Tati Gabrielle's Marienne Is About to Become Your New Favorite on 'You' (2025)

Table of Contents
When you first got the role, how much did you know about Marienne and her storyline? As an actor, what was your approach to the character? Marienne is guarded at first with Joe, but she eventually lets her walls down and they start an affair. How did you work with Penn on portraying their complicated relationship? The scene that touched me the most was the scene that she shares with the Love in the finale, where she's talking to her about realizing she deserves better. They barely even know each other, but it strikes a chord. That line was strong, did it resonate with you as well? And what was it like filming that scene with Victoria? It seemed very intense. There’s a line where Marienne also says that she's drawn to toxic men or toxicity; how did you feel like that played into her character? Another part that stuck out to me was earlier in the season, when Natalie (Michaela McManus), who was killed by Love and Joe, first goes missing. Marienne points out that America has a “missing white woman syndrome,” and “the white ladies deserve to be rescued and the rest of us can fend for ourselves.” Coincidentally, that was in the news recently, especially with the Gabby Petito case and Indigenous women bringing up how missing women from their own community don't receive the same media coverage. How did that line strike you? Were there other parts in the script or in the direction where you were able to step in that way too? At the end of the season, Marienne leaves. What do you hope she's off doing? If we were to get more of Marienne in future seasons, what do you imagine that would look like? Marienne is a librarian. Are you a bookworm as well? Do you have a book recommendation, or the last thing you read that you love? FAQs

Big spoilers for You season 3 ahead.

The first time Tati Gabrielle appears on You, she's striking. Not just because she has a radiant, calming presence (and her voice is soft as butter) but also because an unfortunate realization hits: Oh no, is this Joe Goldberg’s next victim?

The protagonist of the Netflix series, played by Penn Badgley, has a seasons-long streak of charming women, stalking them, killing them, and trying to clean up the mess. A mysterious local librarian like Gabrielle’s Marienne could be an easy target for the bookkeeper-turned-murderer. But luckily, she is safe after her initial encounter with Joe. After all, he’s married now to Love (Victoria Pedretti) and is a father to their infant son, Henry. He can’t be pursuing murderous impulses now, right? ...Right?

Watching the full third season (or reading the rest of this story) will reveal whether Marienne makes it out alive, but our concern over whether she does says a lot about Gabrielle’s performance. Marienne is likable; she’s level-headed and kind. You don’t want to see her lose—not only to Joe, but also to her ex-husband, whom she’s fighting for custody of her child, or in her battle as a recovering alcoholic.

Gabrielle, best known for appearances on Netflix's Chilling Adventures of Sabrina and The CW’s The 100, was eager to tackle the nuanced role. Perhaps what helped spark that enthusiasm was her background as a “huge fan” of You. “I loved it from season one all the way through,” she says on Zoom from New York. Joining the production, and talking to creator Sera Gamble and director Silver Tree, only further elevated her opinion of the show. “It made me appreciate so many things so much more, and understand things even on a deeper level.”

Gabrielle chatted with ELLE.com about getting into character and working with Gamble and Tree to tweak the script to reflect her reality as a Black woman.

When you first got the role, how much did you know about Marienne and her storyline?

Through my auditioning process, they told me just a little bit, essentially. We were playing my race, which I was very happy about. And then once I got the role, they did give me the whole rundown of the season but they gave me the main points of, you know, she's a librarian, she is a recovering addict, and she is fighting for the custody of her child. All three of those things, I was like, “Wow, okay. Let's tackle it.”

As an actor, what was your approach to the character?

My previous roles were all in fantasy, and so this was my first time being able to play a “real-life” person. I just wanted to make sure that Marienne was grounded and try to separate her—excuse my French—bitchiness from, like, Prudence's [the character she plays on Chilling Adventures of Sabrina] bitchiness, and just find ways to subtly bring out, especially from the addict point of view, what that means for somebody—what tics or things would come through in their day-to-day life that could be telltale signs to people who were aware. I got in touch with a friend of my manager; she was a mother who was a former addict and had her child taken from her. And so I wanted to really understand what that means to a mother because, of course, I'm not a mother and a little far away from it. I didn't feel that, as my 25-year-old self, I could just try to do that and say, “Yeah, this is it!” and not have some insight from somebody who’s actually been through that.

Marienne is guarded at first with Joe, but she eventually lets her walls down and they start an affair. How did you work with Penn on portraying their complicated relationship?

We just had a lot of conversations. I appreciated Penn so much and we became really cool, and really close while we were on set. It was a lot of questions between the two of us, especially, “Do you feel this is right?” A lot of it too is just, we flowed well. And we both knew what each of our characters' intentions were, we both knew what Sera needed and wanted.

