The Vampire Lestat, the third season of AMC’s Interview with the Vampire, is approaching its halfway point, and while there are plenty of mysteries still unfolding, one idea keeps resurfacing in ways that feel increasingly deliberate.
The Great Conversion.
It has now been mentioned multiple times across three seasons of the Anne Rice Immortal Universe, yet no one has fully explained what it is. Every new reference only raises more questions, and now that Gabriella de Lioncourt (Jennifer Ehle) appears to be actively advocating for it, it’s beginning to look less like a background problem and more like the event that could define the future of the series.
Gabriella Keeps Bringing It Up
The Great Conversion first appears this season in Episode 2, “Toledo.” While sitting in a strip club with her son and the very namesake of this season, Lestat de Lioncourt (Sam Reid), Gabriella spots a man across the room and casually remarks:
“A good candidate for the Great Conversion.”
It’s an odd, one-off comment, and one that receives almost no explanation.

Then, in Episode 4, “Toronto,” she brings it up again. As Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian) interviews Lestat in the first real formal interview setting of the season, Gabriella telepathically nudges Daniel toward a particular question:
“Try asking him about the Great Conversion.”
When Daniel finally does, Lestat’s response is immediate.
“[The Great Conversion is] fucking stupid.”
The show quickly moves on, but the exchange says a lot. Gabriella clearly believes in the idea. Lestat dismisses it outright. And the writers have now made sure audiences have heard the phrase twice in just a few episodes.
This Isn’t the First Time We’ve Heard About It
What’s especially interesting is that the Great Conversion didn’t originate in The Vampire Lestat.
The phrase first appeared all the way back in Season 1 of Interview with the Vampire.
In Episode 2, “After the Phantoms of Your Former Self,” Daniel asks Louis de Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson) whether other vampires have learned to control their thirst the way he has. Louis explains that the opposite is true. Most vampires are slaves to blood, exhausted by centuries of hiding, and increasingly interested in expanding their numbers.
When Daniel asks how Louis knows this, Louis explains:
“I hear them. Our thoughts can travel thousands of miles to one another… One of them, a brute in Madagascar, called it ‘the Great Conversion.’”
Daniel dismisses the idea as absurd. Louis doesn’t. Instead, he points out that there are countless people who would willingly trade mortality for immortality.

At the time, the exchange could easily have been interpreted as simple world-building. Now, however, it feels much more like deliberate foreshadowing.
Season 2 Confirmed It Was Already Happening
The Great Conversion surfaced again during Season 2, this time through the Talamasca.
For those unfamiliar, the Talamasca is a secretive organization dedicated to observing, documenting, and, when necessary, intervening in supernatural events. Introduced in Anne Rice’s novels and now expanded into AMC’s Anne Rice Immortal Universe, the order keeps extensive records on vampires, witches, and other supernatural beings while generally avoiding direct involvement unless absolutely necessary. If the Talamasca is paying attention to something, it’s usually because they believe it poses a significant threat.
In Episode 3, “No Pain,” Talamasca agent Raglan James (Justin Kirk) tells Daniel:
“We were tracking 900 [vampires] a month ago. We’re tracking 1,600 now. The Great Conversion. It’s real. It’s happening.”
By this point, the Great Conversion is no longer just telepathic gossip among vampires. It’s something the Talamasca believes is actively underway.
Now Season 3 has added another layer. And Gabriella isn’t merely talking about it; she appears to be recruiting for it.
Why the Great Conversion Is So Dangerous
If the Great Conversion truly is an organized effort to dramatically increase the vampire population, it presents enormous problems for both humans and vampires alike.
The most obvious issue is simple mathematics.

If every vampire kills one human every night while vampire populations continue growing into the thousands, eventually the number of deaths begins to outpace births. Humanity itself becomes an increasingly finite resource.
Because AMC’s adaptation appears to exist within our own modern world — with references this season to Post Malone, TikTok, and even Labubu dolls — it stands to reason that the same demographic realities would apply here as well.
Then there’s exposure.
For centuries, vampires have survived because they’ve remained hidden. It’s the very reason the unconsented publication of Louis’ interview and Lestat launching a global rock career have caused so much unrest within vampire society. Every interview, every concert, every public appearance increases the odds that humanity discovers what they really are.
Vampires may be stronger than humans, but they are hardly invincible. Sunlight remains a devastating weakness for nearly all of them, and history has shown that organized humans can be just as dangerous as organized vampires.
Finally, there’s the issue of governance.
Throughout Interview with the Vampire, we’ve seen covens, traditions, and ancient laws governing vampire behavior.
But what happens if those numbers suddenly explode? Who enforces those rules? And why would thousands of newly created vampires feel obligated to follow centuries-old customs established long before they were born?
Anne Rice’s Novels May Already Be Hinting at the Answer
Interestingly, the phrase “Great Conversion” never appears in Anne Rice’s novels. The concept, however, is very familiar to book-fans.
During The Vampire Lestat, vampires from around the world converge after Lestat publicly reveals vampire history through his music, gathering to either witness or destroy him.
The very music that causes the convergence is also the music that awakens Akasha, the mother of all vampires, setting into motion the catastrophic events of The Queen of the Damned, specifically the events that leave countless vampires, and male human beings, dead.
It’s difficult not to wonder whether AMC has created the Great Conversion as a way of expanding that storyline into something even larger.

Could This Explain the Season’s Opening Flash-Forward?
This season’s premiere begins with an unsettling glimpse into a future.
Louis is missing a leg. Armand (Assad Zaman) has lost an eye. Daniel is nowhere to be found. The Talamasca has arrived. And there is an auction selling off objects that once belonged to Lestat — including the tapes we’re hearing throughout the season and even a sample of his blood.
The auctioneer describes the recordings as an “ominous recollection” of what has already happened.
There’s One More Book Detail Worth Considering
Readers who have ventured far beyond The Queen of the Damned novel may notice another interesting connection.
In Prince Lestat, Anne Rice reveals that the sacred core sustaining all vampire life becomes increasingly strained as more vampires are created.
Unlimited growth carries consequences.
Akasha, who holds the sacred core within her, is hardly an advocate for indiscriminately expanding their population.
If AMC chooses to incorporate that mythology into the series, it would suggest Akasha may ultimately stand in direct opposition to the Great Conversion, putting her on a collision course not only with Gabriella’s ideology but potentially with anyone hoping to reshape vampire society.
The Great Conversion Feels Big
At this point, it seems impossible that the writers are mentioning the Great Conversion for no reason.
It has now appeared in every season of the series, evolving from whispers among distant vampires to Talamasca intelligence reports and, now, Gabriella’s apparent recruitment efforts.
Each mention has made it feel larger, more organized, and more dangerous.
Whether it ultimately becomes the catalyst for the devastation glimpsed in the season premiere — or the beginning of an even larger adaptation of Anne Rice’s later novels — remains to be seen.
One thing is certain: the writers want us paying attention to it.
And if Gabriella continues championing the Great Conversion while Lestat continues dismissing it, that ideological divide may prove just as important as the conversion itself.
There will be much more to discuss as The Vampire Lestat continues this season, particularly regarding what aspects of Gabriella’s novel counterpart may have inspired this fascination and whether Lestat’s perspective on the Great Conversion could or would evolve as the story progresses.
With the season finale arriving on July 19, this is one mystery that feels destined to become much larger before it’s finally answered.
The first three episodes of The Vampire Lestat are now streaming on AMC+. Keep following us here at iHorror for continued seasonal coverage — including breakdowns, editorials, and ongoing coverage of all things Lestat.
The Vampire Lestat airs every Sunday at 9 p.m. EST on AMC.


























