As the Stranger Things Series finale is not even a week old, the cast and crew of the iconic Netflix sci-fi series sat down for interviews with countless entertainment outlets. One such interview was between Jamie Campbell Bower and the YouTube Channel Gayety. The interviewer asked Bower how the actor managed to switch to different versions of Vecna and which version was his personal favorite.The Stranger Things actor responded:"Somebody asked me that already if I had a favorite version. It's really hard to say. But if there was one particular iteration of Henry that I enjoyed. I mean, I suppose that I've said this, that underneath the monster of Vecna, there is still this little boy who had this experience and these experiences. And I think I had moments across all of the characters, all of the different iterations of the character where that little boy came forwards. And those moments, I love those moments because it's all of a sudden I'm like, "Oh my God, here's this person that just needs love and here's this person that just needs to be cared for." "But there are also other times within that where I feel so far removed from that little child as well. And then what was it like playing those versions? It was at times terrifying. Mr. Whatsit was such a curve ball for me this season because yes, there are parts of him that are Henry, but there are also parts of him that are not. And I've described him already today, and I feel like it's appropriate and acceptable to say that I feel like he bridges the gap between that sort of child version and Vecna. He's the meat in the middle of the sandwich, I guess is what you could say. And I got to use more references for that and build more things that I wanted to create and use. Within that, and then occasionally come back to that sort of child self within it. So yeah, creatively, it was really cool."What do Stranger Things actor Jamie Campbell Bower's comments mean?Simply put, fans should see that Vecna, Henry Creel, and Mr. Whatsit are not three different personalities. Each personality forms the other, and at the center lies a traumatized kid who unwillingly fell to the whims of an otherworldly object. During his interview with Tudum, the actor was asked which aspect of playing Vecna in Stranger Things was rewarding, to which Bower responded:"Through my interactions with people outside the show, what’s wildly rewarding is knowing people can understand him, that he’s not just some anarchic, crazed lunatic. He has his truth and his story. If I meet people and they say, “Oh, I know how that feels,” I’m like, “Good, because me too.” The fact that it worked is really rewarding. The fact that people found Vecna scary is really rewarding."Bower reveals the exact Stranger Things moment that humanizes Vecna: View this post on Instagram Instagram PostFor those who don't know, almost an hour into the Stranger Things finale, Winona Ryder's Joyce Byers brings the axe down on Vecna, despite the latter requesting her to spare him. She doesn't listen and delivers the killing blow, ending Vecna's reign of terror. His request to Joyce to stop is a humanizing moment, according to Jamie Campbell Bower in the same Tudum interview:“As I’m coughing up this bile, yes, I’m coughing, but the feeling that I want to convey and the words that I’m trying to get out are just, ‘Please don’t. It was one of the more human moments of playing Vecna.”The entire series is currently available to stream on Netflix. Catch it if you haven't already.