much you can tweak a letter without making it unrecognisable, and how much you can add without overwhelming the eye? With DAVE, the A and the V are (almost) inversions of each other. Harder is to see how to make an E into an upside down D. I'll be back at 5pm UK with Hofstadter's designs for 1 to 5. If you would like me to feature your designs of your names in that post, please either email me or tag me on Twitter or Bluesky. Ambigrammia by Douglas Hofstadter, with an introduction by Scott Kim, is out now on Yale University Press I've been setting a puzzle here on alternate Mondays since 2015. I'm always on the look-out for great puzzles. If you would like to suggest one, email me.