'True Detective,' 'North of North' star Anna Lambe looks back at her impressive career: Eh Listers
Lambe spoke to Yahoo Canada about her work to date, from Canadian films to international productions. She also talked about authentically telling Indigenous stories with humour, including projects set in the North.Within the span of 8 years and only really actively pursuing acting for the past 5, that I get to sit here now in the Netflix building.
That's so weird.
That's so cool.
I guess the first real question here is, now that you've seen such a great response, that how does it feel that so many people have really kind of loved the show?
I mean, you know, in creating the show and and in the release in Canada and everything, I, I, you know, had a good feeling people were going to like it.
Um, but the amount of people that have loved it has been just really like humbling, overwhelming, heartwarming.
Um, I, I'm so grateful that so many people have been open and receptive to kind of seeing the story in a place they might not have seen before, um, and allowed themselves to, to kind of fall in love with these characters and, and the show that we created.
I think something that's really striking about the show is that it's like insanely funny and the writing goes to like such.
Extremely funny places, but I think when people think of stories with indigenous lead characters, um, you're not necessarily thinking like outrageously funny in the same sentence.
A lot of times things are are just a little bit more dramatic.
Was it nice to be able to say like, here's all these characters and we're gonna put them in a place where everyone gets to be funny and joyful, and we get to tell that story now.
Yeah, 100%.
I mean, in going into this production, it was so exciting to To know that it was going to be like quite a lighthearted shoot.
It was going to be hard and it was gonna be really long days and we were going to be battling the cold and that definitely posed challenges throughout filming.
But in terms of content, like it was like this is going to be fun, and there were so many times where in approaching episodes and scenes that we were filming, you know, amongst the cast and amongst the crew we'd be chatting with each other but like, oh, I can't wait to do this part.
Oh my gosh, I can't wait to do in Bridgerton, that's gonna be so beautiful.
I can't wait to do the underwater sequences.
That's gonna be really cool.
So just getting to kind of exist and play in so many different forms and and moods and and tempos uh was was really really nice because we you know can go from like really high comedy clown-esque comedy, you know, and then we go and we kind of break your heart a little bit with with some of the stuff that we that we deal with in the show and I think to have that full swing um is is.
Really fun and at a huge uh privilege as an actor.
I have to ask about this Bridgerton moment cause I think like it's such an example of how not only was it like hysterical, but the way that costumes were used in the show, I think are so great, even like when she goes to the party and she has her like outfit ready, it was so great to see such a like vibrancy.
Was it nice to be able to use costumes as like a tool for your character?
Oh my goodness, yeah, the costumes played such a huge part in how I understood CIA and You know her love of color and um you know fun cuts and fun patterns and fun prints and even more so I think what I loved was how Bunn was dressed.
She had such bold, you know, parkas and she wore whatever she wanted and these kind of cool little funky outfits and seeing, I think there was some.
Thing really interesting about um going from Ney's color palette to CIA's to buns because there is like a kind of gradual shift into into bright and bold colors and expression and fun and that to me really exemplified the intergenerational healing that um happened amongst those those three generations and that.
With each generation, people get to express themselves a little bit more that we create safer spaces for our children to grow and and be who they are and I think the costume department did such an incredible job of of representing that, um, and you know just what they were able to to gather from you know across Arctic regions and across North America and even from Greenland in terms of indigenous designers um and and parkas and.
And all of these things, it was just walking onto set or walking into the uh fitting room and seeing like what was laid out.
Oh, stars in my eyes.
I was so happy every single time.
One thing I also love is the kind of complexity that that we get to explore with your character's relationship with Ting, because I think it would be easy to be like.
She made this big declaration that she was like, done, and then she was actually done, but we got to see kind of like the pressure of like, still like the father to her child, still like have that connection.
They still are in this small community where there's like that constant pressure about what their relationship was.
Was it nice to be able to say like, listen, it's not gonna be like a complicated, like, she's just gonna cut and go.
There's a lot more that goes into that decision.
Yeah, it was so important to show that like, you know, CIA and Ting can have a complicated relationship and can fight and cannot see eye to eye on things, but what they both care most about what's always at the forefront of their minds is the the well-being of Bun and creating a safe space for her and and a happy childhood for her and by.
