It’s in episode ten, a few episodes away from the finale. Is there anything you can tell us about those disturbing scenes without giving the story away? It’s very exciting to know I can go to those places and be surprised by work. Yet when a day or two goes by and I can step away from it, I have no regrets. There was one scene in particular where I was surprised by how difficult it was for me to shake the emotional stuff. I’m not sure if this makes me a masochist or something but I think, as draining as the emotionally and physically demanding scenes can be, they’re also very rewarding. And the last couple of scenes were kind of harrowing.ĭo you find those kinds of scenes draining? It was nice to complete the thing, but it was sad to say good-bye to everybody. You’ve just finished shooting the season finale, right? What was it like to say good-bye to this character? Is this deranged creature, Lumen Pierce, the same girl who handled Jason Bourne (the Bourne triology), updated Ophelia and Desdemona ( Hamlet and O), and taught Heath Ledger about feminist punk rock ( Ten Things I Hate About You)? As we move toward Dexter’s season finale, we caught up with Stiles to discuss Lumen Pierce in all her injured, demented, calculating glory. When we first saw her face, soot-covered and peering out like a Bedlam inmate from a tiny window of a locked door in the house of Dexter’s latest kill, Julia Stiles was almost unrecognizable.
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