The scene that touched me the most was the scene that she shares with the Love in the finale, where she's talking to her about realizing she deserves better. They barely even know each other, but it strikes a chord. That line was strong, did it resonate with you as well?

Absolutely. Shooting that scene just in general, I remember having a lot of conversations with Silver about it. Especially in this world, having a conversation between two women and them trying to be like, one trying to save the other, the other one trying to empower. Even as you were talking about it, it brought me chills and a bit of tears to my eyes. ‘Cause we need that. We need more of that in shows like this or just in TV, film in general. I can't even say more than that. It filled my heart with a lot of joy, a lot of hope.

And what was it like filming that scene with Victoria? It seemed very intense.

It was amazing. It took a couple hours. I loved working with Victoria because she was very in the emotional weight of that scene. She’s very giving and we were very much playing off of each other, and doing something a little different each take. It was awesome working with her, and I was happy that I got the chance to, ‘cause most of the season I wasn't able to. So, yeah. It was beautiful.

Tati Gabrielle's Marienne Is About to Become Your New Favorite on 'You' (2)

There’s a line where Marienne also says that she's drawn to toxic men or toxicity; how did you feel like that played into her character?

Where that struck for me was in the form of being an addict, or just experiencing trauma in general, especially as a child. I had developed my own sort of backstory for Marienne and where she came from, who her parents were. And when you don't have a good example, it's very hard for you to know what the best thing looks like or what you're supposed to have. It's hard for you to see the signs of red flags in that way. ... How do I even put this into words? I guess that toxicity is part of the reason she became an addict, of feeling that she's not worth it, that she doesn't deserve whatever. And it's just a perpetuating cycle. So I love that we put that in there and that Sera wrote that as a way of showing that Marienne is aware of herself, despite the fact that she's recovering and trying to be a better self.

Another part that stuck out to me was earlier in the season, when Natalie (Michaela McManus), who was killed by Love and Joe, first goes missing. Marienne points out that America has a “missing white woman syndrome,” and “the white ladies deserve to be rescued and the rest of us can fend for ourselves.” Coincidentally, that was in the news recently, especially with the Gabby Petito case and Indigenous women bringing up how missing women from their own community don't receive the same media coverage. How did that line strike you?

It struck me a lot because for the Black community, it wasn't new. And, I mean, the show's coming out at a great time to be able to make commentary on this, but it's definitely something that's very much not new. And I remember that the line was originally written to say, I think it was like, “the rest of them have to fend for themselves.” And I asked [Sera] and Silver, like, “Can I say 'us'?” Can I include myself in this? Because it doesn't make sense for me, as a Black woman, to refer to...and the passion Marienne has in saying it, and the way she bites back at Joe for it, clearly this touches her too. And it has touched Marienne with [her ex-husband] Ryan and everything that she's been [through]. They don't listen to her, they always listen to him. So it very much struck a chord with me.

Were there other parts in the script or in the direction where you were able to step in that way too?

I was very thankful to Sera and Silver for being so open to communication. And if there were, Sera was very adamant about being culturally accurate and honoring my ethnicity the best that she could. I just remember a few moments where it was like, “Can we talk about this?” Or “I don't feel that as a Black woman, I would do this, or I would say this,” and Sera was always very receptive. And we'd work it too, so that we could still move the story the way that we needed to move the story but still honor me and my community in a truthful way.

Tati Gabrielle's Marienne Is About to Become Your New Favorite on 'You' (3)

At the end of the season, Marienne leaves. What do you hope she's off doing?

I hope that her and [her daughter] Juliette do go to Paris and sit drawing outside the Sacré-Cœur. I hope that she finds the life that she's been longing for and finds the peace that she's been craving.

If we were to get more of Marienne in future seasons, what do you imagine that would look like?

I would love to see the new life that she has created for herself. I would love her to, I don't know, find a way to expose Joe? I would love to see a time jump and see how Marienne and Juliette are when Juliette's a teenager.

Marienne is a librarian. Are you a bookworm as well?

I can't say that I'm as much of a bookworm as Marienne, I can't lie on that, but I do like to read. My favorite book is The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera, which is actually in the show. Joe is reading it, I believe in the episode where Joe and Marienne's thing starts, which I thought was just trippy.

Do you have a book recommendation, or the last thing you read that you love?

I read a lot of spiritual, self-help books because I like them; they're very empowering to me. The Alchemist is always a good one, but I know everyone always lets that be their rec.

