Juliette Lewis has made a surprise return to the franchise that launched her career, appearing in Episode 3 of Apple TV+’s new limited series Cape Fear — 35 years after her Oscar-nominated performance in Martin Scorsese’s 1991 film adaptation.
The casting was years in the making. Showrunner and creator Nick Antosca first worked with Lewis on the 2019 Hulu limited series The Act, where she appeared in a single episode. He says that one-day collaboration was enough to plant the seed. “I always wanted Juliette to be in it,” Antosca told Entertainment Weekly. “I knew from that point, from even just the initial conversation about the rights, that I would love to have her be in it because she showed up for one episode in The Act. She was so great.” When the series was finally in production, his team placed a simple call. “We said, ‘Hey, remember I talked about that a little bit — you want to come do it?’ And fortunately she was available.”
Lewis, now 53, appears in the episode titled “Phantom Sensations” as a masked, hooded figure stalking Javier Bardem’s Max Cady character. She breaks into his home and leaves a disturbing video message — one in which she removes her mask, sings an unsettling song while working a dog collar into the performance, and sends Cady into a violent rage. Antosca has confirmed her character is not Danielle Bowden, the teenage daughter Lewis played in the Scorsese film, but someone connected to Cady’s own traumatic past.
Amy Adams, who plays attorney Anna Bowden opposite Patrick Wilson’s Tom Bowden in the ten-episode series, said working with Lewis exceeded expectations. “She discovered that I was weird, and I think that was good, because I’m not sure she expected me to be as weird as I am,” Adams told Entertainment Weekly. “She’s lovely and committed and fun.” Adams also teased that the two have more scenes together ahead.
The Apple TV+ series, which premiered June 5 with its first two episodes and releases new installments weekly through July 31, draws from both John D. MacDonald’s 1957 novel The Executioners and Scorsese’s 1991 adaptation. While original cast members Nick Nolte and Jessica Lange have not appeared, Lewis’s cameo provides the show’s most direct link yet to its cinematic predecessor — and the biggest surprise of its run so far.




















































