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An Exclusive Sneak Peek at the First Episodes of ‘Outlander: Blood of My Blood'

An Exclusive Sneak Peek at the First Episodes of ‘Outlander: Blood of My Blood'

Elle21-07-2025
In a meadow splayed like a blanket between the peaks of the Scottish Highlands, Jamie Roy and Harriet Slater appear to be alone. The actors' voices are barely audible from within the crumbling cemetery where they've reunited—though the boom mics looming above their heads will solve that problem later. On the horizon, a torrent of machine-generated fog dissolves into the grass, dotted with clover and yellow violets that the surrounding crew members crush underfoot as they huddle beneath a cluster of tents. Together, they help take Scotland back in time: to 1714, the setting of the Starz Outlander prequel series Blood of My Blood , set to premiere on August 8.
It's late June 2024 when I step onto this set with a group of other journalists, but the air is crisp enough to warrant a cardigan. Both Roy and Slater are well-outfitted for the climate: In the signature garb of Clans Fraser and MacKenzie, respectively, they look as traditionally Scottish as the hilltops surrounding them. As Roy later tells me, he teared up the first time he put on the costume of Brian Fraser (father of Outlander 's Jamie), one of the series' four lead protagonists. 'It was actually really emotional, seeing those Fraser colors on the tartan, wearing those for the first time,' he says. 'I was like, 'Wow. This is really happening.''
The scene I'm watching is one of several in which Roy and Slater's characters must meet in secret, as the romance between their characters—Brian Fraser and Ellen MacKenzie—is strictly forbidden. (As Slater puts it, they've 'kind of got a Romeo and Juliet vibe' going on.) Eventually, they'll overcome their clans' rivalry to become parents to Jamie, as played by Sam Heughan in the now-iconic flagship series. But, for now, they're still young, in love, and in danger. Sanne Gault
Jamie Roy as Brian Fraser and Harriet Slater as Ellen MacKenzie.
Hundreds of years later and hundreds of miles away—though, in reality, the two sets are within driving distance of each other—Hermione Corfield sits in a cramped attic flat. As the 20th-century Londoner Julia Moriston, she must navigate a romantic dilemma of her own. She's in love with a soldier on the frontlines of World War I, and she's never once seen his face. But, as Outlander fans will already know, the passionate letters she sends to Henry Beauchamp (Jeremy Irvine) don't go unrequited. Eventually, Julia and Henry, too, will come together, later becoming the parents of Caitriona Balfe's Claire Beauchamp, Outlander 's beloved Sassenach.
As these exclusive first-look images from the first two episodes of Outlander: Blood of my Blood reveal, the earliest meetings between the show's lead couples—Brian and Ellen, and Julia and Henry—are pivotal moments. And they're as loaded with magic as the time travel that soon intertwines their stories.
While Julia begins the series yearning for her soldier, we're first introduced to Ellen as a grieving daughter. Her father, Red Jacob MacKenzie (Peter Mullan), once promised his eldest child she'd never have to marry. But Jacob's sudden death makes Ellen a political pawn in the hands of her younger brothers, Colum (Séamus McLean Ross) and Dougal (Sam Retford), who each seek the now-vacant MacKenzie lairdship. Ellen has no interest in the marriage matches they lay out for her. Unbeknownst to them, she's already found her soulmate.
Brian and Ellen initially collide by accident, but their first planned rendezvous takes place on a bridge revealed in the Blood of My Blood trailer—in a meadow not unlike the one I visited last summer. They begin the scene on opposite ends of the stone structure, uncertain how to proceed, given the scandalous nature of their meeting. (Without a chaperone, Ellen is endangering her reputation as a maiden.) But 'there is this magnetic connection between the two of them,' Roy says, and neither can resist creeping slowly toward each other until, at last, their hands touch. They're meant to be sworn enemies, but the fairies seem to have other plans. Sanne Gault
Jamie Roy as Brian Fraser and Harriet Slater as Ellen MacKenzie.
A sentiment repeated frequently throughout my visit is that Scotland 'is its own character' in both Outlander and Outlander: Blood of my Blood . But the country's infamous weather doesn't pay much heed to call times. Roy says he and Slater had been looking forward to shooting the bridge scene 'for ages, because it's been with us since day one': They rehearsed it throughout their auditions and chemistry reads. But on the actual day of filming, 'we had four different seasons,' he says. 'It was blowing a gale, then it downpoured, then it started to sleet.' The river running beneath the bridge—all but a murmur in the finalized episode—was loud enough that both Roy and Slater had to use earpieces to understand each other. 'Half the time mine wouldn't work,' he continues. 'So I would see Harriet start to say something, her mouth would move, and then it would stop, and I'd be like, 'Oh, okay! My turn!' So that was quite funny.'
'Luckily we both knew each other's lines,' Slater adds.
By the time they'd survived multiple rain delays and filmed several angles, the actors were both so cold that Roy wasn't sure he could speak. 'I couldn't feel my face at the end of each take,' he says. 'I wasn't even sure if words were coming out.' During their lunch break, he had to massage his mouth for 'half an hour, because I couldn't actually chew my food.'
