Leslie Bibb is not responsible for Sam Rockwell’s crazy role on ‘The White Lotus’

Spoilers for The White Lotus.

Generally, I avoid writing too much about Severance and The White Lotus because most discussions involve so many spoilers, and I want people to be able to genuinely enjoy the experience of watching these shows in their own time. I’m really enjoying this season of TWL – I’m rooting for two characters to make it, Aimee Lou Woods’ character Chelsea and Natasha Rothwell’s character Belinda. Almost everyone else can choke! No, I actually like some of them, including Walton Goggins’ man of mystery, who is apparently hunting down the guy who killed his father. Goggins’ character, Rick, has flown to Bangkok to hunt down this guy, and Rick ended up calling an old friend for some help.

In the most recent episode, we finally got to meet Rick’s friend, who was played by Oscar-winner Sam Rockwell. Rockwell’s guest role – it’s more than a cameo, he’s in next week’s episode too – has quickly become one of the most bonkers moments in TWL’s history. Rockwell delivered a truly insane monologue which I will not even describe, you just have to watch it. So many people thought Rockwell’s partner Leslie Bibb somehow got Rockwell the role, or that Rockwell might have been hanging out on set with Bibb, because she’s one of the major characters this season. As it turns out, not so much. Bibb spoke to Entertainment Weekly about how Sam dropped into Thailand for eight days and did his thing.

Leslie Bibb tells Entertainment Weekly that she actually had nothing to do with Sam Rockwell’s casting.

“No, they came to me and they were like, ‘We’re going to offer this to Sam,'” Bibb tells EW. “I was on the treadmill and [producer] Dave Bernad came to me. But I was like, ‘Sam is wild as a buck. Listen, I don’t know what he’s going to do. He’s doing a movie in South Africa, he likes time to prep.’ And he was very nervous about that prep time.”

“That was a big arc to do that quickly,” Bibb says of [Rockwell’s] character’s debut. “And [Rockwell] literally went from one [project] to the next, so I said [to producers], ‘You can’t get mad at me if he says no. What if he says no?’ I was so scared! Then [creator] Mike [White] was like, ‘No, no, no, we won’t get mad at you.'”

Bibb laughed as she remembered telling the showrunner, “I was like, ‘That jet plane’s going to fly, I can’t ground him.’ But then it was really sweet — I think Walton really, because they’re very good friends, wanted to have that experience with him.”

And getting her real-life partner to come join her on the set of The White Lotus was a treat, even if Rockwell got a truncated experience. “It was really fun,” she says. “We don’t have any scenes together, and he did all of his stuff in eight days. We were there for six months, Sam was there for eight days — Sam did not [have] the same experience in eight days. He got The White Lotus light. But it’s nice to be able to have a context to share, and I think he’s a great actor, and we’re lucky to have him, and I think he chewed up that character. Mike was really happy to have him too.”

Bibb did get a bit jealous when she first saw some of Rockwell’s scenes, however. “I saw some stills from them on the boat in Bangkok, and I was like, ‘We’re sweating our faces off, and they were like, hair blowing in the wind,'” she added with a laugh. “Look how cool they look. This is like To Live and Die in L.A., but it was like To Live and Die in Bangkok. It was so cool.”

[From EW]

What’s even wilder about this is that Sam still hasn’t said anything? He just dropped into TWL, delivered the craziest monologue in the history of the show, dipped after a few days and he’s done absolutely nothing to promote it or talk about it. An actor’s life is so wild though, I bet Sam enjoyed the hell out of the guest role and being able to work with his friend Walton Goggins. What I also liked was that Rockwell’s appearance felt completely organic within the show. It wasn’t like “oh, look, a movie star just showed up!” You actually felt like those two guys had some history and once you see the scene, you realize that Sam didn’t do this for the glamour.

Photos courtesy of Cover Images.

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

10 Responses to “Leslie Bibb is not responsible for Sam Rockwell’s crazy role on ‘The White Lotus’”

Comments are Closed

We close comments on older posts to fight comment spam.

  1. Lala11_7 says:

    That scene could have been a continuation of Rockwell’s main character in the 2008 movie “Choke” where he played a broke a– sex addict trying to take care of his 😱 Mama! A movie & book that would be RIGHT up Mike White’s alley!

    I have been tracking Mike White since he burst on the scene in the 2000’s indie movie “Chuck & Buck”…a movie…that is…something else 😊….so I have to slot that scene under the label “Quintessential Mike White”!

    • Mightymolly says:

      Okay I need to find Choke and watch it. Although Iove that monologue as a stand alone moment from a random character. Like, you think you have this guy stereotyped and then it goes off the rails.

  2. Square2 says:

    It’s bonker that they spent 6 month (a half year) to shoot (just) 8 episodes; and the production cost most be very high, even in Thailand.

    • KASalvy says:

      Actually considering they’re filming using practical locations and not studio makes sense. 8 episodes in 6 months, 3 weeks per ep (which is 15 working days) tracks. Shutting down hotels, streets, parks etc is a logistical nightmare for production and expensive for exclusive use. Add in that’s it’s an ensemble show and you can’t just do a sitcom 3 camera setup per shot.

  3. Sasha says:

    Loved their scene. So unexpected from these two very brooding, tough-guy characters. I think exploring masculinity is an overarching theme across all the seasons.

    • Mightymolly says:

      Yes absolutely. And there’s always the nerdy boy who they try to corrupt with associating masculinity with manipulating women, and he usually prevails. (Actually the season 1 nerd boy prevailed over conformity more than toxic masculinity.)

  4. Lucy2 says:

    That whole thing was wild. I watched the episode a little sleepy, and I was like what is happening!?
    I love Sam Rockwell, he’s such an interesting actor. Him and Walton together is perfection.

  5. USA_noob says:

    That scene was intense and I learned about something scary called autogynephilia. I googled it after I watched that episode. AGP is something we should all be aware of.

    • Mightymolly says:

      Just googled it. And yeah I definitely dated a guy like that in my early 20s. Nothing at all wrong with a bedroom kink, but that monologue used some really colonialist, borderline racist implications of embodying women from other cultures.

  6. Ben says:

    The last two episodes have felt very tense and with a building dread that feels like something horrible can happens at any second. We all know since the first episode but not sure if more than one event will happen and the build up have been amazing.