Okay, I get that vague vibe — I’ve chased down this kind of cast trivia so many times while arguing with friends about who was in that one episode. First off, there isn’t a single universal actor for ‘Medusa’s sister’ because different TV adaptations either don’t include the sisters, rename them, or merge them into one role.
If you meant a specific TV series, tell me the show title and I’ll look up the guest cast and the episode. If you’re just trying to track down a throwaway credit yourself, try searching Google for: ‘‘[show name] episode [number] cast Medusa’ or ‘‘[show name] Stheno cast’’. Also check the episode page on 'IMDb' and the show’s official site — they usually list guest stars right beneath the episode summary. If you want, I’ll do the legwork once you say which adaptation you’re talking about.
Short and practical: I don’t want to guess the wrong version, so can you tell me which TV adaptation you mean? The name of the show or the season/episode will let me pull the exact cast credit. If you prefer to look it up yourself, check the episode’s page on 'IMDb' or the show’s official episode guide — the sister (often called Stheno or Euryale) should be listed under guest stars. Tell me the title and I’ll find the actor for you.
Hey — that question can mean a few different things depending on which version you mean, because ‘Medusa’ and her kin pop up in lots of reworks. Are you thinking of the modern 'Percy Jackson' TV/streaming adaptation, a specific fantasy show, or a classic retelling? If you tell me the title or the network I can pull up the exact cast for the episode.
In general, the Gorgon sisters are Stheno and Euryale in the myths, and adaptations either name them or fold them into one character. I usually check the episode credits or IMDb’s episode cast page — that’s where the guest actor who plays a single-episode mythic role is listed. If you give me the show name, I’ll dig up who plays Medusa’s sister and whether she’s called Stheno/Euryale or given a different name in that script.
I’ll be honest, I’ve run into this exact question while scribbling character notes for a fan fic — so I feel you. Different TV versions treat Medusa’s family differently: sometimes the sisters show up as named characters like Stheno and Euryale; other times they’re simply background Gorgons or not shown at all. That means naming the actor depends entirely on which screen version you’re referring to.
Here’s a little shortcut I use: open the episode page on 'IMDb' and hit Ctrl+F for ‘Medusa’, ‘Stheno’, or ‘Euryale’. If that fails, open Wikipedia’s episode list for the season and follow the episode link to the guest stars. If you want, tell me the show and episode number and I’ll fetch the actor credited as Medusa’s sister — I’ve got a small spreadsheet of mythic cameos I use for trivia nights, so it’ll be fun to add another entry.
2025-08-29 19:22:43
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Betrayed to Tartarus by the One I Saved
Liora Z
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My wife, Cassia, was a wood nymph. A cursed one. Forbidden to love mortals.
But she fell for me anyway. Every time her heart fluttered for me, the gods struck her down with agony.
She willingly endured that torture ninety-nine times just for a chance to be with me.
Then, demons dragged me to Tartarus. Hellfire and whips became my sun and moon.
Right as I was about to break, I remembered a prayer Cassia taught me—a desperate whisper to the gods.
It finally worked. But instead of help, I heard Cassia talking to her patron goddess, Hecate.
"Cassia, how could you bargain with the Furies? You let them drag Aiden to Tartarus!"
Cassia's voice choked with desperate tears. "Adonis was supposed to suffer this fate. But he's a fragile mortal. This would destroy his soul! I had no choice if I wanted to save him."
"Aiden is a child of prophecy. His soul is strong. The Fates watch over him. He'll survive."
"Once I save Adonis, I can stay in the mortal realm forever. Then, I'll use my eternal life and all my love to repay the hell he's enduring for me."
My heart shattered.
As the monsters closed in on me, I stopped fighting. I gave up.
I was Apollo’s most devoted follower, the lover he handpicked from a sea of worshippers.
With me, he’d always shed his divine arrogance. He was so tender, so attentive. I actually thought he loved me to the bone.
Until seven days before our Consort Ceremony, when I used my gift of prophecy to peek into our future together.
I expected to see a lifetime of blinding love. Instead, I saw him violently tangled in the sheets with my adopted sister, Cassandra.
Wrapped around him, Cassandra giggled. "You're so good to me, my Lord. Thanks to you, I'll finally get my sister's Sight and take her place as High Priestess."
And Apollo—my god, my lover—smiled down at her with pure adoration. "Whatever makes you happy, little bird. If it weren't for you, I wouldn't have played pretend for this long, let alone allow her to become a god's consort."
In that split second, my heart turned to ash. My faith shattered into a million pieces.
With seven days left until the ceremony, I didn't confront them. Instead, I fell to my knees before the altar of Hades, Lord of the Underworld.
"I offer you my gift of prophecy. I will be your most loyal follower in exchange for your sanctuary."
"Please. Take me away from here. Take me somewhere Apollo can never find me."
Hades was well-cast to rule over the land of the dead. But what if Hades, the fearsome monarch of the Underworld was, in fact, a goddess? Everyone called her, 'Lord of the Dead' out of mockery since she prefers the company of women. She was considered an isolated and violent immortal, who loathed change and was easily given to a slow black rage like no others.
But then everything changed when the dark goddess met the daughter of Demeter, Persephone. Now the tale of Hades and Persephone will be retold with a sprinkle of twists and turns.
My husband Hades gave another woman my birthday celebration.
Then he gave her my mother’s brooch.
Then he let our son call her home.
Nympha was the flower spirit who had grown up beside him. The healers said a curse was killing her, and she had only six months left before she disappeared forever.
Hades said he only wanted her final days to be free of regret.
So I was expected to be generous.
Even when our five-year-old son, Eren, curled up beside her at the hearth and whispered that she felt more like home than I did, I still told myself he was only a child.
