Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Features

Every cameo in The Last of Us season 1, explained

Add as a preferred source on Google

Over the course of its first season, HBO’s The Last of Us has repeatedly gone out of its way to honor the 2013 video game that inspired it. Not only has the critically acclaimed, postapocalyptic series stayed surprisingly faithful to its source material. but it’s also included references to the original Last of Us that only longtime fans of the property could catch. From a child’s drawing on a wall to a specific needle drop in its seventh episode, The Last of Us has snuck in plenty of deep-cut Easter eggs throughout its first season.

The live-action series has also featured a handful of cameo appearances from actors who were involved in the Last of Us video games. Here’s what new fans of the series should know about the cameos in question, including one actor’s major, but easy-to-miss appearance in the Last of Us season 1 finale.

Recommended Videos

Note: This article features spoilers for The Last of Us season finale.

Ashley Johnson as Anna

Ashley Johnson stands in the woods in The Last of Us Episode 9.
Liane Hentscher/HBO

The Last of Us episode 9 opens with a surprising flashback. The season finale’s opening minutes follow Anna Williams, the mother of Bella Ramsey’s Ellie, as she not only gives birth to her daughter, but also experiences the infected attack that resulted in her death. By the end of the tragic sequence, viewers finally know, among other things, how Ellie was born, how her mother died, and how Ellie’s immunity was (accidentally) created.

The sequence would be noteworthy for just those reasons alone. However, what new fans of The Last of Us might not realize is that Ellie’s mother, Anna, is played by none other than Ashley Johnson. The BAFTA-winning actress portrayed Ellie in both of the original Last of Us video games, as well as the series’ 2014 DLC, Left Behind. Last of Us creators Neil Druckmann and Craig Mazin have repeatedly noted how important Johnson’s performance was to the creation and formation of Ellie as a character, which only makes her role in the HBO series as Ellie’s mother that much more moving.

Troy Baker as James

Troy Baker wears a winter coat in The Last of Us Episode 8.
Liane Hentscher/HBO

In The Last of Us episode 8, Ellie and Joel (Pedro Pascal) run into a cult of religious fanatics-turned-cannibals that are led not only by the predatory David (Scott Shepherd). but also his lethargic right-hand man, James. The latter character is, notably, played by Troy Baker, who portrayed Joel in Naughty Dog and Sony’s Last of Us video games. Unfortunately for him, Baker’s James doesn’t make it out of his Last of Us episode alive.

Unlike Johnson, Baker’s role in HBO’s adaptation of The Last of Us doesn’t have any major connection to the character he played in the original games, either. That doesn’t make his appearance in episode 8 of The Last of Us any less noteworthy, though.

Laura Bailey as a Firefly Nurse

Laura Bailey wears a cardigan on Talks Machina.
Critical Role

The season 1 finale of The Last of Us features the easiest-to-miss cameo of the entire series. Near the end of the episode, Joel marches into the Fireflies’ operating room and proceeds to gun down the surgeon who was preparing to operate on an unconscious Ellie. The room’s only other occupants are a pair of Firefly nurses, including one played by Laura Bailey. Bailey’s name will be familiar to anyone who has played 2020’s The Last of Us Part II as she portrayed Abby, the secondary protagonist of that divisive sequel.

As gamers will attest, Bailey’s scene in the HBO show’s season 1 finale will go on to be an important moment for the character she played in The Last of Us Part II. It’s also worth noting that Bailey originally voiced one of the Firefly nurses at the end of 2013’s The Last of Us. The actress was, however, replaced in the minuscule role when Sony and Naughty Dog remade the game last year.

Jeffrey Pierce as Perry

Jeffrey Pierce wears a tactical vest in The Last of Us Episode 4.
Liane Hentscher/HBO

In its fourth and fifth episodes, The Last of Us introduces viewers to not only the militaristic leader of Kansas City’s rebel faction, Kathleen (Melanie Lynskey), but also her capable and devoted second-in-command, Perry. What first-time viewers might not know is that Perry is portrayed by Jeffrey Pierce, the actor who played Tommy, Joel’s brother, in the Last of Us video games.

Pierce is one of only a handful of Last of Us voice actors who were given the chance to appear in the new HBO series (others include Johnson, Baker, and Bailey). Only the next actor on this list, however, was cast as the same character in both the original Last of Us games and the current HBO adaptation.

Merle Dandridge as Marlene

Marlene smirks in The Last of Us Episode 1.
HBO

In both the original Last of Us and its HBO adaptation, it’d be hard to classify Marlene, the leader of the Fireflies, as a “cameo” character. That admittedly makes her inclusion on this list a bit of a cheat. However, in keeping with the spirit of this list, it’s important to note that Marlene is played in the HBO series by Merle Dandridge, the actress who also played Marlene when she was originally brought to life as a video game character.

Dandridge isn’t just the only original Last of Us actor who got to play the same role twice, though. Thanks to the live-action series’ season 1 finale, she and Johnson are also the only members of the Last of Us video game cast who actually share a scene together in the HBO show.

The Last of Us Season 1 is streaming now on HBO Max.

Alex Welch
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Alex is a writer and critic who has been writing about and reviewing movies for years. He was previously the Managing Editor…
Samsung just got sued for millions of dollars by pop icon Dua Lipa
Samsung’s TV boxes have landed it in a Dua Lipa lawsuit
Dual Lipa posing for Elle US

Samsung has a new legal headache, and this one involves Dua Lipa's face on TV boxes. The pop star has sued Samsung Electronics America and Samsung Electronics Co. in California federal court. It is accusing the company of copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and violating her right to publicity. The complaint claims Samsung is using a copyrighted image of Lipa on cardboard boxes for its televisions without authorization.

Why is Samsung getting sued?

Read more
Mortal Kombat 2 understands fan-service better than storytelling
A movie made for fans… maybe a little too much
Mortal Kombat 2 Movie Featured

I still remember the first time I properly got into Mortal Kombat. Like many people from my generation, I had obviously seen the characters before. Scorpion yelling “Get over here!”, Sub-Zero freezing people into ice cubes, Raiden looking like a thunder god who somehow still manages to disappear whenever the plot needs him most. Mortal Kombat was always around. But it wasn’t until the 2011 Mortal Kombat reboot game that I truly became invested in the franchise. That game was special because it balanced everything perfectly. It had the gore, the ridiculousness, the iconic rivalries, but it also had a surprisingly engaging story that tied together the first three games in a way even casual players could follow. It made characters like Liu Kang, Kung Lao, Kitana, Raiden, and Johnny Cage actually feel important beyond just being arcade fighters.

That’s probably why the 2021 Mortal Kombat movie disappointed me so much. It felt like a film that wanted to introduce a brand-new guy nobody asked for while pushing actual fan-favorite characters into the background. The fights were decent, sure, but the emotional core was missing. So when Mortal Kombat 2 was announced, I genuinely had hope. This looked like the correction fans were asking for. More tournament action, more classic characters, more lore, more violence, and finally, Johnny Cage entering the mix. On paper, this should have been the movie that finally nailed Mortal Kombat.

Read more
AnimeKai, one of the biggest pirated anime streaming sites, has gone offline
AnimeKai is dead, and the reason is literally on fire
Frieren eating with the rest of her companions by a campfire in Frieren: Beyond Journey's End.

One of the bigger names in pirated anime streaming, AnimeKai, has just gone offline. While the usual takedown from corporations is expected, the issue this time around seems unusually dramatic. A post on the r/AnimeKAI subreddit, labeled as an official announcement, says AnimeKai will be shutting down. The reason? Problems in running the site, especially a data center being on fire.

What's next for AnimeKai users?

Read more