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Meet the Cast of ‘The Twelve Season 3’

Meet the Cast of 'The Twelve Season 3'

Premiering August 4, 2025, on BINGE, The Twelve Season 3 plunges back into the harrowing trial of a woman accused of killing a child, seen through the eyes of 12 ordinary Australians whose personal demons threaten to sway justice. This critically acclaimed drama masterfully interweaves courtroom tension with intimate portraits of the jurors’ lives—exposing how trauma, bias, and hidden agendas collide in the quest for truth. As new evidence shatters old alliances and fresh secrets surface, the lines between innocence and guilt blur beyond recognition. Anchored by Sam Neill’s powerhouse performance, this season escalates the stakes with raw emotional brutality, asking: Can flawed people deliver a flawless verdict?

The ensemble cast—a blend of revered veterans and rising stars—delivers career-defining work, layering each juror’s struggle with societal issues like addiction, immigration, and systemic inequality. From sleepless nights in deliberation rooms to explosive flashbacks revealing their private wars, The Twelve remains a tour de force of human complexity. Meet the faces behind the verdict.

The Twelve Season 3 cast list

1: Sam Neill as Brett Colby QC

Sam Neill (OAM, Jurassic ParkPeaky Blinders) returns as the formidable prosecuting barrister Brett Colby QC, whose razor-sharp intellect masks a crumbling personal life. With a career spanning 50 years and iconic roles in The Piano and Hunt for the Wilderpeople, Neill’s gravitas electrifies the courtroom—especially in Season 3’s pivotal cross-examinations, where Colby’s obsession with winning threatens his ethics. Off-screen, Neill’s advocacy for climate action and mental health mirrors Colby’s unspoken battles with guilt and isolation.

This season, Colby grapples with a terminal diagnosis, forcing him to confront the legacy of his ruthless tactics. Neill’s portrayal—oscillating between volcanic intensity and vulnerable silence—peaks in a midnight confrontation with juror Alan Chaplan (William Zappa). “Colby isn’t just chasing justice; he’s running from his own shadow,” Neill reveals. The role solidifies his status as Australia’s acting titan.


2: Kaila Ferrelli as Nina Distazio

Kaila Ferrelli (NeighboursThe End) delivers a breakout performance as Nina Distazio, a young nurse juror haunted by her sister’s overdose. Ferrelli’s nuanced acting—honed in indie films like Slam—captures Nina’s journey from idealistic healer to disillusioned skeptic as trial evidence mirrors her trauma. Her Season 3 arc, involving a forbidden bond with the accused, becomes the moral lightning rod of the series.

Ferrelli trained with addiction counselors to ground Nina’s struggles in authenticity. “She’s a wound that won’t close,” the actor notes. Nina’s clashes with Louella (Joanna Tu) over privilege and punishment reveal the jury’s class divides.


3: Joanna Tu as Louella

Joanna Tu (New Gold MountainThe Commons) shines as Louella, a corporate lawyer whose icy logic masks generational trauma. Tu’s command of legal jargon and emotional restraint—a contrast to her fiery role in Barons—makes Louella the jury’s most polarizing voice. Her character’s secret affair with a high-profile politician threatens to derail deliberations when blackmail evidence emerges.

Tu’s portrayal explores Asian-Australian identity pressures, drawing from her advocacy against xenophobia. “Louella uses control to hide chaos,” she says. A flashback to her mother’s deportation in Episode 4 reframes her ruthlessness.


4: Phoenix Raei as Farhad

Phoenix Raei (StatelessClickbait) brings simmering intensity as Farhad, a refugee-turned-construction worker whose past in Iran fuels his distrust of authority. Raei’s own Afghan heritage informs Farhad’s visceral reactions to the trial’s injustices, culminating in a standoff where he accuses the court of “colonial verdicts.” His subplot involves a custody battle for his son, mirroring the accused’s plight.

Raei’s physicality—a clenched fist, averted gaze—speaks louder than dialogue. “Farhad’s rage isn’t anger; it’s grief for every system that failed him,” he explains. His bond with Nathalie Morris’s character offers rare warmth.


5: Nathalie Morris as Ellie

Nathalie Morris (BumpTroppo) portrays Ellie, a single mother and supermarket clerk drowning in debt. Morris infuses the role with raw vulnerability, particularly in scenes where Ellie’s financial desperation tempts her to accept bribes for her vote. Her character’s secret second job at a brothel unravels during deliberations, exposing the jury’s hypocrisy.

Morris researched working-class struggles, embedding Ellie with relatable resilience. “Her greatest fear isn’t prison—it’s her kids seeing her fail,” Morris shares. Ellie’s quiet courage anchors the season’s emotional core.