Of course, the weather cooperated just in time to give the scene the air of enchantment it needed to convince audiences Jamie and Ellen are indeed headed for a life-changing love affair. The wind whips up as Brian steps forward; the gloom parts to wash them both in sunlight.
'[Jamie] has this line where he introduces himself for the first time, and he says, 'I'm Brian Fraser,' and [at one point] the sun just came out from behind the cloud behind him,' Slater tells me, laughing. 'It was almost like he was the Messiah.' Sanne Gault
Jeremy Irvine as Henry Beauchamp and Hermione Corfield as Julia Moriston.
Julia and Henry's first meeting is no less fateful, though it was perhaps easier to film. Shot on a set of steps in Glasgow's Park District, the scene depicts the couple passing each other by chance in 1917 London. But the 'magnetic draw between them,' Corfield says, is as potent as the one between Brian and Ellen. When Henry speaks aloud a line from their letters, Julia turns around, recognizing her soon-to-be husband in the flesh. 'We were both wondering how that was going to play,' Corfield admits. 'Because, on the page, it's quite interesting just seeing two people not saying anything, walking past each other on a step, and then one person says something and they both go, 'It's you.' It worked because of the romance between them.'
Adds Irvine, '[Henry] tries his luck and says something, and it is her. We were joking, myself and Hermione, saying, 'How many other women has he been saying that to that day?'' But Outlander has always existed in a world where anything can happen. When Irvine asked showrunner Matthew B. Roberts about the logic of the scene, Roberts told him, 'Look, this is a romance that's got to have some magic about it.' Irvine continues, 'I didn't really understand that until I saw the episode cut together. I went, 'Yeah, this is something slightly out of this world.' If you believe in fate, and destiny, and soulmates, then this is how it happens.'
That magic only intensifies when Julia and Henry's saga intersects with Brian and Henry's. On holiday in Scotland in the 20th century, Julia and Henry inadvertently tumble through time after encountering Outlander 's infamous stones of Craigh na Dun. They separately land in Scotland circa 1714, and they soon meet both the MacKenzies and the Frasers as they fight their way back to each other. Sanne Gault
Jeremy Irvine as Henry Beauchamp and Hermione Corfield as Julia Moriston.
Corfield was thrilled when she learned that, like Outlander , Blood of My Blood would feature a time-travel plot. 'It's a challenge to play someone that's time-traveled,' she says, 'I don't know any other job where you can possibly say that you are both in the [20th century] and also 1700 Scotland. So it was a challenge, but when I first started reading all the scenes taking place [in the 18th century], I was really excited.'
It helps that the lead quartet have become close friends. 'We became actual mates before we had to become colleagues,' Irvine says. 'We spent a few months up here getting ready for the role and doing what production called 'boot camp,' learning all the things that we need to learn for the roles. In that time, we all became very close.' They often spend their evenings and weekends off set together, either singing karaoke in Glasgow or picnicking along one of the country's many lochs. 'We started this project in the depths of winter in Scotland,' Irvine continues. 'When you're doing that, you've got to go and have fun sometimes.' Sanne Gault
Hermione Corfield as Julia Moriston. Sanne Gault
Jeremy Irvine as Henry Beauchamp.
This summer, Roy, Slater, Corfield, and Irvine are all back in the meadows of Scotland, already filming the next chapter. 'I feel very privileged to be shooting a season 2 before season 1's even come out,' Slater says. 'I'm very aware of how rare that is.'
