David Harbour returned to the Stranger Things fold this week with a punchline and a tribute, appearing at Netflix’s Emmys FYSEE event at Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles — his first significant public reunion with castmates since skipping several of the show’s finale events seven months ago.
Harbour, 51, attended alongside Natalia Dyer, Noah Schnapp, and Jamie Campbell Bower, joined by creators Matt and Ross Duffer and executive producer Shawn Levy. Millie Bobby Brown, who played his on-screen adopted daughter Eleven across all five seasons, was not present at either of the day’s two events.
When asked during the FYC panel what he had learned from his younger castmates over the course of the show, Harbour opened with a deadpan “Uh, nothing,” before delivering a more considered answer about the qualities that made the child leads so effective. “A lot of kid actors that you work with are very actor-y and they really know what they’re doing,” he said. “Part of the strength of the actors that they formed were that, at their essence, Noah and all these little kids were just kind of kids.” That naturalness, he suggested, was the show’s secret — a group of young performers who hadn’t yet learned to perform.
Harbour described the first season, which debuted on Netflix in 2016, as a “magical experience” and a “miraculous time” in his life, adding — with characteristic self-deprecation — that his attachment to Season 1 also had something to do with the fact that “I was thinner.” On Season 5, which wrapped on New Year’s Eve, he was more expansive, saying it “transcends character” and becomes about the Duffer Brothers’ vision — “which became so large and epic in scale and scope and the things that they accomplished cinematically in a TV format, I’ve never seen done before.”
Matt Duffer, also on the panel, reflected on the difficulty of absorbing the show’s cultural weight while in the middle of making it. “When you’re in the midst of making it, you’re just so stressed about making it, so you don’t really think about any of that stuff,” he said. “But now that we’re on the other side of it, you do a little bit.”
The event carried an unspoken weight. Reports emerged in late 2025 that Brown had filed a harassment and bullying complaint against Harbour before Season 5 filming began. The two later appeared together at the November 2025 premiere, where Brown told reporters she felt safe with everyone on set, and Harbour said he adored her. The panel also addressed the finale’s open-ended conclusion, with Bower and Schnapp both expressing their belief that Eleven survived her apparent sacrifice inside the collapsing Upside Down.





















