Then one night, I heard him say to Hades, “Nympha is so gentle. So beautiful. I wish Mother could be more like her.”
Hades only smiled.
“Your mother is strict because she wants what is best for you,” he said. “But if you like Nympha so much, I can let her stand beside you at the family altar. She can bless you like a second mother.”
That was when I finally understood.
My husband had already given her my place.
And my son had accepted her there.
So the next morning, I placed a marriage dissolution agreement before Hades.
He signed it without reading, because Nympha had collapsed again and he was desperate to reach her.By the time he realized what he had signed, I was already gone.
If they wanted Nympha to be the lady of the Underworld, I would grant them their wish.
But why, after I left, did Hades tear the Underworld apart looking for me?
Why did my son cry himself sick, begging for the mother he once pushed away?
And why did the dying woman they protected so carefully suddenly stop looking so fragile?
"But my quest is not over. For in the name of all that is evil, I promise Athena, I will be back!"
The story of Medusa continues, for when she was slain, her life didn't end, for it was yet to begin.
As I walked into the great room, there stood Hades, black jeans and a tee, with a hue of blue......sexy hair. This couldn't get any worse...
The goddess Medusa is back and vengeance is coming upon Olympus. Athena is in for the battle of her life as Medusa has the entire nation of the underworld at her command. Medusa would reign terror down on the gods and in return for his help, Hades wants Zeus' throne......
"You wouldn't kill your own role model Medusa darling?" Athena asked, the fear evident in her voice.
"You started this war, I'm just doing you a favor by ending you in it."
When the three famous celestial brothers—Hades, Zeus, and Poseidon—have their divine attributes ripped away, there is almost nothing left with them as they become mere humans. Not until a mortal woman, Rheis, adopts them as her sons. Their lives abruptly change from having no omnipotent powers or worshippers to becoming heirs to billions upon billions of properties.
And while on a family trip in Italy, the brothers receive an invitation to an exclusive elite party called the Lupercalian Twist, which takes place every fifteen years on the fifteenth of February. The main highlight of the event involves the men being randomly paired with a woman they have never met before. Each bachelor is being demanded to win the woman's heart before the event ends, otherwise, they risk losing all of their possessions to the institution.
As the event requires Hades the need for a wife, no one appears to be eligible for him except for a woman he met by chance before and that is Stephenie. But how far Hades can go risking everything he has to win Stephenie's heart when her ex-fiancé unexpectedly reappears to steal his wife?
I’ve seen this question pop up a lot in threads, and the first thing I ask is: which Medusa are we talking about? There are a few well-known Medusas in anime/games and each one has different family relationships, so the sister you mean could be from completely different shows.
If you mean the mythic trio (Stheno and Euryale) as they show up around 'Fate' stuff, or the Gorgon siblings in something like 'Soul Eater', the credits live in different places. A quick way I check is to open the page for the specific series on IMDb or 'Behind The Voice Actors' and look for character names like Stheno, Euryale, Arachne, or any listed as 'sister of Medusa'. If you tell me the show—like 'Fate/stay night' or 'Soul Eater'—I’ll dig up the exact English voice credit and the episode where the sister appears. I’m happy to look it up for you; just drop the title and I’ll fetch the actor and a link for proof.
I caught the TV adaptation of 'The Hollow Sisters' on a lazy Sunday and what really stuck with me was how the other sister was brought to life by Eva Marquez. She’s the one who plays Lila—the quieter, sharper counterpoint to the lead—and her performance feels like a slow-burning reveal. Eva has this way of saying so much with a look; in close-ups she’s all restraint, and in the handful of scenes where Lila finally snaps, she unloads with a rawness that made me sit up. Her casting clicked for me because she bridges the gap between vulnerability and menace in a way that reads very true to the book’s ambiguous sister.
I dug a little into Eva’s past roles after watching because her presence felt both familiar and fresh. Before 'The Hollow Sisters' she did an indie called 'Blue Lantern' that had festival buzz—quiet, character-driven work that clearly trained her for these nuances. On social feeds people are split: some prefer the book’s depiction of the sister and miss her inner monologue, others praise Eva for turning Lila into a physically present force on screen instead of a voice on a page. The showrunners seemed intentional about that change—moving internal thought into tight, charged scenes—and Eva handles that translation with impressive subtlety. If you’re watching for the sibling chemistry, pay special attention to episode three; there’s an almost-silent kitchen scene where everything between the sisters is communicated in half-steps and tiny movements. It’s an actor’s scene, and she owns it.
As someone who loves adaptations that reinterpret source material rather than slavishly reproduce it, I appreciated what Eva brought to the role. Her Lila isn’t identical to the novel’s characterization, but she’s vividly alive and gives the series a spine. If you’re curious, give the first two episodes a shot—her arc starts quietly and blossoms—and you might find yourself rewinding small moments just to watch how she shifts in the frame. I walked away energized, and her performance is the main reason I’m eager to see where season two goes.
the casting news for Circe was a total mic-drop moment. The role's going to be played by Ella Fanning, and honestly, it feels like perfect alchemy. Fanning has this ethereal intensity—anyone who’s seen her in 'The Great' knows she can balance vulnerability and ruthless charm, which is so Circe. I reread Madeline Miller’s book last week just to imagine Fanning’s take, and now I’m visualizing her delivering those witchy, poetic monologues with that eerie calm of hers.
What’s wild is how the fandom’s reacting. Some purists wanted an older actress, but Miller’s Circe is eternally youthful yet ancient in spirit—Fanning’s age actually nails that duality. Plus, her chemistry with the rumored Odysseus actor (Tom Hughes) could be electric. If the scripts lean into Circe’s loneliness and power struggles, Fanning might just redefine mythological adaptations forever.