Shadow and Bone Star Jessie Mei Li Steps Into the Grishaverse (2024)

The name Alina Starkov may not mean much to someone who has yet to read Leigh Bardugo’s book Shadow and Bone, the basis for a Netflix adaptation debuting Friday. But for millions of Bardugo fans who have spent nearly a decade exploring the corners of her fictional Grishaverse, Alina is the kind of Chosen One heroine who—like Katniss Everdeen and Bella Swan before her—has the potential to turn any young actor into a household name. That’s why Jessie Mei Li, a 25-year-old actor without a previous major credit to her name, has already spent more than a year as an object of fascination for Alina fans who are eager to see what she will bring to the role.

Li beat out hundreds for the coveted Shadow and Bone spot; her next gig, in Edgar Wright’s buzzy One Night in Soho, is already in the can. She’s on the verge of something very big. But much like her fictional counterpart—whose heroic reputation overwhelms the reality of her life—Li is just trying to keep her feet on the ground.

Over the past few years, the posh-U.K.-school-to-film-career pipeline has come under much scrutiny, from both within and outside the acting world. “They’re so talented and they’re so confident,” Li told me, speaking of her co-stars who took that more traditional route. “There’s part of me that wishes that I’d had that experience.” Lately, however, there’s been a rise in British talent coming from other avenues, with performers like John Boyega and Letitia Wright vaulting to franchise stardom after participating in a part-time program at the relatively new Identity School of Acting.

Li struck out when she auditioned for the big British acting schools. She took a position as a teaching assistant for children with special needs—a job she loved—to make ends meet. Identity is where she too was able to train part time and get her foot in the door. “What’s nice about places like Identity,” she said, “and lots of places that are just more diverse and not too expensive, is they give opportunity to people like myself, who may not have been able to afford to go to [university] for three years.” Li would work with kids during the day; twice a week at night, she’d take the train to London to hone her acting skills.

Just a few months before landing Alina, Li booked her first stage role: 2019’s All About Eve, opposite Gillian Anderson and Lily James in London’s West End. Playing Claudia Casswell, a tiny part that Marilyn Monroe herself made a meal out of in the 1950 film version, Li turned in a performance that was broadcast worldwide via National Theatre Live. In between performances, Li went in to audition for Shadow and Bone, not knowing quite how coveted the role was.

During the lengthy audition process, Li devoured Leigh Bardugo’s Grishaverse books—seven installments and counting—and found she connected deeply with Alina, despite living in a very different world. Alina, as Bardugo writes her, is an orphan who grows up in a war-torn and fantastical version of Russia known as Ravka. She’s been kicked around her whole life. Unlike genre heroines like Katniss Everdeen, who seem like they were born to lead, Li liked that Alina “doesn’t start off as being really strong. She’s like a sort of a stray dog that you might find in an alley.”

Though Alina isn’t described this way on the page, both Shadow and Bone showrunner Eric Heisserer and Bardugo herself, who served as an executive producer, liked the idea of casting someone nonwhite in the role. In the books, Alina grows up on the border of Ravka and Shu Han (Bardugo’s fictionalized version of China). For as long as Alina has been alive, Ravka and Shu Han have been at war.

“There was something very powerful about the idea that this girl has had to grow up in a country where she’s constantly being reminded that she looks like the enemy,” Bardugo explained to me. “This is the person who is going to have to sacrifice so much for this country that hasn’t treated her very well.”

Jessie Mei Li was born to an English mother and Chinese-born, Hong Kong–raised father. “I grew up with that,” Li said. “Which is why I felt so connected to Alina. I grew up in a predominantly white area in the South of England. Racism towards Asian people in the U.K. generally, I think more so than the States, is so weird and not taken seriously.” Li said in her childhood, people were “outright racist and mocking” to her: “You know, the silly accents and the pulling eyes.”

She didn’t see much representation onscreen to empower her either. “Asian characters were laughed at. Their accents were mocked. Asian men are emasculated and Asian women are sexualized. Even my own dad makes fun of himself for being Asian, because that’s just how things are and how people are socialized.” The rise in anti-Asian hate crimes in America, Li said, is forcing a discussion that has long been swept under the rug.

In the show, even as Alina grows in her power and renown, she still faces similar indignities. “It comes out of nowhere,” Li said, describing a particularly brutal exchange in episode six. “It almost feels a little bit shoehorned in—but that’s how it feels when you’re walking along and going about your business and someone just randomly says something to you.”

Making Alina multiracial in the show allows for an additional layer of commentary about the disparity between Alina’s rise to fame as a powerful hero and her reality as an orphan from Ravka trying to survive. Alina becomes known throughout Ravka as “Sankta Alina” (or Saint Alina). But posters and murals depict her with blonde hair and fair skin, highlighting how little the legend has to do with reality. That detail helped Li understand and navigate the sudden fame and scrutiny that comes with playing a beloved fictional heroine.

“They don’t really know who I am,” she said of anyone who has formed an opinion by sifting through her sparse social media presence. “Anything people say about me who don’t know me personally, it doesn’t really matter. I think that’s really important for me going forward…. Alina having that realization of ‘that’s not me’ has helped me in lots of ways.”

As much as Li relates to Alina, there are plenty of ways in which they differ. After she is plucked out of the army and taken to a palace, Alina is somewhat seduced by the finery she discovers there. Trading in her muddy uniform for intricately embroidered coats (called keftas) and gowns, Alina is a stray dog no longer. “Her coats are shiny, you know?” Li said.