You know, showing kind of these moments where it's just ing and CIA and they're kind of going at it a little bit, and then how they pivot onceuns in the picture and how to, how to take care of her and put her first, um, was really important and that kind of aspect of like, you know, we can have our differences, but What we need to do is make sure that she's um she's on the right path and that she's happy.
You know, there's so much fun and there's so much great comedy in this show, but I think when you get to the end and you have a moment where like your character's mom is talking to her about what happened to her child, like that's a really serious moment and that's a moment that's obviously really important.
Um, what made you feel was effective about this set in the way that this story is being told where you felt like you could go to kind of those really emotional spaces just as much as you can go to the comedy spaces.
Yeah, you know, I think at the core of the show, like what was most important for us was the authenticity of it and the experience of of um living in the north and the complexities of our communities and our family dynamics.
And you know something that's very real is how you know our community is really really struggles with the the trauma from colonialism and and how we navigate that um but for the most part we do it through humor so that aspect of like, you know, from from really like dry humor to really like silly like fart joke humor, um, the coping exists within all of that and.
You know, those moments where you do just break open, those, those are real too.
And I think, you know, it kind of defining the show as as one thing or the other, as just a comedy or just a drama doesn't do it the service of like, it's just a human kind of experience and just a human story.
Um, so it, it was nice to kind of feel like we weren't needing to exist in one or the other, and that we can have both at different moments and they both serve the story, uh, equally importantly.
Because you got to work with the team that was behind Grizzlies as well.
What was it like to kind of come back and and work with them again?
It's been so special to work with that team again.
I love them.
So, so, so much.
I, you know, they took a chance on me when I was 15 and, and then they took a chance on me again when I was 23 and, you know, I, um.
So grateful for the way that they always lead with the community at the forefront of their minds and that it's always about how they can give back and how they can tell stories um with nuance and complexity and appropriately and authentically.
Something about grizzlies because because you were, you know, so young when you started that, and, you know, I think from my understanding it was just like a posting that this was happening and then your teachers were like.
There and you're like, OK, I'm gonna show up to this thing, I guess.
Um, when you reflect back now where you stand now, um, how do you reflect back to those kind of really pivotal decision that you ended up making at 15 to actually like just show up and audition.
Yeah, I mean, I often look back on that and every time I, I get a new job, um, it's something that my dad always makes sure to remind me of is like, can you imagine if you never went and did that audition?
Um, and it It's, it's really humbling and it just makes me to think about it in like the big picture and to think that within the span of eight years and only really actively pursuing acting for the past 5, that I get to sit here now in the Netflix building.
That's so weird.
That's so cool.
Um, I am grateful that I just took the chance.
I mean, it was a low risk, low risk chance, um.
But it has kind of led to.
To so many bigger things and I mean I've had to take risks over and over again along the way that's just how this industry rolls um and everything's a bit of a roll of the dice but I've embraced that a little bit more and um I'm really curious to see what.
What comes next?
Is there anything that you think you learned on grizzlies when you were 15 that kind of sticks with you now?
Yeah, I think going into Grizzlies, I was just excited about making something.
I had no idea what it meant or what we were doing really or what it would turn out to be.
I was just excited to connect with people and make friends and, you know, serve a story that I thought was really important.
And you know at the time I, I didn't take things super seriously like I always take work very seriously.
My dad's always made sure that, you know, you take people's time seriously, you take the work seriously, um, but in terms of the industry, it's always just been like we're making movies, we're making shows, like let's have fun and that's been my approach to to every job and and how I, how I see my work and and what I want um from the work and.
You know, just that kind of like lesson because it, it worked then and it still seems to be working now, um, that I just get to move through this industry with um a smile on my face because I'm just having the time of my life.
I we're doing grizzlies because your character was, you know, the female on the team.
Was it interesting to be able to say like, I'm also making a mark to say like, this is what this girl looked like in this kind of male dominated space that she was operating.