6: Ewen Leslie as Garry

Ewen Leslie (The CryThe Great) devastates as Garry, a former teacher battling PTSD after a school shooting. Leslie’s haunted eyes and trembling hands—a masterclass in subtlety—reveal Garry’s guilt over surviving. His obsession with the accused’s “motive” becomes a proxy for his own unanswerable questions.

Leslie collaborated with trauma therapists for the role. In Episode 5, Garry’s panic attack during testimony forces the trial to halt. “He’s a ghost haunting his own life,” Leslie states. Garry’s friendship with Sarah Peirse’s character offers fleeting solace.


7: Sarah Peirse as Margaret

Sarah Peirse (Top of the LakeHeavenly Creatures) returns as Margaret, the jury’s eldest member, whose dementia masks startling clarity about the case. Peirse’s portrayal—frail yet fierce—turns Margaret’s fragmented memories into key evidence, including a revelation about the victim’s family. Her subplot involves a heartbreaking nursing-home romance.

Peirse drew on her mother’s dementia journey for authenticity. “Margaret’s mind is a mosaic—broken pieces revealing bigger pictures,” she says. Her exit from the jury in Episode 7 triggers chaos.


8: Paul Tassone as Vince

Paul Tassone (Mr InbetweenWakefield) intimidates as Vince, an ex-con with ties to the accused’s gang. Tassone’s Vince uses intimidation to sway votes, smuggling shivs into deliberations. His character’s redemption arc—a struggle to protect his transgender daughter from old associates—adds shocking depth.

Tassone’s own Italian-Australian roots inform Vince’s code of honor. A scene where he defends Hannah Diviney’s character from bigotry redefines his loyalty. “Vince’s violence is a language he’s unlearning,” Tassone notes.


9: William Zappa as Alan Chaplan

William Zappa (RakeThe Dressmaker) dazzles as Alan Chaplan, the jury foreman whose conservative façade hides a double life. Zappa’s theatrical background fuels Alan’s manipulative charm—especially when he fabricates votes to conceal his embezzlement scandal. His clashes with Sam Neill crackle with class warfare.

Zappa reveals Alan’s Season 3 breaking point: “When his lies implicate an innocent man, the gavel of guilt falls hardest on him.”


10: Charles Napoleon An as Daniel

Charles Napoleon An (Erotic StoriesThe Unlisted) portrays Daniel, a medical student whose ambition clashes with his immigrant family’s sacrifices. An’s Daniel battles panic attacks while hiding his father’s deportation—a secret exploited by the defense. His expertise in child psychology becomes pivotal, forcing him to confront his own childhood abuse.

An’s performance—stoic in court, shattered in private—echoes his advocacy for mental health in Asian communities. “Daniel’s verdict isn’t just about the accused; it’s about forgiving himself,” he says.


11: Tracy Mann as Carol

Tracy Mann (Sweet RiverA Place to Call Home) embodies Carol, a retired journalist whose investigative instincts uncover police corruption. Mann’s Carol weaponizes her sharp wit to challenge biased testimonies, but her terminal cancer diagnosis fuels a reckless quest for legacy. Her secret recordings of jury misconduct threaten to overturn the trial.

Mann’s real-life cancer survivorship informed Carol’s dark humor and urgency. “She’s racing death to find truth,” Mann shares. Carol’s mentorship of Bessie Holland’s character is a standout.


12: Hannah Diviney as Chloe

Hannah Diviney (Latecomers, disability advocate) makes history as Chloe, the first wheelchair-using juror in Australian TV. Diviney’s Chloe faces ableism in deliberations but uses her law degree to dismantle flawed arguments. Her character’s romance with a court officer becomes a beacon of hope amid darkness.

Diviney, who has cerebral palsy, co-wrote Chloe’s courtroom accessibility scenes. “Chloe isn’t ‘inspirational’—she’s a badass who happens to use wheels,” she asserts. Her closing argument challenges the court’s physical and moral barriers.


13: Bessie Holland as Gemma

Bessie Holland (The GreatThe Portable Door) captivates as Gemma, a socialite using the trial to escape her abusive husband. Holland’s Gemma masks bruises with designer scarves, her privilege crumbling as she recognizes the accused’s coerced confession. Her daring testimony against her husband in Episode 8 redefines courage.

Holland’s arc, informed by her work with domestic violence charities, exposes how power silences women. “Gemma’s pearl necklace is her armor—and her noose,” she reveals.


What is about

The Twelve Season 3 is BINGE’s most unflinching exploration of justice yet—a tapestry of trauma, bias, and fragile hope. With Sam Neill’s commanding swan song, Hannah Diviney’s groundbreaking role, and a finale that leaves morality on trial, this season cements the series as a global masterpiece. Stream exclusively on BINGE—where every vote is a war within.

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