Here is a NEW Interview with Richard Rankin from Town And Country
From Town and Country:
Roger MacKenzie has covered a lot of ground on this season on Outlander. He’s traveled through the stones and across an ocean in search of Brianna. And just as Roger and Bree finally found each other through time and space, they were quickly torn apart again, and Roger was forced to work on Stephen Bonnet’s ship as it traveled up the coast of colonial America. A horrible misunderstanding prevents a second reunion for the couple, and sets into motion Roger’s most recent journey with the Mohawk people, who marched him from North Carolina to New York state in captivity.
Here is a NEW Interview with Terry Dresbach from Town and Country
From T&C:
As Brianna stumbles her way through 18th-century Scotland at the beginning of this week’s episode of Outlander, it becomes immediately apparent that her clothing is a far-cry from the expertly constructed “bat-suit” Claire wore back in time last season.
But in actuality, Brianna’s ’70s attire was inspired by what Claire wore through the stones, not on the television show, but in the source material, Diana Gabaldon’s book.
Here is a NEW Interview with Terry Dresbach from Town and Country
From Town and Country:
It’s no secret that Hollywood has a horrible track record of portraying Native Americans in film and television, and stereotypical depictions of the indigenous people of this continent continue to persist even today
Here is a NEW Interview with Ed Speleers from Town and Country
From T&C:
Ed Speleers is no stranger to period drama. He played Edward Seymour in Wolf Hall and Slean in Beowulf: Return to the Shieldlands, but he’s most well-known (to American audiences, at least) as Jimmy Kent, an ambitious 1920s footman in the latter seasons of Downton Abbey.
Here is a NEW Interview with Tobias Menzies from Town And Country
From T&C:
Actor Tobias Menzies isn’t one to shy away from a complicated character. Over the past two seasons of Outlander, he’s masterfully portrayed not only the sadistic Black Jack Randall, but also his distant relative Frank Randall, the long-suffering husband Claire left behind when she journeyed through the stones to the 18th century.
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