Absolutely I think for you know in playing spring and taking up space and you know she really goes through this arc where she finds her strength after after such significant loss and trauma, um, and how she as a as a young woman was like, I'm not going to, I'm not going to be scared out of things that I want to do and that I think I make sense for and that I um see myself in.
And so I, I, yeah, I think there's like a great um example in that of, of taking up space and and not, you know, we're so often encouraged to make ourselves smaller for for other people um and recognizing that your story and your strength and your resilience, um, is valid and is important is, um, I think something that we all deserve to to see in here.
By the time you get to 3 pines, I mean a very different story than we're getting in North and North and a very different character, um.
And in that show, you definitely had to go in and tackle subjects that are harder and very um connected to trauma.
What made that set in particular um effective for you to be able to to play that role that I think was, you know, difficult for people to watch, but I can imagine also to kind of have to go into that headspace yourself for the character.
Yeah, Three Pines was was a heavy project, and I think there was a lot happening at the time that was quite Um, that, that made it that much harder and um it's like a deeply personal um thing to me and and something that I was struggling with at the time and um trying to kind of deal with all of these different feelings that that I was having, um, but you know, the, the very real issue of missing a murdered indigenous woman is something that, you know, I think we can never stop talking about and something that I think deserves that space and and that platform.
Um, and so it it was very much like a, a difficult one and um one that.
I really also struggled to watch um violence against indigenous women is is a very real threat and also something that um many of us have experienced or have loved ones who have experienced.
So it, yeah, Three Pines was so different.
From anything else that I had done up until that point and continues to be different from anything else I've done since, um, and I, I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know if I, um.
Because of how uh.
How difficult it was for me.
Um, I don't know if I would choose to do that kind of thing again, but I, you know, those kinds of stories are so important and continuing to highlight that that crisis that very much is still happening within our communities, um.
It's very important to me.
When you get to 2 Detective, um, and you're on a show with Jodie Foster and you're on a show where like things are particularly like Hollywood amplified, I'll call them it's like very like um how did it feel to kind of step into a role that did have so much attention and for that show True Detective in particular, had the history of the show being so popular before?
I mean, stepping into True Detective was was such a dream, the the cast on that.
Um, show was, was so incredible.
I mean Jodie Foster, of course, but like Kyle Reese, Finn Bennett, John Hawks, Chris Eccleston, Isabella LeBlanc, like just what, what an incredible cast and like lovely people, really, really such a great group of people to to work with, um, and you know Issa Lopez, I adore her with my whole heart and she put so much attention to detail into everything that she did, everything, everything she wrote, everything she directed.
Um, she was such a powerhouse and you know, I admire her work so dearly and as well as the Alaskan producers, um, Cathy Dugnock Wexford and Princess Johnson.
Those women wa wa adore, love, and of course Nutok uh Simmons, who is now Elisa in in north of North.
I remember finding out that she got cast and I was jumping up and down so excited um because she's just the best but stepping into True Detective was just I think it gave me a taste of what could be and um something to chase for the rest of my career and then hope to kind of get to that point again or do something similar.
Um, it allowed me the time and the space, you know, with the acting coaches and the dialect coaches and everything to, to try and do my best to level myself up, um, and yeah, I mean that shoot was just such a, a privilege and getting to meet everyone on it was such a privilege.
And the story that we told, um, one that was deeply important again about missing and murdered indigenous women but also about empowerment and and reclamation and taking back and um and justice, whatever that may look like or whatever that might mean and whether you agree with that or not um is always something that can be debated.
Um, was just really, really exciting and empowering, and it's a point of my career that I often look on and I'm like, I can't believe that happened.
That's so cool.
I mean, the announcement came out very recently about Heart of the Beast, which is, you know, massive.
How does it feel to have that announcement, be out and to have people know and to be on such a project that does have so many eyeballs and people are so excited about.
I mean it's it's pretty surreal it's it's really really cool um you know I every, every new project just feels so so exciting but I mean the the caliber and the size of of Heart of the Beast is just, um, I feel very honored to have the the trust of of the team to to hop in and and do my thing so you know I'm just, uh, I don't know, just always excited to be here everything is just.
I, I want to do it all.