Roy shares in that sentiment. 'When we finished the last season, there was no guarantee,' he says. 'It's a spinoff. We don't know [if it will work]. So to get that call that says, 'Hey, we're going to do this again, and you get to revisit these characters and this story?' It is really just a privilege. I hope we get to do it for as long as possible.' Breaking Down the Outlander Family Tree
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RELATED: Outlander: Blood of My Blood Gets Season 2 Renewal at STARZ CM: Now, y'see, I think the opposite about the heels because the heels give me a poise… They make me walk quite differently, and I'm instantly in a 'Ned' zone when I put the heels on. I also love the ponytail. It has a real impact on how I behave. Clothes That Make the Man SR: I feel that for us, the kilt-wearers, the kilt is the most practical piece of equipment we can be given to do our job in because, my goodness, you get a lot of freedom with that thing, sprinting through the Highland woods. TC: Do you wear your underwear or do you go full… umm… SMR: What d'ya call it, commando? SR: Well, yeah, I have to do quite a lot of rolly-pollying on the floor, and I'm afraid the amount I have flashed my underwear… if I wasn't wearing any, then I probably wouldn't be here right now. RELATED: TV Review: The Serpent Queen Season 2 SMR: For me, my favorite thing about it is the weight. 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I hope fans are more entrenched in the story and see how complex these favorite characters' lives truly are, and the years of their lives that you've not already seen. It's adding more depth and more drama to a brilliant, brilliant story. CM: Yeah, you're getting a new perspective on characters you know and love so well. But you're getting the journey of how they got to be the characters that you know and love so well. You're seeing an entirely new version of them in our show, which is exciting. RELATED: Hair and Makeup Artist Jacquetta Levon Talks Incorporating Reality and Fantasy for The Serpent Queen SR: I hope it changes people's minds about certain characters. To be able to give people so much more context could really inspire a shift in how those characters come across and the reason behind a lot of their decisions, which objectively might not align with what fans want to happen. This at least allows a little window into the soul of where they're coming from. 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Is that what you're pertaining to? [group laughs] Outlander: Blood of My Blood – Image Credit: Courtesy of STARZ Building Out Known Characters Cherry the Geek TV: How familiar were you all with the Outlander franchise going in? Did you study the other actors' performances? Or did you want to keep it your own thing and stay away from that? RA: For me, I took the second option. Matt [B. Roberts] and Maril [Davis] kind of encouraged it. [They advised,] 'Don't go in and try to do an impersonation. If you can, at this point, keep clear.' I'd watched some of it prior to starting the process, but then I really tried to stop so that I didn't just make a bad impression of Duncan [Lacroix] and ruin what he had already done. Because it is the same world and universe, once you step into that, there are some pretty clear guidelines around, so you feel like you're very much walking the same path but wearing slightly different shoes. Well, actually, maybe we wear the same shoes. RELATED: 7 Royal Questions We'll Never Get Answered in The Great Season 4 CM: It's really nice having the show because you know the destination. You get to make the journey and the plan for the journey to get to that destination. It doesn't mean you're making an exact replica of what they're doing, but 'I see where I'm going towards.' That's quite a useful thing to have. SMR: And people change. Especially when you're 18-19 years old. Characters like Colum and Dougal, these guys have aspirations. Colum certainly didn't think he'd have legs like he does. He didn't think he would face such obstacles fighting for the leadership with his brother. Life throws all sorts of obstacles at you. Like Conor was saying, seeing where your characters end up gives you the freedom to show how he got there. Doing the Homework TC: With regards to Lord Lovat, I've watched three, four seasons because my wife loves the show and all her friends love it. I watched quite a lot of it, but I went and did a historical/political deep dive into Simon Fraser. My nephew gave me this first edition book. He lives in Nuremberg, Germany. He's at a little bookshop one day, and he found this first edition, 1903 or something. It was a biography about Simon Fraser, Lord Lovat, written by a MacKenzie. RELATED: Read our My Lady Jane recaps The irony isn't lost on us all. I just started flicking through it. It was over a hundred years old. You could smell the history. It was all these incredible little gems about how Lovat played both sides. He'd play the Jacobites. He'd be with the Redcoats. By all means necessary, what he wanted to do, he would do it to get back to the glory days. A Little Detour Off-Track SR: All of this art and design then leads to us bleeding into the characters rather than us replicating them. It's down to the writing and the costumes. You are physically stepping into those shoes. Apart from me. I've got size 12 feet, and Graham [McTavish] has little size 4 women's feet. Really quite unusual. He struggles to balance. Looks quite large on tiny, tiny little feet. [gets back on track] That sort of does the work. [oops, nope] He's going to kill me for that. He didn't want the public to know. I had to sign an NDA. SMR: [Directly to the camera] Hi, Graham! [Entire group completely cracks up.] RELATED: Netflix Renews The Witcher for Fifth and Final Season SR: [Determinedly back on track] All of the work is done for us, really, so we can bring those early days, which can be a completely different person. By the time we get to the in 30 years, they've been through so much. SMR: Unrecognizable, really. Outlander: Blood of My Blood – Image Credit: Courtesy of STARZ For the Newcomers Scenes in Color: If you could send a message to new fans, what would it be? CM: You're getting elements of the characters you love so well that you've never seen before. And you're seeing aspects of the journey of how they all ended up where they end up and how those characters became who they are in Blood of My Blood , which isn't in Outlander . For that, come watch Blood of My Blood. SR: The show's so beautifully crafted in the way that it stands so firmly on its own foundations, and yet, there will be so much in there for the fans of the original show. So much more that they can extrapolate. All these Easter Eggs. There's another dimension of fun that can be taken away from the show, but, like I say, it really does stand as a piece on its own. You don't need any advice, only to come and switch on and switch off. Outlander: Blood of My Blood premieres with two episodes on Friday, August 8, at 9/8c, on STARZ and the STARZ app. New TV Shows This Week (August 3-9) Diana lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she invests her time and energy in teaching, writing, parenting, and indulging her love of all Trek and a myriad of other fandoms. She is a lifelong fan of smart sci-fi and fantasy media, an upstanding citizen of the United Federation of Planets, and a supporter of AFC Richmond 'til she dies. Her guilty pleasures include female-led procedurals, old-school sitcoms, and Bluey. She teaches, knits, and dreams big. You can also find her writing at The Televixen, Women at Warp, TV Fanatic, and TV Goodness.

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