It is described as a secret society set up to research, investigate, observe and monitor the paranormal, in particular, vampires, witches, spirits and werewolves.[2][3][4] Rice describes them as "psychic detectives". Many vampiric characters from Rice's novels once belonged to the Talamasca before accepting the "dark gift". Jesse Reeves, David Talbot and Merrick Mayfair are the best known of Rice's Talamasca characters.[5]
The Talamasca represents one strand of Rice's theme of anthropology in her work which she repeatedly returns to. There are a number of anthropologists in, or connected with the Talamasca. The Talamasca can itself be seen as a kind of parallel to physical anthropology, looking for artifacts of another world. This is especially clear in the Talamasca's secret search for the Taltos.[6] The Talamasca provides a solid foundation for Rice's work. With a history going back centuries it is like a backbone going through Rice's work which makes it coherent within itself.[7]
History in Rice's works
Introduced in The Queen of the Damned (1988),[8] the Talamasca is said to have formed in 758 by Teskhamen, Heskreth and Gremt, and though it operates in offices worldwide, the organization's central files are held in London.[2][9]
In the novel Prince Lestat it is revealed to the vampire Pandora and Arjun that the founder of the Talamasca is the spirit Pandora encountered upon the death of Cassiodorus.[10] The leader at that time is David Talbot, who spearheaded its growth at the end of the twentieth century.[2] Earlier in the Vampire Chronicles, the society was sent to New Orleans to uncover the truth behind the story told in Interview with the Vampire (1976).[2]
Television series
In April 2023, it was reported that AMC was developing a third Immortal Universe television series focused on the Talamasca.[11][12]John Lee Hancock is attached to the project as showrunner and writer.[11][12]The Talamasca had begun production by October 2024 and is set to premiere in 2025.[13][14]
^Frank A. Salamove, "The anthropological vision of Anne Rice, pp. 49–50 in, Gary Hoppenstand, Ray Broadus (eds), The Gothic World of Anne Rice, Popular Press, 1996 ISBN087972708X.
^Linda Badley, Writing Horror and the Body: The Fiction of Stephen King, Clive Barker, and Anne Rice, p. 127, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996 ISBN0313297169.