On Louis and Jonah:
There’s a reason Jonah Macon’s return hits so hard in AMC’s Interview With the Vampire. Jonah isn’t just some random old hookup Louis dusted off for a little revenge-flirting after Lestat got too comfortable. He is the ghost of a life Louis never got to live.
Louis and Jonah’s relationship is one of the most quietly devastating “old flame” stories in the show. We are talking about two Black gay men whose bond began in childhood and shifted into something more intimate during adolescence, all under Jim Crow, all under the threat of violent racism, social surveillance, and criminalized homosexuality. So no, this was not just “boys being boys” in the bayou. Please be serious.
Jonah was sixteen when things started between them. Louis was older, though the exact age gap is murky. What matters is that their connection required trust. Real trust. Not the dramatic vampire “I’ll burn the world for you” kind, but the much scarier human kind: knowing someone could ruin you with one careless word and trusting them not to.
That is why the bayou matters so much. It is not just a sexy little outdoor interlude. It is their private world. Their spot. A place outside the rules, outside the family expectations, outside the white gaze, outside the performance of masculinity Louis wears like armor. The bayou gives them privacy, but not safety. That distinction matters. They can breathe there, but the world is still waiting on the other side.
Then there is the class piece, because of course there is a class piece. Jonah leaves New Orleans because he has to work. Hotels in Philadelphia. A gunpowder mill in Delaware. Dangerous labor, unstable opportunity, and the constant grind of being a Black man trying to survive in America. Louis has his own financial struggles, yes, but he and Jonah are not moving through the same economic reality. Louis is a Pointe du Lac. He has family name, property ties, ambition, and later the Azalea. Jonah feels like someone who had to hustle wherever work would take him.
Honestly, I would not be surprised if Jonah originally met Louis because he or his family had some kind of labor connection to the Pointe du Lacs. The show does not say that outright, but the difference in social position is sitting right there in the subtext, smoking a cigarette and minding everybody’s business.
Now, did human Louis call this love? I doubt it. Not because it was not love, but because Louis was too deep in denial, duty, Catholic guilt, family pressure, and respectability politics to give it that name. He probably would have called it comfort. Peace. Fooling around. A few early fumbles. Anything but the word that would make it real.
And that is exactly why Louis minimizes it when Lestat clocks the situation. Lestat calls Jonah an old love, and Louis immediately tries to shrink the whole thing down into something casual. “A few early fumbles.” Sir. Be for real.
That line is doing several things at once. Louis is protecting himself. He is protecting Jonah. And he is trying to manage Lestat’s jealousy before it turns into something dangerous. Because Lestat is not just jealous in a normal boyfriend way. Lestat is jealous with supernatural stalking privileges and a body count. So when Louis downplays Jonah, I do not read it as proof that Jonah meant nothing. I read it as Louis trying to keep Lestat from understanding just how much Jonah meant.
And the gag is, Lestat probably understood anyway. He can read Jonah’s mind. He calls it love because Jonah’s mind likely told him what Louis’s mouth would not.
That is what makes the whole thing so tragic. Jonah represents a path not taken. A version of Louis that might have existed without Lestat, without vampirism, without the endless gothic mess of domination dressed up as romance. Jonah is not perfect, and the relationship should not be flattened into some pure fantasy. But compared to the volcanic dysfunction of Lestat and the suffocating control of Armand, Jonah feels like something quieter. More human. Maybe even cleaner.
The later reunion makes this even more interesting. Louis says he saw Jonah again decades later, likely sometime before the attempted murder of Lestat, so probably in the 1940s. By then, Louis would have looked unchanged while Jonah would have aged into a grown man with a whole life behind him. And Louis apparently revealed his immortality to him.
That is not small. Louis does not just hand out the truth of what he is. If he told Jonah, then Jonah mattered. Maybe Louis needed someone who knew him before the fangs. Maybe he wanted to stand in front of one person from his human life and be seen without all the performance. Maybe he wanted to touch, even briefly, the version of himself who once had a future.
The show leaves enough unsaid for fans to argue, which is honestly where this fandom does its best and worst work. Was Jonah the love of Louis’s human life? Was he just a symbol of innocence? Was he a mirror showing us what Louis lost when he chose Lestat? Maybe all of the above.
But calling Jonah irrelevant feels lazy. He is not just a detour. He is a wound. A memory. A “what if” with a heartbeat.
And knowing Louis, he would rather call it anything but love.
Which, unfortunately for him, makes it look even more like love.























