interview | emily lind

top + dress. Christopher Esber

Emily Lind has never been one to ease quietly into a role. From blood-soaked cult thrillers, like Doctor Sleep and The Babysitter, to the high society gloss and chaos of Gossip Girl, Lind has made a career out of finding the edge in every character she plays. Having been a performer since she was a child, she’s moved effortlessly between genres, and she’s carving out a body of work that’s both unpredictable and distinctly her own. Whether she’s wielding power or unravelling on screen, there’s always something simmering beneath the surface. 

In We Were Liars, Amazon Prime Video’s highly anticipated adaptation of E. Lockhart’s cult-favourite novel, Lind takes on her most haunting roles yet as Cadence Sinclair Eastman, a privileged teenager trying to piece together her fractured memory after a traumatic summer that gave her a head injury and amnesia. Set against the windswept wealth of a fictional New England island, the series is a slow-burning unravelling of grief, denial, and the cracks that run through every generation of the Sinclair family, and Lind carries its emotional weight with quiet intensity. 

Schön! chats with the actress about reckoning with the safety nets of privilege, growing up in the industry, and why sometimes it’s better not to have all the answers. 

dress. Emilia Wickstead
opposite
dress. Tory Burch
earrings. Anabela Chan

Cadence Sinclair is a layered and emotionally complex character. What drew you to her when you first read the script, and how did you prepare for the role?

What drew me in was the passion behind the creatives, and the book really got to me. Emily Lockhart has this ability to lull you in with something sweet and poetic, and then just rip the floor out from under you. It goes from love story to something almost sinister, and you barely see it coming.

The story sways between truth and illusion, memory and denial. What was the biggest challenge in portraying Cadence’s fractured perspective without giving too much away?

I think I already have like…80 personalities, so playing someone with a fractured sense of self felt kind of familiar. Different voices, different rhythms, I don’t always feel like one person. I wish I could say it was very hard acting work, but it’s fun when you’re slightly unhinged.

The setting of We Were Liars is so haunting and atmospheric that it’s almost a character in itself. Was there a particular moment on set, or a location you filmed at, that really stuck with you or helped you get into Cadence’s headspace?

Nova Scotia was kind of perfect. Haunting, peaceful, lonely, and cold in a way that made you feel very small. Whenever I could, I’d go to Tipper’s sewing room. Everyone would leave for lunch, and I’d stay up there in a blanket, staring at the ocean, watching the sunlight turn to torturous rain and then back again. It was peaceful.

top. Shushu/Tong
shorts. Cou Cou

Did playing Cadence change the way you think about grief, family legacy, or even privilege?

It clarified how privilege distorts your sense of consequence. Cady’s grief is real, but it exists in a reality most people will never know. She burned down a house and, on some level, assumed life would carry on. That’s the privilege—not just the money or the view, but the belief that redemption is inevitable. There’s a line Caitlin Fitzgerald delivers to her, “Being a Sinclair is hard. But I imagine not being one is much harder.” It’s not self-pity. It’s perspective. Cady thinks she’s waking up, but she hasn’t stepped out of the conditions that have always protected her. Grief doesn’t erase privilege. And walking off an island doesn’t mean you’ve entered the real world.

Fans of the book are deeply protective of the Sinclair family as well as the story. What did you hope would surprise them when watching the show? 

What I hoped would hit was the slow unraveling, the emotional rot under all the pretty surface-level shit. That sense that something’s been wrong here long before anything actually happened. People expect a mystery. What I wanted them to feel was something more disorienting. If someone watches this and still sees the Sinclairs as enviable or tragic heroes, I’d be a little worried. This isn’t about rooting for anyone.

dress. Tory Burch
shoes. Jimmy Choo
earrings. Anabela Chan
opposite
top + dress. Christopher Esber

Whether it’s Gossip Girl fans or We Were Liars readers, your roles spark a lot of conversation online. How do you balance fan expectations with your own creative instincts?

I think if you start trying to be compatible, you lose the part that made people interested in the first place. Not that I’m assuming anyone’s interested, but if they were, it’d be because I didn’t try to smooth it all out.

You’ve essentially grown up on screen, from The Secret Life of Bees to Doctor Sleep to Gossip Girl. Looking back, is there a role that felt like a turning point for you creatively?

I don’t think there was one neat, movie-montage moment where everything clicked. It’s been more like a slow, weird evolution, getting older on camera while trying to figure out who I actually am off it and, hopefully, behind it soon enough.

dress. Emilia Wickstead
boots. Jimmy Choo

You come from a family of actors. How has that shaped your understanding of this industry, especially as you’ve stepped into more leading roles?

I’ve been lucky as hell, no doubt about it. And I’ve loved being able to see firsthand, from people I actually love, the ebb and flow of this beautiful, occasionally heart-wrenching, and often brutally confusing industry. We all signed up for it. Sharing that with them makes it feel a little less lonely.

What’s something you’ve unlearned about acting, or even fame, since your early days in film and TV?

I used to think I had to speak up and have all the answers. When you’re a kid in this business, you try to grow up fast and mimic a sense of maturity just to keep up. But the lousy part is, you lose the best thing, the magic of vulnerability and the belief in magic. Only kids and a few wise enough older people seem to hold onto that. Everything in between is a lot of pretending. I’m starting to realize it’s not my job to have answers, it’s to ask the questions. All of them. All the goddamn time

You’ve played everything from teen royalty to telepathic cult leaders. What excites you about darker or psychologically intense roles?

I don’t know what it says about me that I keep getting cast as emotionally unstable girls on the verge of either a breakthrough or a felony…but I’ve made peace with it. There’s just more to do when a character is falling apart. More colours. More chaos. Hopefully, more truth?

jacket. Christopher Esber
sneakers. Alohas
earring. Beaufille
opposite
jacket. Self-Portrait
shorts. Agolde

Do you have a dream genre or role you haven’t tackled yet, but would love to?

If I could go back in time, I would beg Lars von Trier to let me do even a background role in Dogville

You’ve worked with such a wide range of actors and directors. Who’s given you advice that’s stuck with you?

It’s the most obvious advice, but also the one people forget: watch movies. Steal from the greats. Steal from the flops. Just don’t stop looking. Explore every genre, even the ones you think you hate. Every film is a resource. Every performance is a resource. Even the bad ones…especially the bad ones. Half of knowing what to do is just knowing what not to do.

jacket. Vintage
dress. Simkhai
opposite
jacket. Simkhai
shorts. Vaillant
shoes. M.Gemi

We Were Liars is streaming now on Amazon Prime.

 

photography. Alex Justice
fashion. Amelia Levin-Sheffield @ A-Frame Agency
talent. Emily Lind
casting. Alabama Blonde
hair. Clayton Hawkins @ A-Frame Agency using Amika + L’Oréal AirLight Pro
make up. Nova Kaplan using 111SKIN + Prada Beauty
creative production. Clara La Rosa
interview. Naureen Nashid