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Genevieve O’Reilly On Mon Mothma’s Masks, Loss & Legacy, & Finally Getting Her Moment [The Rogue Ones Podcast]

May 30, 2025

The Rogue Ones: A Star Wars Andor Podcast returns with another deep-dive into “Andor” Season 2, this time spotlighting the woman at the heart of the Rebellion’s political front: Mon Mothma, as portrayed by Genevieve O’Reilly. While the character has long been a stoic fixture in the “Star Wars” galaxy, “Andor” redefines her as something much more profound. She’s a woman navigating deep isolation, fractured loyalties, and the exhausting burden of secrecy under Imperial rule.
Created by Tony Gilroy and starring Diego Luna as Cassian Andor, “Andor” is a prequel to “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” (which Gilroy co-wrote and famously helped reshape during reshoots). Set five years before the events of Rogue One, the show focuses on the origins of the Rebellion and how ordinary people — not just Jedi or Chosen Ones — stand up against oppression. Season two picks up a year later in the first three episodes and jumps one year ahead with each block of three afterwards, leading directly to the beginning of “Rogue One” by the end (read our review of season two here).
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In this episode, host Rodrigo Perez speaks with Genevieve O’Reilly about Mon Mothma’s arc in Season 2, from the slow unraveling of her personal life to the immense political gamble that defines her legacy. O’Reilly recalls her initial hesitation to return to the role after “Rogue One,” explaining that Mon had previously functioned as little more than an expositional device. “She’s this woman who’s just been an expositional force. She stands there and says, ‘Here’s your mission. Go off and do it.’ And I said, I think I’ve done that,” she says. But Tony Gilroy changed her mind. “He said, ‘No, I do [want you], and I’m curious about her, and I will write for her.’”

That creative promise became one of the most emotionally complex character arcs in the entire series. “Such a multifaceted, brilliantly complicated woman,” O’Reilly says. “Wife, mother, friend, confidant, politician, senator, threat.” What sets her apart from most in the Rebellion is that she’s leading a double life in plain sight. “There are lies within lies. She’s concealing and confining her own motivations. It’s the only way she can be effective,” she explains. “And the audience is in on that. That’s the dramatic irony.”
Season 2 also subtly explores Mon Mothma’s upbringing on Chandrila, and how the planet’s rigid orthodoxy shaped her ability to endure political performance. “You understand that maybe her first rebellion was finding her way out of that orthodoxy,” O’Reilly notes. “She has a complicated relationship with tradition and culture. She must wear those masks, and never let them slip.”
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As the season unfolds, those masks become harder to maintain. Her marriage crumbles. Her daughter becomes a bargaining chip. Her closest friend, Tay Kolma (Ben Miles), disappears with her implicit approval. “She tacitly agrees to the murder of her friend,” she says. “And who does that make me? What is Rebellion? Am I the good guy now? Am I the bad guy?”
All of it builds to the season’s emotional apex: the infamous Mon Mothma Senate speech. “She mustn’t feel heroic in that moment,” O’Reilly emphasizes. “Andor is interested in the idea that heroism is something others assign you after the fact. In the moment, it’s fear, anxiety, and mistrust. Can I even do this?” She adds, “How do you find the personal bravery and the courage to actually give voice to everything you’ve hidden for so long?”

And when Mon Mothma appears at her most powerful, the show throws her into chaos again, where she finally crosses paths with Cassian Andor. “She’s just given this extraordinary speech and revealed herself as this leader… and then she walks into a situation where she’s useless,” O’Reilly says. “He can pull out a gun. He can do things she has no concept of. And that’s what’s lovely in the writing—that a leader doesn’t have to be good at everything.”
O’Reilly also speaks candidly about one of her favorite scenes: the wordless dance sequence after knowingly or unknowingly agreeing to Tay’s death. “She’s trying not to scream. You lose that pillar of the stoic woman,” she says. “The trauma bubbles up through her body.”
Asked about the future of the character, O’Reilly expresses genuine hope. “Now I feel like she’s been written for. I’m thrilled for the character,” she says. “She doesn’t wear heroism like a shiny shield. It’s there in the interior sacrifices.”
All episodes of “Andor” are now available to stream on Disney+. Listen to the entire interview with Genevieve O’Reilly below:

The Rogue Ones is part of The Playlist Podcast Network, including Bingeworthy, Deep Focus, The Discourse, and more. We can be heard on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Soundcloud, and most places where podcasts are found. You can stream the podcast via the embed within the article. Be sure to subscribe and drop us a comment or a rating, as we greatly appreciate it. Thank you for listening.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
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