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Its felt like a nice ride, um, because you have Sullivan's Crossing, you have One Calls the Heart, you have all these things. Um, but what did it feel like when you got to kind of land those roles to be like, oh, I'm like really high up here on the call sheet, like this is my thing. When Holk Calls, when I first booked that, that was, um, originally just a guest star on One Calls the Heart with a potential for a spinoff, but it was not, not a shoe-in; like it wasn't a real thing. So we did the episode, and it was great, or it was two episodes, and um, they're just kind of waiting, and then when it actually happened, its like, wait. Are you sure? Are you sure this is a real thing? Are you sure you want me? Because yeah, it was from a guest star to number one on a show that was crazy, um. Yeah, it was incredible, like so incredible. I'm very, very grateful for that show and the opportunity that that, like, yeah, love me too. 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And, you know, it's always that balance of there's more productions, but sometimes getting the better roles doesn't necessarily mean those are coming to Canadians because it's filming in Toronto or Vancouver or wherever. Um, have you seen an evolution in just like potential roles for you? Have you, have you seen that kind of go? I mean, because I'm on Sullivan's, it does limit what I can go for, but I definitely have seen with my friends, um, who are auditioning for some of the shows that come up here, getting really close and then finding out that it keeps going to Americans. And even the size of the role, like even small, tiny roles. So I definitely think it is both. Like, there are more productions, but I, yeah, I, I wish there was a way for it to be a little bit more, um, Uh, what's the word, um. open and accessible to see how many roles really are going to Canadians, and what that size is, and how much effort there really is in casting Canadians when it's up here. Because I don't know. I, I love going to class, so I keep going to class as soon as I'm not working, and the work that I see in class and the people and the level, the skill, like it is so incredible. Like I know there's such incredible actors here, and yet so many of them aren't working or are nowhere close to the kinds of roles that they should be booking, and it can be so disheartening to see that too. And you're like, I see it, like literally in front of me, you are incredible, and yet. So yeah, I don't know. You still go to class even when you booked some roles too. Oh yeah, I love it. It's like, I don't know, I see it like the gym. You're never gonna be there. I will never, there's never a place to stop learning. And Sullivan's is wonderful, but it's one character, and I want to be able to expand and get better and fail miserably in class with characters I may never book. And so then when ones that are closer come, I have a little bit more experience and feel a little bit more flexible with it. And it just, like, it keeps the love alive too. I find going to class. Is there something that you have kind of like a bookmark in your brain that you're like, oh, I'd love to go into like this genre or do this thing, anything you have on your kind of bucket list. I love a good dramedy, like I'd love to try a little bit more in the comedy world, um. But I also love to do action. I'd love, like, uh, I love drama. I love the dark kind of shows that come up. I love fantasy. I like theres so much out there where I like, I don't have one specific thing, but I'm just excited about the possibility of everything.
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‘Ballard' Star Courtney Taylor On Taking On First Major Drama Role In Prime Video's ‘Bosch' Spinoff
From Abbott Elementary to Insecure, Courtney Taylor continues to evolve with each role she takes on. Although she feels the most at home with comedy, whether it's in online skits or playing around with her loved ones, Taylor has always had a fascination with drama, and she loves the transformation that actors undergo while taking on various roles. Now, she will step out of her comfort zone and into the world that she's long been captivated by as she joins the popular Bosch universe by way of the Prime Video spinoff, Ballard. 'As much as comedy feels like home, I'm so happy that drama has found a way into my career and I've been able to really exercise that muscle and drama,' Taylor told Blavity's Shadow and Act in a recent interview as the series launched. On landing her first drama role 'To be a part of Michael Connelly's universe, in any way, is always super special,' she continued. 