American Horror Season 3 Cast -

Here is your complete guide to the principal players of American Horror Story: Coven . Jessica Lange as Fiona Goode If there is a Mount Rushmore of AHS characters, Fiona Goode is the craggy face carved into it. Lange plays the aging Supreme witch who will literally murder anyone (including her own daughter) to stay young and powerful. Her delivery of lines like "I'm not quirky. I'm a fucking nightmare" remains peak television. Lange balances monstrous vanity with genuine pathos, making Fiona the tragic villain you can’t look away from. Sarah Paulson as Cordelia Goode Paulson serves as the perfect foil to Lange’s Fiona. As the insecure, wounded heiress to the coven, Cordelia is the heart of the season. She starts as a meek headmistress blinded by her mother’s shadow, but Paulson masterfully charts her transformation into the rightful Supreme. Her final scene with Fiona is one of the most emotionally brutal moments in the entire AHS anthology. Angela Bassett as Marie Laveau Bassett enters the AHS universe with a bang. Playing the immortal Voodoo Queen of New Orleans, she is regal, terrifying, and hypnotic. The rivalry between Marie Laveau and Fiona Goode is the nuclear engine of the season. Bassett’s physicality and fiery delivery turned what could have been a stereotype into a powerful, sympathetic legend. The Next Generation (The Teens) Taissa Farmiga as Zoe Benson Returning from Murder House , Farmiga plays the "new girl" with a tragic twist: her vagina is a murder weapon (yes, you read that right). Zoe is the audience surrogate—the innocent thrust into a world of dark magic. While sometimes overshadowed by the bigger personalities, Farmiga provides the necessary emotional anchor. Emma Roberts as Madison Montgomery This is the role that defined Roberts’ "bratty queen" archetype. Madison is a Hollywood starlet, a necromancer, and a sociopath. Roberts delivers every line with a perfect sneer, from complaining about "Hell being for amateurs" to her iconic dismissal of a zombie: "Surprise, bitch. I bet you thought you’d seen the last of me." Gabourey Sidibe as Queenie Sidibe brings a fierce vulnerability to Queenie, a human voodoo doll who feels the pain of anyone who hurts her. Queenie is the lonely outsider desperate for belonging, and Sidibe plays the conflict between loyalty to the coven and her attraction to Marie Laveau’s power with heartbreaking honesty. The Steely Supporting Cast Kathy Bates as Madame Delphine LaLaurie Perhaps the most shocking performance of the season. Bates plays a real-life 19th-century serial killer and racist. After Marie Laveau curses her with immortality, she becomes Queenie’s personal maid in modern times. Bates manages to make a monster almost pathetic—and then violently reminds you she is still a monster. It is a career-defining horror turn. Denis O’Hare as Spalding The loyal, mutilated butler with a crush on Fiona. O’Hare barely speaks for half the season, communicating entirely through creepy stares and tea-pouring rituals. When he finally breaks his silence with a deranged monologue over a doll, it’s a masterclass in quiet insanity. Frances Conroy as Myrtle Snow "Myrtle Snow" is a fan-favorite for a reason. Conroy delivers a bizarre, Shakespearean performance as the resurrected witch with red hair, a love of caftans, and a penchant for burning at the stake. Her final speech in "Go to Hell" is so beautiful and unhinged that it turned Myrtle into a queer icon overnight. Evan Peters as Kyle Spencer Poor Kyle. Peters plays the "Frankenstein’s monster" of the season—a sweet frat boy murdered and stitched back together by Madison and Zoe. While Kyle is mostly silent (grunting and crying), Peters conveys immense trauma and confusion. It’s a rare sympathetic, non-villain role for Peters, proving he can act just as well with his eyes as his voice. Lily Rabe as Misty Day Rabe returns as the swamp-dwelling, Stevie Nicks-worshipping healer with a fear of being burned alive. Misty is the purest soul in Coven , and Rabe plays her with a childlike wonder that makes her eventual fate (trapped in Hell dissecting frogs forever) absolutely devastating. She is the heart the season didn't know it had until it broke it. Final Verdict American Horror Story: Coven works because the script is sharp, but the cast is sharper. Watching Lange, Bassett, and Bates scream Shakespearean insults at each other while Roberts rolls her eyes and Sidibe eats fried chicken is a specific brand of chaotic magic that no other horror series has ever replicated.

When American Horror Story: Coven premiered in 2013, it didn't just raise the bar for horror on television—it threw a hex on it. Season 3 traded the haunted rubber man of Murder House and the asylum horrors of Briarcliff for the smoky, sassy, and sadistic streets of New Orleans. american horror season 3 cast

What makes Coven arguably the most beloved season of the franchise isn't just the voodoo vs. witchcraft plot; it’s the . This ensemble delivered Emmy-worthy drama, razor-sharp one-liners, and performances that turned villains into icons. Here is your complete guide to the principal

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