Amandla Stenberg describes herself as “an average enjoyer of ‘Star Wars’” before joining “Star Wars: The Acolyte.” The actor, known best for her roles in films such as “The Hate U Give” (2018), “Bodies Bodies Bodies” (2022) and “The Hunger Games” (2012), watched and loved the “Star Wars” films when she was younger. But it wasn’t until she was cast in “The Acolyte” that she delved deeper into the franchise’s lore. “The ‘Star Wars’ universe is almost like a giant hive mind of subconscious and conscious ideas contributed to by so many creators,” said Stenberg. “Now I have a deep appreciation and love for the lore — particularly Anakin Skywalker’s journey from the prequels into the original trilogy — that I didn’t have before and I get really obsessed with my own conspiracy theories.”
While Stenberg used her involvement with the series as an opportunity to expand her “Star Wars” IQ, “The Acolyte,” which premiered Tuesday on Disney+ with two episodes, requires no prior knowledge of the ever-expanding franchise, although an affinity for laser sword-wielding space wizards is a plus. Created by Leslye Headland, who co-created the Netflix series “Russian Doll,” “The Acolyte” takes place roughly 100 years before the events of 1999’s “Star Wars: Episode I — The Phantom Menace,” during a period known as the High Republic era. A time period mostly explored in “Star Wars” novels and comics, it’s an era of relative peace and prosperity for the Galactic Republic when the Jedi Order was flourishing.
Stenberg plays Osha and Mae Aniseya, twins at the center of an investigation into a series of attacks on Jedi. Helping lead this investigation is Jedi Master Sol, who had trained Osha during her time in the order. Master Sol marks the first English-speaking role for South Korean actor Lee Jung-jae. The Emmy Award-winning “Squid Game” star couldn’t believe he was being offered the role of a Jedi master and dived into all of the “Star Wars” films and series to study the performances of past Jedi actors. “I wanted to make sure that there was a kind of connective tissue between Master Sol and the Jedi in these other shows,” says Lee through an interpreter. “I really wanted to capture my admiration for these actors in my playing of Master Sol [and] I hoped that I could express myself fully in a unique way through the role.” Lee, who first watched “Star Wars” as a kid, thinks of Sol and Mae’s relationship as one ordained by fate.
“Meeting a padawan or a student with natural abilities and developing such a special relationship, I think that’s something that’s so precious,” says Lee. “You can see Master Sol really wants to continue this connection with Osha.” Stenberg similarly sees this “cosmic connection between Sol and Osha.” “I thought often about how Osha has this innate ability, and yet, can never find the place where she truly belongs, including [among] the Jedi,” says Stenberg. But “regardless of how she doesn’t fit into the world of the Jedi and was unsuccessful there, Sol still maintains so much compassion and belief in her and sees her for what she is.”
The master-apprentice dynamic has been a part of “Star Wars” storytelling since the beginning. Jedi are required to adhere to strict codes restricting they ways they express emotions and form attachments, and both Stenberg and Lee praise Headland for taking a different approach for the bond between Osha and Sol. Stenberg also credits Lee for the way the relationship soars. “JJ imbued the character with so much warmth and heart in only a way that he could,” says Stenberg. He “brought the relationship out in a way that was so natural and I felt guided by him and wanted to impress him as if he was my master .… I think Sol has this particular quality of warmth now that wasn’t necessarily just on the page.”
“I really wanted Master Sol to have a very humanistic aura to him because people might not necessarily see a Jedi in that way,” adds Lee. “They might see a Jedi as brave, as powerful, but I really wanted Master Sol to be unique (and have) this human element to him (to) help fans empathize with him more.”
Tracy Brown, Tribune News Service