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Lestat’s Devastating Making by Magnus

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Lestat’s Devastating Making by Magnus
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Major spoilers ahead for The Vampire Lestat episode 3. Content/trigger warnings for discussions of rape and sexual assault.

In a harrowing hour of television, The Vampire Lestat’s third episode, “Toronto,” fully depicts the hunting, and subsequent forced transformation, of Lestat (Sam Reid) by his maker, Magnus (Damien Atkins).

But unlike the comparatively staid description told to Daniel (Eric Bogosian) by Louis (Jacob Anderson) in Interview with the Vampire season 1, this traumatic event wasn’t shared with the journalist for the purpose of personal exploration of the past by someone the assault did not happen to and who was told in confidence.

Lestat gave Daniel an ‘80s pop music video explanation that romanticizes Magnus’ obsession, but what the audience later sees with Louis’ accompanying narration of Claudia’s (Delainey Hayles) rape by Bruce (Damon Daunno) through her diary entries is the reality.

Haunted by Magnus, and barreling down the road at dangerous speed, Lestat is forced to confront his rapist as he’s triggered into reliving his making. But his mind’s unwillingness to keep the memory at bay unlocks a realization in Lestat that leads to “The Loneliness.”

It’s a song that reckons with the perils of escapism and asks the listener to not bury themselves away to handle what they’re feeling alone. In doing so, “Toronto” ends not as a tale about trauma but as one that works through it to put Lestat, notorious for literally hiding away for a near century, on the path to healing.

Lestat Denies Daniel The Details Of His Transformation

Lestat wrote “Your Biggest Fan” to exorcise the demon of Magnus. But he did so in the vein of songs like “Stan” by Eminem. When he tells Daniel this during their filmed sit down interview, it gets him nowhere.

Daniel wants the details of Magnus’ place in Lestat’s life at the time. He refers to Lestat’s maker as his abuser, but Lestat isn’t willing to walk down that road with him. What he chooses to do is soft wash the series of events that led to him being made into a vampire.

It’s a campy retelling set to music that depicts Magnus as a besotted fan who couldn’t help but fall in love with the unattainable thespian Lestat de Lioncourt. But even in its creepily amusing, heart-eyed trot through the past, the sinister truth simmers right on the surface.

From the brief glimpse of the boys who looked like Lestat who Magnus had tired of and killed to Nicki (Joseph Potter) and Lestat arguing as Magnus watches from the window, it’s clear something is not right. But the curtain is not ripped away for Daniel’s sake. Not just because Lestat believes the horrific details of his making are none of the journalist’s business but also because Daniel knows some bullet point facts about it due to Louis.

While Louis could only share what Lestat was willing to tell him, it was still too much information. It took the story out of Lestat’s hands and enabled Daniel to weaponize it for his own benefit, or at least he tries to during their interview. Lestat doesn’t budge on keeping the intimate details of his transformation to himself.

However, they are ripped from him after a particularly emotional flashback to Lestat falling in love with Nicki and then losing him to both mental illness and an intolerance of the dark gift.

How Lestat Became A Vampire

Telling Daniel about Nicki’s death, caused by the accelerated decline of Nicki’s mind due to the heightened effects of vampirism on emotions and personality traits and executed by Armand (Assad Zaman), triggered a panic attack for Lestat.

He succeeded in luring Daniel into believing that he’d share such a heartbreaking and regretful period in his life for the consumption of the masses but in doing so opened a door he could not shut.

Magnus appeared in the backseat of his car, not the least bit an admirer. In truth, not even a sycophant. Just a man with the needling ability to make Lestat feel small and an agenda that concerned his own wants and desires.

The scene is stripped bare of glamoured, hazy shots that capture Lestat as if he were bewitching. What remains is the singular truth that Magnus saw Lestat as a morsel on which he could dine and hold power over.

But “Toronto” doesn’t stop at depicting the night Lestat was stolen from his bed and brought to Magnus’ tower. The episode juxtaposes his rape with that of his daughter Claudia’s through the narrative device of Louis once again telling a story that’s not his to tell. But instead of Louis recounting to Bruce the pain he put his daughter through, he goes a step further and shares her diary entry, performing his own violation in a misplaced sense of righteous vengeance decades too late.

Forbes‘The Vampire Lestat’ Explores Gabriella And Lestat’s Horrific Bond

Claudia’s words describing her captivity, how she was made to entertain Bruce’s whims, how she fought him to no avail, and how he ground her into nothingness to show her how powerless she actually was played over the depiction of Magnus doing the same to Lestat.

The layered and mirrored parallel tied Lestat and Claudia together in their trauma. Through an experience neither wanted told but only one of them got to tell how he wanted. Unlike Claudia, Lestat gets to control his narrative. He gets to wrestle his story back from Louis, Daniel, and the masses to be told how he sees fit and through his own experience and history. Claudia is denied that not only because she’s dead but because her words are used for the purposes of others. What those words mean to them and how they makes them feel.

Louis took Claudia’s diary entry about Bruce from its binding, removing it from the context of her other personal writings to read it to her rapist as a form of punishment that he then uses to burn Bruce to his death. Louis not only kills the vampire that irreparably hurt his daughter, he wipes the crime as detailed by her own words from existence to now only be felt, heard, and told through her fathers.

There is no healing in that, only erasure, hence Louis’ trip to New York to see Claudia’s aptly named doppelganger Regina (Delainey Hayles). Meanwhile, after surviving a flaming car crash caused by his memories of Magnus, Lestat takes to the stage in Toronto renewed because he faced his demon head on.

The Healing Power Of Music In ‘The Vampire Lestat’

For Lestat, his self-funded tour across North America has been confronting not only over his place in his own story but in the patterns his life has fallen into. It has been one tragedy or trauma after another. His method of coping when existence has gotten too hard to bear is to hide away, whether sleeping for a near century or becoming a recluse in a hovel.

But the release of Interview with the Vampire and Louis’ betrayal doesn’t send him back underground and that’s not solely because of his hurt and anger over the book. It’s because music had found him again. He was distracted by it when talking to Louis before he was made aware of the book. And it interrupted his rage-fueled reading and annotating. Music is what saved Lestat in the past when he reunited with Nicki, and it’s what saving him in the present.

Lestat loves an artful turn of phrase because they’re fun and also easier to hide behind. He can’t do the latter with music. It forces him to be nakedly honest and in that honesty he finds understanding in himself and is better able to put to words how he’s feeling.

“The Loneliness” is the song that best captures this narrative arc in The Vampire Lestat because it’s entirely about himself. It’s about the cycle he’s learning to break. Instead of running from his heartache and pain, Lestat is standing in it. His music is making him and that confrontation is what ultimately is going to heal him.

It’s a lyrical and beautiful way of describing one of the hardest parts about healing—acknowledging and accepting that the only way out of something is to go through it. Eventually, what you’re running from will catch up to you as Lestat is finding out, but he’s channeling what’s happening through his music and in doing so is not going through this alone like he has before.

Notably, Gabriella took her leave as “The Loneliness” was played. So did Magnus. Leaving Nicki, a tragic but loved figure in Lestat’s life, to experience the joy of Lestat finally coming into his own in a way that had been denied to him over two centuries ago.


New episodes of The Vampire Lestat air Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on AMC and are available to stream on AMC+. Follow Sabrina Reed on Forbes for weekly coverage of the season and news about the business of TV.

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