Market Cap: $3.3826T 2.180%
Volume(24h): $148.9806B -17.570%
  • Market Cap: $3.3826T 2.180%
  • Volume(24h): $148.9806B -17.570%
  • Fear & Greed Index:
  • Market Cap: $3.3826T 2.180%
Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos
Top News
Cryptos
Topics
Cryptospedia
News
CryptosTopics
Videos
bitcoin
bitcoin

$103543.459369 USD

1.56%

ethereum
ethereum

$2633.470092 USD

7.94%

tether
tether

$0.999999 USD

-0.02%

xrp
xrp

$2.549560 USD

3.65%

bnb
bnb

$662.515805 USD

2.61%

solana
solana

$179.658185 USD

6.08%

usd-coin
usd-coin

$0.999912 USD

-0.02%

dogecoin
dogecoin

$0.237120 USD

6.88%

cardano
cardano

$0.816978 USD

3.56%

tron
tron

$0.272018 USD

3.15%

sui
sui

$3.964909 USD

2.47%

chainlink
chainlink

$17.197951 USD

5.41%

avalanche
avalanche

$26.135043 USD

9.60%

stellar
stellar

$0.309763 USD

2.83%

shiba-inu
shiba-inu

$0.000016 USD

5.75%

Cryptocurrency News Articles

Helen Mirren Discusses the Joy of Playing Maeve Harrigan in Taylor Sheridan's 'MobLand'

May 12, 2025 at 07:00 am

This post contains spoilers from Sunday's episode of MobLand. Proceed accordingly. This is probably not the Mother's Day that Maeve Harrigan envisioned.

Helen Mirren Discusses the Joy of Playing Maeve Harrigan in Taylor Sheridan's 'MobLand'

This post contains spoilers from Sunday’s episode of MobLand. Proceed accordingly.

This is probably not the Mother’s Day that Maeve Harrigan envisioned.

In the latest MobLand, which happened to debut on Mother’s Day in the United States, Maeve was forced to watch one of her children die. Son Brendan was murdered with a chainsaw on Richie Stevenson’s orders while Seraphina screamed for mercy next to her half-brother; Richie had a livestream of the grisly event sent to Maeve’s phone. Seraphina, Conrad’s daughter by another woman (and therefore the focus of Maeve’s loathing), only survived thanks to some quick maneuvering on Harry’s part.

Given the horrible outcome, and the fact that Maeve set the whole thing in motion by offering Richie Seraphina as a sacrificial lamb, might the Harrigan matriarch have any regrets? We checked in with Mirren, and, turns out: not really! The conversation below starts out being about MobLand, meanders over to Mirren’s turn as 1923’s Cara, and then winds up back with the unpredictable Maeve, who “likes to get down and dirty,” Mirren says with glee. Read on for the rest.

TVLINE | Helen, Maeve is bats—t, and I am in love with her.

HELEN MIRREN | Love the word ‘bats—t.’ That was a great description. It’s the first time I’ve heard it called ‘bats—t,’ and I love that. It’s a perfect description.

TVLINE | At the end of Episode 7, we find out that Brendan got chainsawed to death. Do you think Maeve, who put this all in motion, ever considered that her meddling might backfire — especially given that Richie doesn’t seem super trustworthy?

I don’t think she cared. [Laughs] Because she certainly wanted to get rid of her stepdaughter, and she kind of cared about Brendan, kind of.

In the immediate moment, [Brendan’s death is] a kind of devastation. She said, “Well, if I had to lose someone, it’s better that it was Brendan than anybody else.” I mean, she is batshit, as you say. She’s very, very — well, you know what? She’s a fantasy woman, really, and it doesn’t pay to talk about real human psychology. The thing that I love about MobLand is that it’s operatic. It’s like an opera, and you don’t really ask for, you know, Aida’s psychological background. [Laughs] I mean, “What’s her backstory?” [Laughs] It’s got that sort of magnificent grandeur and excess about it, and I’ve always loved that kind of thing. It’s why I started off as a theater actress and why I love playing Empress Catherine the Great of Russia or Elizabeth I of England. I loved the grandeur of those worlds, you know. And the Harrigan world has that sort of excessive grandeur.

I didn’t know it was going to be that when I signed up. Really, I had not much idea at all about who Maeve was or what she was going to be. I think we’d seen the first episode maybe, but Pierce [Brosnan] and I both signed on at the same time. We were working together. So, one of the great reasons why I agreed to do it, or I wanted to do it, was because I knew Pierce was going to be in it, and I loved working with Pierce so much. So, we didn’t really know what we were particularly walking into, and it revealed itself as we went along, and I have absolutely loved doing it.

TVLINE | Before we talk about anything else, sidebar: You and Pierce worked together in his first movie, right?

Well, we didn’t really work together. We were both in the same movie. [Editor’s note: The film is The Long Good Friday, which was released in 1980]. He played a very small role, nonspeaking role — important little role, but nonspeaking — and I was never in any scenes that he was in. So, we never met on that movie at all. Later on, when he became James Bond and a lot of things… “Oh, he was in Long Good Friday,” I went, “was he? I don’t remember that.” Obviously, he’s gone on to have this spectacular career that he’s had, but no. The first time we’ve actually worked together was in The Thursday Murder Club that’s about to come out, a Chris Columbus film. We were working together, and I was loving working with him, when this came.

TVLINE | You and I have talked about 192

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

Other articles published on May 14, 2025