

Sarah is telling Ward how much he’s hurt her, and he’s saying how sorry he is. It’s the first time they’ve seen each other since they were on the boat and the terrible fight at the end of that scene. There’s a spot early on - in fact, in one of the ads - where Ward is with Sarah. Sometimes things just work out, and a lot of it is the writers being utterly available to what’s gonna work in that moment and what’s gonna really make the audience feel something. To my mind, we landed on the one that is by far the most meaningful and the most interesting.

He also discusses Ward’s death scene: “There were different outcomes of that scene. It was just an interesting line to follow of, is he authentic? Is he feeling this? Is he using this to get the other gold? Why should anybody trust Ward? The answer is, they shouldn’t, but that doesn’t mean things can’t happen within him.” The other thing is, not only does the audience not really know to the end, I don’t know how soon the writers knew how it was gonna go out. Not only that, he’s walking away with these horrible memories of laying his hands on his daughter, choking her. We’re all chasing this gold, but in the end, they walk away with that, and Ward walks away with nothing.

They have the family that Ward has supposedly always been fighting for, and to my mind is the real treasure of the show. And meanwhile, the Pogues have nothing - literally the shirts on their back, and they’re on a deserted island - and they have everything. It was gratifying to get to explore that, but it also made total sense to me because, at the end of season two, Ward has everything - all the gold, the cross, he got away. But from the very beginning, they put it in the lines, and they allowed me to run wild with it, is that other side of Ward that makes people not exactly sure they hate him - where they might just see a human being under there. He says of his character: “It’s been very gratifying to me because it’s not often that the bad guy gets any kind of emotional arc. Season three will be the end for Ward, however, as he pushed Lou Ferrigno Jr.’s Ryan (Stargirl, S.W.A.T.) down a cliff in an effort to save his daughter, Sarah, played by Madelyn Cline ( Glass Onion, This Is the Night). Was the treasure ever within their reach? Or was it all a trap to stop them once and for all? Either way, it’s the Pogues against the world – and the only way out is together.”Įsten portrays Ward Cameron, who has a complicated history with the Pogues and often served as the antagonist of the series. They’re broke and far from home, they can’t trust anyone, Ward and Rafe are hungry for revenge, and there’s a ruthless Caribbean Don who will stop at nothing to find the bounty. The newest installment, via People, follows the Pogues: “They find themselves once again caught up in a race for the treasure, quite literally running for their lives. It has dominated Netflix’s Top Ten chart and has already been renewed for a fourth season. Outer Banks season three debuted on February 23rd.
