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Montreal actor focused on directing but has ideas for ‘White Lotus' after breakout performance

Montreal actor focused on directing but has ideas for ‘White Lotus' after breakout performance

Global News08-06-2025
Since her breakout role in Season 3 of HBO's hit dramedy White Lotus, acting offers have been pouring in for Charlotte Le Bon.
But for now, the Montreal native is just not interested.
'Making films is my main focus more than acting, to be honest,' Le Bon said during a sit-down interview in Toronto Thursday.
Le Bon recently returned from the Cannes Film Festival, where she held meetings in search of a financing partner for her sophomore feature — a still-untitled Montreal-shot drama exploring themes of loss.
'It's autobiographique,' says the bilingual actor, reluctant to reveal too much.
'It's a very, very personal movie and I think the goal is to try to make a very light-hearted movie on grief. It's a challenge, but that's what I'm aiming for.'
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The Montreal-based Le Bon was in town for Bell Media's 2025-26 programming showcase, where Etalk hosts interviewed her during a splashy event for media buyers about the last season of The White Lotus, which streams on Crave.
In Mike White's eat-the-rich anthology series she plays Chloe, a socially savvy French-Canadian expat living in Thailand with her much older boyfriend, and the series' main antagonist, Greg, who now goes by 'Gary.' She's seemingly unaware of Greg's history: in Season 2, he pulled off a plot to murder his wife Tanya, played by Jennifer Coolidge, in order to inherit her wealth.
Le Bon says she was ready to take a hiatus from acting when she was offered the White Lotus role. Though she'd built a successful career — with roles opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the 2015 biographical drama The Walk and Christian Bale in the 2016 war epic The Promise — her passion had shifted to working behind the camera. Her 2023 horror-romance Falcon Lake, which she directed and co-wrote, premiered at Cannes to strong critical acclaim.
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Eric reviews The Promise
'I was thinking about taking a break from acting because I was like, 'Oh, I don't know if I still like it.' I was just asking myself some questions about it… I sometimes played characters that were not really inspiring for me for some reason,' she says.
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'And then White Lotus arrived and I was like, 'There's no way I can not do this. It's just an amazing opportunity'… Between the moment where I sent the self-tape and the moment I was in the plane flying to Thailand, there were probably like 10 days.'
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Le Bon says the experience of being part of such a pop-culture juggernaut was hard to wrap her head around.
'It's kind of overwhelming when you're taking part in such an important thing in culture. Even when it started to come out, when I started to see memes on it on social media, it was really exciting,' she says.
While acting isn't her current focus, Le Bon says she would be down to return for Season 4 — and has some ideas about how it could play out.
'If their relationship is based on true love, which I think it is, then maybe she'll come back with Greg, because Greg has to come back, for sure,' she says.
Le Bon muses that Chloe could be Greg's accomplice or even the one who serves him his inevitable comeuppance.
'She could either become Greg's ally and they can be like a duo of villains, or she can maybe be the one who will create the karma for Greg. Maybe she'll give it to him,' she says.
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'He has to get it at some point, so we'll see what happens.'
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The Canadian composer behind 'The White Lotus' soundtrack
While Chloe's relationship with Greg may seem transactional on the surface, Le Bon argues the two share a deeper 'understanding' of one another.
'I think what she likes in this relationship is she thinks she's found a way to be free… just by spending a lot of money and partying and having sex with whoever she wants,' Le Bon says.
'I think they find an agreement by the end of the season where it's clear that's her intention and maybe he can take part in this and have fun with it as well.'
If that setup sounds peculiar, Le Bon says that's just the kind of thing that interests her.
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'There needs to be a singular aspect to a part that really inspires me in order for me to move my butt and be an actress again,' she says.
'It needs to be weird.'
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Seattle boy's million-dollar idea steers his Lamborghini dream
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Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Alex Butler, now 15, and his parents, Leslie Pierson and Mark Butler, sold his original card game Taco vs. Burrito, to Wisconsin-based PlayMonster last month, the Seattle Times reported, per the U.K. Daily Mail . Butler was just seven years old when he invented the game and sold it. 'It was never something that I've been attached to or anything,' the teenager said, per the Daily Mail. 'It's not super important to me. I just kind of wanted to get the most money out of it.' In the game, players compete to make the most valuable meal. It's not clear how much the game sold for, but the teen is working with his parents to invest the money. He plans to have some fun with the fortune, too. Butler said he would like to buy 'a Lambo' as he moves away from the gaming industry that has been a big part of his and his parents' lives for the past eight years. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Their idea for the game came 'randomly,' Alex said, noting that he didn't even like tacos or burritos at the time. However, he spent time playing card games such as Exploding Kittens with his family, which sparked his desire to create one of his own. Initially, his mom, who calls herself a 'serial entrepreneur' and has been involved in various projects including GoodHangUp — which she promoted on Shark Tank in 2016 — was simply trying to appease her young son. Alex regularly took his parents to the local coffee shop where he would test out a prototype for his game. On the way home, he would often plot new twists or ideas to add to the game, Leslie said, and he eventually started playing with his friends. Recommended video This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 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