Right now I'm actually reading...My uncle wrote a book at the end of his life, like a romance novel. I was very young when he died and so it's very trippy to see where his head was at the time. It's called The Yellow Daffodil.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Tati Gabrielle's Marienne Is About to Become Your New Favorite on 'You' (2025)

FAQs

Does Joe end up with Marienne in You? ›

Unfortunately, Joe is right behind her. He ends his marriage the best way he knows how (poisoning Love and burning their house down) before following Marienne to where she feels safest: Paris.

Is Marianne alive in you? ›

Thanks to some quick thinking by both Nadia and Marianne, Marienne is alive and well at the conclusion of You Season 4. Nadia didn't show up in time for the two women to attempt to murder Joe — and, honestly, this was probably a bad plan anyway — so Marianne took some beta blockers that Nadia had brought her earlier.

Did Joe put Marienne in the cage? ›

Well, this Rhys, the murderous Rhys, was all in Joe's head. It turns out Joe is responsible for all of the murders, but he can't remember committing them. He can't even remember that he's imprisoned Marienne (Tati Gabrielle) in a glass cage instead of letting her go, because he's been dissociating all season long.

How long was Marianne in the cage in You? ›

Another challenging part was blocking out her time in the cage. She was in there for about 30 days, is what we had talked about, Sera [Gamble, creator and showrunner] and I.

Does Joe sleep with Marienne? ›

Joe and recovering drug addict Marienne, who has a daughter called Juliette, met while working at the local library together. They eventually slept together, despite Joe being married to Love. Love revealed everything about Joe's murderous past to Marienne before she left for Paris and Love was killed.

Does Joe sleep with Kate in you? ›

It turns out he has. You see, Kate is not like Guinevere Beck or Love Quinn. She is steely, sophisticated, and resistant to Joe's charms. The first time they have sex — in a secluded garden of her choosing — she refuses to let him kiss her.

Was Joe in love with Rhys? ›

Like Lady Phoebe's (Tilly Keeper) stalker, Joe has been suffering from erotomania, which is characterized by the delusion that one is the object of another person's desire. He imagined his entire passionate (if antagonistic) relationship with Rhys, a man he actually barely knows.

Why was Joe obsessed with Rhys? ›

But during the second part, it was revealed that while Rhys is a real person in Kate's life, the killer version of the character was a figment of Joe's imagination and Joe, who became obsessed with Rhys after reading his autobiography, was the real Eat the Rich Killer.

Who killed Malcolm in You season 4? ›

The identity of the killer is revealed to be Montrose, and Joe tries to figure out how to take him down to get him off his back.

Who did Joe really love in you? ›

Season 3 of You saw Joe and Love attempt to settle down in Madre Linda as a married couple with their baby son, Henry, but Joe's obsession with his co-worker got the best of him. After realizing that Joe was in love with Marienne, who worked at the library with him, Love put in place a plan to end Joe's life.

Did Joe frame Nadia? ›

After she finds evidence that Joe is the real Eat the Rich Killer, Joe frames Nadia for the murder of her boyfriend, Edward. Scared for her life, Nadia stays silent about Joe's crimes, and accepts her prison sentence.

Do Joe and Marianne kiss? ›

Joe attempts to submit a letter of resignation the following day but Marienne refuses and insists he stay. They share another kiss and Marienne says they can't continue their relationship, before they immediately begin kissing again.

How does Kate's dad know Joe's real name? ›

Doing his research on Moore, Tom uncovered his true identity: Joe Goldberg, the presumed dead husband and accomplice of late serial killer Love Quinn. At dinner, Tom privately reveals to Joe his newfound knowledge of him before making small talk with him and Kate.

What happened to Joe's mom in You? ›

A flashback in the finale revealed that Joe's mom moved on and started looking after another child after abandoning her son. Effectively, she left Joe behind for good, much to the chagrin of our antihero. But the maternal influence in Joe's life might be back for future installments of the series.

Who does Joe end up with on you? ›

“You” can go home again: At the conclusion of Season 4 of the Netflix thriller, Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley) is back in New York City, alongside his billionaire girlfriend Kate (Charlotte Ritchie) — sitting on top of the world. He nearly died by suicide earlier in the episode, in some warped attempt at redemption.

Who is Joe's new girlfriend in you? ›

Elsewhere, Joe's new love interest Kate (Charlotte Ritchie) tries her hardest to stop her best friend Lady Phoebe (Tilly Keeper) from marrying Adam (Lukas Gage), who only wants her for her money. Below, Badgley breaks down his television directorial debut and reveals his own favorite shot.

Why does Joe forget about Marianne? ›

As part of Joe's dangerous new habit of "accidentally" forgetting things, he's also forgotten that he's kidnapped Marienne. We all thought she was on a train to Paris in Part 1, but this is Joe's world, and our reliably unreliable narrator seems to have omitted a whole week of his life.

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