One of Us Is Lying Season 2 Cast and Creator on Breaking Stereotypes and Finding Joy in Darkness
Photo courtesy of Peacock
One of Us Is Lying is very much as if The Breakfast Club and Gossip Girl merged into one soapy drama, where cliché teen angst meets murder mystery. Based on Karen McManus’s 2017 novel of the same name, the Peacock original is returning a little over a year later with a second season filled with more secrets that will truly make you ask: whodunnit?
During a recent press junket, showrunner Erica Saleh, along with stars Cooper van Grootel and Marianly Tejada, sat down with Paste to discuss One of Us Is Lying Season 2’s darker tone, balancing mystery with character arcs, and breaking free from stereotypes.
One of Us Is Lying follows characters Bronwyn (Marianly Tejada), Nate (Cooper van Grootel), Cooper (Chibuikem Uche), Addy (Annalisa Cochrane), and Janae (Jess McLeod) as they jump from one murder mystery straight into another. Although the group discover the culprit behind who was framing them for Simon’s murder, Season 2 takes an intense turn as an anonymous figure dubbed “Simon Says” tortures and threatens to expose their even deadlier secret.
“In Season 1, they really haven’t done anything so bad,” said Saleh. Each of the characters are introduced to be battling these individual secrets—cheating on tests, dealing with toxic relationships, coming out of the closet—that fit snugly into the tropes of classic high school archetypes. “Their journey is to realize people make mistakes and that’s okay and to figure out how to live honestly. In Season 2, they have done something really bad and they’re wrestling with this moral gray zone and trauma, so it was very natural for the tone of the season to shift with them and become darker and scarier.”
Van Grootel added, “The stakes are just higher. It’s kind of like, ‘Our characters have to go through this again? This is happening again?’ We’re getting thrown back into this crazy situation and that’s exciting to see.”
One of Us Is Lying works towards peeling back each of the protagonists’ different layers, and Season 2 creates a space to further enable them to break free from the stereotypes and expectations placed upon them. On balancing more complex character arcs with the show’s overarching mystery, Saleh explained, “There’s a really natural intersection. The mystery is part of what’s forcing them to become more authentic and testing them and keeping them from hiding.” Saleh continued, “[It] forces them to decide who they can trust, how much of themselves they’re going to show each other, and who they’re going to be to the world when they’re under truly the worst circumstances you can imagine. It’s this really great exciting backbone that’s an excuse to tell really honest and exciting character stories.”
For Nate and Bronwyn, the season’s mystery allowed space for the duo to understand each other in a deeper way, which in turn allowed the relationship to bloom even further. “They have this traumatic event and they each cope with it differently,” said Tejada. “So it kind of forces them to communicate openly about what they’re feeling and what they’re going through.” Van Grootel echoed, “Now that they’ve sort of developed this intimate bond that they can’t run away from, they still have to navigate these tricky waters having Simon Says loom over the top of them, and this whole murder investigation. I think when a situation is tense and high stakes, you can’t help but feel like you need to lean on someone and be there for someone as well.”