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There’s something deeply comforting about the idea of surviving an episode of The Vampire Lestat only to immediately sit down afterward with the cast and creators to unpack whatever emotional devastation just occurred. Thankfully, AMC seems to understand that too.
AMC Global Media has officially announced The Vampire Lestat: After Dark, a brand-new half-hour companion series that will air alongside The Vampire Lestat, giving fans behind-the-scenes access, cast interviews, production insight, and what will likely amount to group therapy sessions for whatever this season is about to do to us emotionally.
Hosted by writer, producer, and podcast host Lizzie Bassett, the series will feature conversations with cast members and producers including Sam Reid, Jacob Anderson, Assad Zaman, Delainey Hayles, Eric Bogosian, executive producer Mark Johnson, and showrunner Rolin Jones.
The companion series premiered today with a special preview episode on AMC+ ahead of the full launch on June 7. Episodes will stream weekly on Sundays through AMC+ before becoming available on podcast platforms including Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, and YouTube. Select episodes will also air on AMC throughout the season, including the premiere and finale.
And honestly? With Anderson, Reid, and Hayles all serving as executive producers on the companion series, I trust this thing with my life already.
With the preview episode now streaming on AMC+, it immediately became clear that literally nobody involved with this season emerged from the experience emotionally unscathed. When discussing what made them nervous heading into Season 3, Jones admitted the biggest challenge was the premiere itself because this season fundamentally changes the shape of the series audiences have known so far. Following the emotionally catastrophic Season 2 finale, Jones explained that it was finally time to go “for the jugular.” Which is an insane thing to say to people already emotionally compromised by this franchise.
One of the funniest moments comes from Bogosian, who appears via video to summarize the events of the first two seasons through Daniel Molloy’s perspective. He describes Louis as the “confused and pretty 144-year-old vampire” he interviewed, which, frankly, accurate. From there, he speed-runs through the chaos of Louis and Lestat’s relationship, Claudia deciding “dad number one has to go,” murder attempts, Europe, and emotional ruin. I will be hiring Eric Bogosian to teach plot summarization to my tenth grade English students immediately.
Jones also discussed the writing approach for this season, explaining that if scenes felt too elegant or overly choreographed, they simply didn’t belong in Season 3. This time around, the goal was messier storytelling — more contradictions, more unpredictability, more chaos. According to Jones, now audiences get “wild, weird stuff.” Considering this is already an Anne Rice adaptation, that statement somehow feels both exciting and vaguely threatening.
Anderson offered some especially fascinating insight into Louis this season, explaining that there were moments while filming where he no longer fully recognized the character. After spending two seasons understanding Louis primarily through Louis’ own perspective, Anderson described this newer version as feeling like a “funhouse mirror version” of him through the eyes of other characters, which sounds psychologically horrifying in the exact way this show thrives on.
Jones also confirmed there’s roughly a year and a half to two-year gap between the end of Season 2 and the beginning of Season 3.
Naturally, a fan sent in the one question that truly matters: do any of these characters get even a single day of peace this season? The cast initially answered yes before Sam Reid clarified, “…at least an evening…” only for Anderson to immediately jump in with, “It doesn’t last!” Reid then happily confirmed, “It goes really bad.” Deeply reassuring stuff here from the people responsible for our emotional wellbeing.
Alexandra Daddario also appeared via video message to ask about the season’s new cast additions and tease crossover potential with Mayfair Witches. What followed was essentially several minutes of competitive sibling energy between the two Immortal Universe shows, with Jones joking that nobody from Mayfair Witches ever calls them about characters first. Anderson responded that maybe they “should tell [them] first” before getting answers.

Reid did confirm that a “relevant” character connected to Mayfair Witches appears this season, though based on the expression on his face while saying it, I do not believe this development will improve literally anyone’s life.
In fact, Reid spent most of this preview episode terrifying me personally. At one point, he strongly implied that an unexpectedly major figure from Anne Rice’s universe may appear this season and now I’ve been staring at the ceiling trying to figure out who it could possibly be.
Hayles later joined the panel in person, while Zaman made what might genuinely be the funniest entrance of the episode by hiding behind the couch before suddenly popping up directly between Anderson and Reid — which, to be fair, is spiritually Armand’s ideal location in any room.
Hayles’ return this season remains heavily under wraps story-wise, but honestly, simply having her back on screen again already feels like something worth looking forward to.
Meanwhile, Zaman delivered the single funniest line of the entire preview when he looked directly into the camera with complete sincerity and declared, “Armand has always been good.” The conviction with which he says this should qualify as performance art.
The preview episode closes with the cast collectively telling viewers “Good luck” before the season begins, which feels less like promotional enthusiasm and more like a formal warning.
The Vampire Lestat: After Dark will air weekly alongside The Vampire Lestat beginning June 7 on AMC and AMC+.
Keep up with us here at iHorror for continuing coverage of The Vampire Lestat and The Vampire Lestat: After Dark.

