A scene from 'Fargo' season 5 on FX

A scene from 'Fargo' season 5 on FX

'Fargo' Season 5 on FX: Meet the New Cast

'Fargo' returns with a new season of midwestern murder and mayhem on FX. Here's a look at the new cast and characters.

Having visited 2006, 1979, 2010, and 1950 in its first four seasons, Fargo isn’t going too far back in year five. The new season is set in 2019, and the mood is…well, you probably remember what it was like. A predatory strain of freedom rings out over the golden valleys of the upper midwest. Rural sheriffs interpret and enforce laws according to their personal agendas. Debt collectors reap record profits from underpaid workers who can’t afford their student loans. Even good-hearted police feel impotent and baffled by the severity and brazenness of the violence.

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If that description invokes the bleak world of No Country For Old Men more than the quirky communities of Fargo, you’ve pinned down the tone of the fifth season of FX’s Emmy-winning anthology series. Mashing up a plot that replicates some of the specific events of the Coen Brothers’ 1996 original with the shocking violence and sustained tension that made No Country so anxiety-inducing, season 5 of Fargo feels like a fascinating remix of the Coen Brothers canon, as well as the first four seasons of the show.

Here’s your introduction to the new cast and characters in Fargo Year 5. The new season premieres with back-to-back episodes on Tuesday, Nov. 21 at 10pm ET on FX. To watch FX with Sling TV, use the link at the bottom of this page to subscribe to Sling Blue or Orange + Blue.

Juno Temple in 'Fargo'
Jon Hamm in 'Fargo'
Jennifer Jason Leigh in 'Fargo'
David Rysdahl in 'Fargo'
Joe Keery in 'Fargo'
Lamorne Morris in 'Fargo'
Richa Moorjani in 'Fargo'
Sam Spruell in 'Fargo'
Dave Foley in 'Fargo'

Juno Temple as Dorothy “Dot” Lyon

Official Description: “Depending on who you ask, Dot is a wife and mother, a member of the PTA, a fighter, survivor, or a tiger. She's tenacious to almost a delusional fault, never giving up no matter how impossible the circumstances. Ultimately, she’s a mama bear with a lion’s heart.”

Don’t Cha Know: Juno Temple earned three Emmy nominations for her role as Keeley Jones on Apple TV’s Ted Lasso. Despite that character’s unmistakable Englishness, Temple quickly slips into her midwestern role, and her character’s odd vacillation between protectiveness, fear, and maternal sensitivity anchors the ensemble.

Jon Hamm as Sheriff Roy Tillman

Official Description: “One of those constitutional sheriffs, a rancher preacher, defender of the American gospel. A man who works from sunup to sundown shepherding God’s land. In Roy's own reality, he is the law and therefore is above the law; he’s the judge, jury and too often the executioner.”

Don’t Cha Know: Hamm will forever be known as Don Draper on Mad Men. But with apologies to his perfect portrayal of the titular wisecracking P.I. in Confess, Fletch, this might be his best role since the end of that iconic AMC series. Roy Tillman is possessive and deranged, sure, but he’s also charming enough to see why women and the electorate keep falling for him.

Jennifer Jason Leigh as Lorraine Lyon

Official Description: “CEO of the largest debt collection agency in the country, with two billion dollars in annual revenue. Lorraine is poised, regal and opinionated. She's also a huge donor to any candidate or cause that she believes in, regardless of political affiliation (read: anyone that can be helpful to her in the future).”

Don’t Cha Know: Jennifer Jason Leigh is finally old enough to start playing overbearing, aristocratic, implacable mothers, and she sinks her teeth into this role like a steak. Cold and skeptical toward her daughter-in-law Dot, Leigh’s character has an impeccable BS detector and very little patience for those who set it off.

David Rysdahl as Wayne Lyon

Official Description: “Wayne has the forced cheer of a man whose mother raised him with a thick brew of disappointment and guilt. Now he owns a car dealership and three quarters of a fishing boat. A sweet guy who doesn’t match up to society’s (or his mother’s) definition of masculinity, his ideal evening is playing sock hockey at home with his daughter, Scotty.”

Don’t Cha Know: Wayne’s demeanor and profession place him in the lineage of William H. Macy's Jerry Lundegaard. But where Jerry’s insecurities curdled into violent resentment, Wayne’s placid, trusting personality presents a different kind of danger to his family.

Joe Keery as Gator Tillman

Official Description: “A handsome charmer, the way the snake in the garden was a charmer. He’s a sapling struggling to grow in the shadow of an oak, desperate to prove himself to his larger-than-life father in the absence of a mother’s love. With daddy issues up there with Oedipus Rex’s, Gator wants to be a winner but unfortunately doesn’t know what the word means.”

Don’t Cha Know: Keery is best-known as Steve on Netflix’s Stranger Things, where his puppy dog charm is put to good use. His role as Roy’s sadistic son Gator is a revelation; Keery still excels at playing insecure, but there’s a menacing quality to his neediness, an unearned arrogance that’s as unconvincing as it is unnerving.

Lamorne Morris as Deputy Witt Farr

Official Description: “The guy when you look up the word “reliable” in the dictionary, you see his picture. He splits the check down to the cent, not because he’s cheap but because he’s fair. He's dogged, earnest and Minnesota nice.”

Don’t Cha Know: Although overall less cynical than its fourth season, there’s not as much humor in this season of Fargo as there was in the first three. However, Lamorne Morris gets to cook. He plays a kind, well-intentioned Deputy who is struggling to understand the power dynamics in his suddenly violent stretch of North Dakota.

Richa Moorjani as Deputy Indira Olmstead

Official Description: “A practical woman – socks before shoes – and good at puzzles, which may have led to her career in law enforcement. She struggles to manage her finances while supporting her husband Lars and his delusional dream of winning the masters golf tournament.”

Don’t Cha Know: Best known for the Netflix dramedy Never Have I Ever, Moorjani is a classically trained Kathak dancer.

Sam Spruell as Ole Munch

Official Description: “On any given day, he looks as though he could be 30-60. Some say he has always been here, blowing through the American landscape – the dark shadow waiting for us at the end of the hall. He's carved from stone, relentless as the sea, the forces of physics don’t apply to him.”

Don’t Cha Know: As that description (and his haircut) suggests, Ole Munch is something like a surrogate for Javier Bardem’s Anton Chigurh in this season of the show. But like a lot of the obvious reference points from the Coen Brothers oeuvre, the expectations created by those associations will be both rewarded and subverted.

Dave Foley as Danish Graves

Official Description: “Lorraine Lyon's in-house counsel and primary advisor. A country club type, who has never been in a real fight, but sees himself as a winner, when clearly Lorraine is the heavyweight champion and he just holds her spit bucket.”

Don’t Cha Know: The former Kid in the Hall wins this year’s “Nikki Swango” award for best character name. It’s a different role than we’re used to seeing from Foley, but similar to Chris Rock’s menacing lead turn in season 4, Foley slides into his fixer character with surprising ease.

Season 5 of Fargo premieres Tuesday, Nov. 21 at 10pm ET on FX. Use the link below to subscribe to Sling Blue with FX.

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