Shadow and Bone Star Jessie Mei Li Steps Into the Grishaverse (2024)

FAQs

Is Shadow and Bone part of the Grishaverse? ›

The first season of Shadow and Bone was based mainly on the eponymous first book in the Grishaverse, but also introduced characters from Six of Crows, such as the Crow gang of the city of Ketterdam as well as Nina (Danielle Galligan) and Matthias (Calahan Skogman).

What is Jessie Mei Li doing now? ›

The actress leads the popular Netflix fantasy series "Shadow and Bone," now in its second season.

Why did they make Alina half shu? ›

“When [showrunner] Eric [Heisserer] and I first sat down together, one of the first things we decided was that we wanted Alina to be half Shu," Bardugo said. Shu-Han is Bardugo's fantasy analogue for an amalgam of Asian countries, so making this change meant that in the show, Alina became half-Asian.

Is Alina half Shu in the Shadow and Bone books? ›

Alina was always from a Ravkan border town, but in the show, she's explicitly part Shu. In several interviews, actor Jessie Mei Li, who plays Alina Starkov, talks head-on about being relieved that Shadow and Bone doesn't shy away from race.

In which order to read Grishaverse? ›

This is the path we recommend following through the books of Leigh Bardugo's Grishaverse.
  1. The Shadow and Bone Trilogy.
  2. The Six of Crows Duology.
  3. The King of Scars Duology.
  4. Other Grishaverse Books.
  5. Beyond the Grishaverse: The Alex Stern Series. ...
  6. Standalones.
Apr 5, 2024

How are Shadow and Bone connected to Six of Crows? ›

The Shadow and Bone Trilogy is set in Ravka and the Six of Crows Duology is set in Ketterdam, two countries within the Grishaverse. Six of Crows begins two years after the events of the final book in the Shadow and Bone trilogy. Some intrepid characters appear in both series.

Does Jessie Mei Li have ADHD? ›

Shadow and Bone's Jessie Mei Li: 'When I was diagnosed with ADHD it allowed me to be a bit kinder to myself' The star compared her diagnosis to "having a superpower”.

What age is Jessie Mei Li? ›

Jessica Mei Li (born 27 August 1995) is an English actress.

How old is Alina in Shadow and Bone? ›

Laura The author says Alina's 17, and she got drafted into the army at 16. Laura She didn't say it in the book, but she said it on Tumblr when a fan asked her.

Why did Mal left Alina? ›

Alina decides to accept Nikolai's (Patrick Gibson) proposal to marry him as a political strategy and leaves season 2 ready to become royalty. Meanwhile, Mal, after being resurrected, found himself uncertain about his future. As a result, he decided that the best thing for him and Alina was to go their separate ways.

Why is Alina Starkov hair white? ›

During The Darkling's attack at Os Alta, he reveals that he has set nichevo'ya on Genya Safin for sparing Alina. Alina fights him and uses merzost, which causes her hair to turn white, and nearly drains her of her power, defeating them both. This leaves her almost dead and the Darkling, also, badly wounded.

What did Zoya whisper to Alina? ›

​​​At breakfast one day, a group of Grisha arrive at the Little Palace. Alina is surprised to see that one of them is the black-haired woman who had caught Mal's eye back in Kribirsk. Alina learns that her name is Zoya. When Zoya gives Alina a hug, she whispers in her ear that she stinks of Keramzin.

Did Alina use Merzost on Mal in the books? ›

“That discovery by Alina goes to the cost of merzost. She used merzost to bring Mal back to life, and she knows that it always has a price attached to it,” Heisserer says. ”In the books series, at the end of the trilogy, Alina loses her sun-summoning powers so she is back to being otkazatsya essentially.

Does Alina ever get a black kefta? ›

Kefta colors

Black, with black cuffs – Only the Darkling is permitted to wear this color; despite this, Alina Starkov wears a black kefta at the winter fete in Shadow and Bone. Gold – Alina Starkov wore this color while putting on the façade of a Sun Saint.

Who does Alina Starkov love? ›

Alina has feelings for Mal long before he realizes he loves her back. After all, she's been his BFF since childhood. Nevertheless, his feelings do develop while they're searching for the stag, and Alina and Mal kiss.

Is Shadow and Bone a sequel to Six of Crows? ›

The Six of Crows Duology

This duology picks up two years after the end of the Shadow and Bone trilogy, set in a new country with new characters. You can start here, but you may get spoiled for some of the events in the trilogy.

What book is the Shadow and Bone series based on? ›

Shadow and Bone (TV series)
Shadow and Bone
GenreFantasy Drama Mystery
Based onShadow and Bone and Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo
Developed byEric Heisserer
18 more rows

Does the show Shadow and Bone spoil Six of Crows? ›

The Six of Crows books take place in the years following the events of the Shadow and Bone trilogy, but the show really folds (pun intended) the events from both book series into one story, in which the Dregs are tasked with stealing Alina in a heist.

Does Shadow and Bone have Kaz and INEJ? ›

Shadow And Bone Didn't Get To Complete Kaz & Inej's Storyline. In the end, Shadow and Bone did not get to complete Kaz and Inej's story which is quite a shame. In general, Shadow and Bone's timeline jumped around a lot, which left many aspects of both books feeling underdeveloped or rushed.

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