Friday, November 20, 2020

Casting News - Netflix's 'Stranger Things' Adds Jamie Campbell Bower, Eduardo Franco and Robert Englund to Season 4

Casting News - November 20, 2020

Netflix's Stranger Things.






NETFLIX's STRANGER THINGS
  • Jamie Campbell Bower, Eduardo Franco and Joseph Quinn have been cast as new series regulars on the drama's upcoming fourth season. Moreover, Tom Wlaschiha, Sherman Augustus, Mason Dye, Nikola Djuricko and Robert Englund will appear in recurring roles.
  • Bower (The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones) will play Peter Ballard, a caring man who works as an orderly at a psychiatric hospital. Tired of the brutality he witnesses day after day, will Peter finally take a stand?
  • Franco (Booksmart) will play Argyle, Jonathan's (Charlie Heaton) new best friend, a fun-loving stoner who proudly delivers delicious pizza pies for Surfer Boy Pizza.
  • Quinn (Catherine the Great) will play Eddie Munson, an audacious 80s metalhead who runs The Hellfire Club, Hawkins High's official D&D club. Hated by those who don't understand him - and beloved by those who do - Eddie will find himself at the terrifying epicenter of this season's mystery.
  • Wlaschiha (Crossing Lines) will play Dmitri, a Russian prison guard who befriends Hopper (David Harbour). He is smart, cunning and charming but can he be trusted?
  • Augustus (Into the Badlands) will play Lt. Colonel Sullivan, an intelligent, no-nonsense man who believes he knows how to stop the evil in Hawkins once and for all.
  • Dye (Bosch) will play Jason Carver, who seemingly has it all - he's handsome, he's rich, he's a sports star and he's dating the most popular girl in school. But as a new evil threatens Hawkins, Jason's perfect world begins to unravel.
  • Djuricko (Informer) will play Yuri, a seedy and unpredictable Russian smuggler who loves bad jokes, cold hard cash and crunchy style peanut butter.
  • Englund (A Nightmare on Elm Street) will play Victor Creel, a disturbed and intimidating man who is imprisoned in a psychiatric hospital for a gruesome murder in the 1950s.