A possible episode in the second half of the season will feature both Grodd and King Shark.
Another theme for the season is "legacy".
One of the themes for this season is family.
Patrick Sabongui as Captain David Singh.
Keiynan Lonsdale as Wally West/Kid Flash.
Tom Cavanagh as Harrison Sherloque Wells, Professor Eobard Thawne/Reverse Flash, Harrison Wolfgang Wells and Dr. Harrison "Harry" Wells.
Jessica Parker Kennedy as Nora West-Allen/XS.
Danielle Nicolet as District Attorney Cecille Horton.
Hartley Sawyer as Ralph Dibny/Elongated Man.
Danielle Panabaker as Dr. Caitlin Snow/Killer Frost.
Grant Gustin as Barry Allen/The Flash/Savitar/Green Arrow.
“The beautiful thing about being a part of something is that there’s always a possibility for all of these things.”īut if Kennedy had her way, she would absolutely like to see more of Nora on The Flash. “I feel like if it was supposed to – if they went home and were never seen again, there would have been a scene that said, okay, ‘Bye, guys! Bye forever!’ You know?” Kennedy says. (Heck, we haven’t even seen Bart meet Joe yet!)Ĭould we see the extended West-Allen family take on some more bad guys in Season 8 together? At the moment, Kennedy is as in the dark about her character’s The Flash future as we are, though it sounds as though she thinks a return is possible. Bart and Nora are both in attendance and neither mentions heading back to 2049 anytime soon, indicating that they might still have some unfinished business to deal with in our present day. “Heart of the Matter Part 2” ends with Barry and Iris holding an impromptu vow renewal ceremony in the living room of the West home. “That’s sort of a very personal answer for me. “I think there’s something healthy – to fantasize about what it might be like to have this idealistic family,” Kennedy continues. “So there’s a lot of make-believe that I really enjoy when I’m there having a mom and a dad and a brother. “I was raised without any brothers or sisters, and I was raised by a single parent,” she says. it’s a balance of caring for him, but also tolerating him at the same time.” So there’s a definitely parenting element that she’s had to take with him. And he’s always in the way and doing the wrong thing. And she’s responsible for a little brother who’s very much like her OG character. Yet her family still remains the driving force behind everything this Nora does, particularly her affection for and feelings of responsibility toward her younger brother. This version of Nora is missing much of the anger and resentment that drove her first incarnation, having grown up in a timeline where her relationship with Iris was completely different (and much more healthy) than the one in which she blamed in mother for her father’s absence in her life. a different version of her, but it’s also very, very similar.”
“I love her, and I related to her on so many levels. “, it feels very much like coming home,” Kennedy tells Den of Geek.