'I've loved all of his work. [The] Lincoln Lawyer, and the Bosch series itself, was always to me, very good. I was excited to be a part of this series because I think it was something that was so beautifully written, I mean the books are so good, and now that I'm involved in this project, this woman-led cold case unit that is very adamant about finding justice and caring for people, I cannot imagine playing a better role. I'm so excited that they believed in me enough to take on this role, and that I had this wonderful team of people rallying behind me.' Who is Samira Parker in 'Ballard'? Bosch focuses on Detective Renée Ballard (Maggie Q) and her work in the LAPD's cold case unit, and Taylor plays Samira Parker, who, according to a character description, is a 'wary, impulsive and tough woman with a burning desire for justice.' 'I think what makes her the most unique is her passion,' Taylor said of her character. 'I think this cold case unit that we're talking about in Ballard, it talks about the underfunded. It talks about how [the] majority of the people are volunteers and not being paid. There's an episode where she basically says that she's the only paid staff member. Ballard is the only paid staff member. Everybody else is here, but just because they're passionate about it and they want to help people and people deserve to get answers — especially people who were waiting decades for answers about their loved ones.' She added, 'I just really thought that made it completely different from anything we've seen because you get to see the gritty of it, and how passionate people have to be to work on a cold case unit.' What her acting journey has taught her so far Whether the role is big or small, Taylor understands the art of pouring herself into various characters we've grown to love. Her recurring role on Insecure as Issa Dee's assistant Sequoia, showcased her as the 'I got it covered' girl, and she also shines as Janine Teague's close friend, Erika, in Abbott Elementary. Taylor, who also had a series regular role in Netflix's Neon, says each character causes her to lend more trust in herself. 'I think I've spent a lot of time doubting me,' she said. 'I think it's so easy, especially when you're young, to be like, 'I don't know if this is good. I don't know if this is right.' But, I think as I've gotten further into this career and gotten such wonderful opportunities to work with amazing people, it's just a validation that I needed inside of me to say, 'Courtney, you are good at this and because you enjoy doing it so much, and you want it to be good, it will be good.'' Taylor added, 'It was a lot of me trusting myself. That's what I learned, personally. Professionally, I learned to be extremely flexible, to be ready to change whatever I needed to change to serve the team, to serve the people around me, to serve the cast I need to work with. I was so ready to be flexible, so ready to help when it came to like ad-libs or fun moments and stuff like that, because I wanted to be of service to everyone around me. I think that's the goal really, just to be of service to the people you're working with, so they can be of service to you.' At the end of the day, Taylor's goal is to create, whether that's in front of the camera or behind it, particularly stories that center people of color and explore narratives that are different. Ballard Season 1is now streaming on Prime post 'Ballard' Star Courtney Taylor On Taking On First Major Drama Role In Prime Video's 'Bosch' Spinoff appeared first on Blavity. Solve the daily Crossword
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Legendary '90s Singer Shows Off Dance Moves With Major News
Legendary '90s Singer Shows Off Dance Moves With Major News originally appeared on Parade. has teamed up with Swedish DJ and music producer Sebastian Ingrosso to create a song unlike any she has ever released. For her latest tune, the "My Heart Will Go On" hitmaker is combining her past with a new style. Taking to Instagram, Dion shared a video of her showing off her dance moves in a recording studio. Dion couldn't hide her excitement as she danced to Ingrosso's new tune "A New Day (feat. Celine Dion)."It's a remix of her iconic 2002 hit single, "A New Day Has Come." ''A NEW DAY' IS OUT NOW. THANK YOU CELINE DION FOR LETTING ME BRING THIS INTO A NEW SHAPE. @celinedion,' read the caption on her joint Instagram post with Ingrosso. Fans flooded the comments section with excitement over the new collab. 'This will go down as an all time legendary edm track,' shared one fan. A different fan wrote, 'pure magic, pure bliss!' Another fan said, 'This is giving so much LIFE! 😍🤩😭.' One fan stated, 'A new day… a new story!' while a different fan expressed, 'Celine stronger than everything! ❤️.' More comments included, 'THE ICON 👑🔥🚀', 'Good vibes only,' and 'Wicked tune! 🔥👏.' According to Beatportal, Ingrosso has always been a Dion fan and especially loved her hit song "A New Day Has Come." 'I've always loved that song. I wasn't trying to remake it, just felt like that moment could live in a darker, more euphoric space," he told the outlet. Dion and Ingrosso's collab can be heard on Apple Music, Spotify, and more. Legendary '90s Singer Shows Off Dance Moves With Major News first appeared on Parade on Jul 25, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 25, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword