![]() ![]() There’s also Vancouver’s Thomas Antony Olajide, whose character in episode three unwittingly inflames Lestat’s thinly veiled insecurities, and screenwriter Hannah Moscovitch, who penned an exceedingly violent assault in episode five that divided the online fandom. The following contains spoilers for what happens in season one, which examines a toxic vampire relationship. It’s crazy.”Īmid a multitude of off-the-rail moments in the seven-episode gothic series, O’Byrne is just one of several Canadians who contributed to some of the show’s most devastating shockers. “It’s terrifying how much it looks like (me), down to my eyebrows. “It was all very kind of accidental but then in the end, a total highlight,” O’Byrne says by phone from Los Angeles, where he serves as producer and ”right hand“ to creator and showrunner Rolin Jones. The Toronto-bred Stratford Festival alumnus appears during a particularly gruesome turn of events in the penultimate episode of the completed first season, in which the depraved vampire Lestat decapitates a man and toys with the head – a “startlingly realistic” mould of O’Byrne’s noggin. ![]() ![]() Adam O’Byrne had largely put aside acting to work behind-the-scenes in television, but he could not turn down a hair-raising cameo on AMC’s “Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire.” ![]()
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