MAY 16, 2016 EMMY PREVIEW/UPFRONTS
PRESENTS
THE SPY AT NIGHT
WHY THE NIGHT MANAGER, STARRING HUGH LAURIE AND TOM HIDDLESTON, MIGHT BE THIS YEAR’S HOTTEST TV EVENT
1 BOB ODENKIRK RASHIDA JONES ELLEN BURSTYN WILL FORTE SISSY SPACEK
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PUBLISHER
Stacey Farish EDITOR
Joe Utichi
CONTENTS
M AY 1 6 , 2 0 1 6
CREATIVE DIRECTOR
Craig Edwards
ASSISTANT EDITOR
Matt Grobar
DEADLINE COEDITORS
Nellie Andreeva Mike Fleming Jr.
DEADLINE AWARDS COLUMNIST
Pete Hammond
DEADLINE CONTRIBUTORS
Anita Busch Anthony D’Alessandro Lisa de Moraes Jeremy Gerard Patrick Hipes Ali Jaafar David Lieberman Ross Lincoln Dominic Patten Erik Pedersen Denise Petski David Robb Nancy Tartaglione
AWARDSLINE CONTRIBUTORS
Antonia Blyth Dan Doperalski Greg Evans Gabriel Goldberg Eric Schwabel Stefan Studer
CHAIRMAN & CEO
Jay Penske
VICE CHAIRMAN
Gerry Byrne
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, STRATEGY AND OPERATIONS
4-10
FIRST TAKE On Set: Behind the scenes on Modern Family’s season finale
Mr. Robot’s Rami Malek 3 Questions: Casting Directors Guest Column: America Ferrera on diversity
12
COVER STORY John le Carré’s The Night Manager gets a glitzy TV update
23
THE DIALOGUE Bob Odenkirk & Jonathan Banks
Ellen Burstyn Rashida Jones Will Forte
George Grobar
Sanaa Hamri
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
Sissy Spacek
Craig Perreault
GENERAL COUNSEL & S.V.P., HUMAN RESOURCES
Todd Greene
V.P., CREATIVE
Nelson Anderson V.P., FINANCE
38
FLASH MOB Deadline’s The Contenders Emmys event
Ken DelAlcazar V.P., TV ENTERTAINMENT SALES
Laura Lubrano
DIRECTOR, FILM & TV
Carra Fenton
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES, FILM & TV
Brianna Hamburger Tiffany Windju
AD SALES COORDINATORS
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PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
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ON THE COVER: HUGH LAURIE AND TOM HIDDLESTON PHOTOGRAPHED BY GABRIEL GOLDBERG THIS PAGE: BOB ODENKIRK PHOTOGRAPHED BY DAN DOPERALSKI
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MR. ROBOT’S RAMI MALEK p. 8 | YOU ME HER p. 8 | 3 QUESTIONS: CASTING DIRECTORS p. 9 | AMERICA FERRERA ON DIVERSITY p. 10
u ON SET
OUR AMERICAN FAMILY Behind the scenes of Modern Family’s season finale. by Jo e u t i c h i
shots and things like that.”
precise, witty comedy that landed
ON ONE OF THE LAST SHOOTING
and Sofia Vergara struggle to keep
DAYS of its seventh season, Modern
straight faces as they film a scene in
Family’s shot list spills over onto a
which Manny tries (and fails) to teach
about the dance these actors do with
wins for Outstanding Comedy in its
second page of the call sheet. Things
Jay how to double-click on his tablet.
their crew as they run multiple-page
first five seasons.
move quickly and efficiently on
All this before lunch, and Lloyd still has
dialogue scenes in single takes, refin-
the Fox lot’s Stage 5, as co-creator
time to teach a visiting writer how to
ing and refining with each do-over so
making history last year when Veep
Christopher Lloyd and director James
use the coffeemaker at Craft Services.
the camera moves quicker and the
took the Emmy crown (it’s tied on
comedy gets sharper. Stonestreet
five wins with Frasier, another Lloyd-
R. Bagdonas preside over filming for
“We’ve even got a bit slower since
Indeed, there’s something balletic
Modern Family five consecutive Emmy
The show narrowly missed out on
the season finale. As Mitch, Jesse Tyler
the first three seasons,” says Eric
remembers cracking up when Rodri-
produced show), but co-creator
Ferguson struggles to escape a Little
Stonestreet, who plays Cam. “But
guez and O’Neill practiced the double-
Steve Levitan is proud of the resolve
Orphan Annie costume. The Dunphy
it’s testament to the blueprint of the
click scene at the table read, and
with which his writing staff charged
clan makes plans in the living room,
show: we don’t even think about turn-
it’s funny still when they go for their
into Season 7. “The legacy of the show
as Andy (Adam DeVine) and Haley
ing around on scenes like traditional
first rehearsal on set. But by the time
is something we take extremely seri-
(Sarah Hyland) say an emotional
shows. We’re always raking and pan-
they’re ready to move onto the next
ously,” he says. “And this was a very
goodbye. Rico Rodriguez, Ed O’Neill
ning and we don’t need to do insert
shot, it has morphed into the kind of
ambitious season. Especially as you
4
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PHOTOGRAPHS BY
Jessica Chou
5/6/16 1:17 PM
ANNIE ARE YOU OK? Main image: James R. Bagdonas walks Jesse Tyler Ferguson through the scene. Above: Cast and crew make the busy schedule look effortless.
lucky with the kids,” says Julie Bowen.
way, that Phil can be a really tough
“You never know what kind of actor
taskmaster, or Claire has the ability to
they might grow into, but we’ve been
be looser.”
so fortunate to be able to write to
Really, Modern Family has always
their strengths. They’re by no means
dealt deftly with two extremes like
just supporting cast.” When baby Lily
this, so it’s no surprise that even the
(Aubrey Anderson-Emmons) started
people who make the show contrast
to speak in the third season, she
when asked to explain what exactly
became Mitch and Cam’s sarcastic
made it a hit. On the one hand it’s
voice of reason. And the show was
a broad, network family sitcom; a
already a hit before Jeremy Maguire
reliable old friend for viewers around
was even born. Today, the four-year-
the world. On the other, it deals with
old who plays Jay and Gloria’s young
issues like mixed-race marriage
son Joe has his first big speech to
and gay adoptive parenting. Not so
deliver, and he has it down to a tee.
uncommon for the networks today,
“Jeremy’s so great,” smiles Sofia Ver-
perhaps, but there’s an argument to
gara. “He’s such a sweet kid and very
be made that this show helped pave
professional.”
that road.
get into the later years of a series, just
feel is not to betray what we started
feeling like you’re not starting to be
out doing, which is delivering a funny,
adult cast fresh material to react
and its drama subtle, sometimes in
terrible is a victory. We’re really trying
quality show that reflects real lives
to. But, says Ty Burrell, it’s equally
the space of a single scene. On the
hard not to let this series finish weak,
and real family emotions.”
important that they stay true to those
Dunphy house set, Alex (Ariel Winter)
original characterizations. “It’s still
is rolling her eyes at her family for
and we did a lot of big shows, and a
Over the course of this day on set,
These new dynamics give the
Similarly, its comedy can be arch
few shows that were very different for
each of the principal actors and many
a sitcom and there has to be a little
forgetting she’s returned from college
us, this year.”
of the show’s longstanding behind-
bit of a reset button so that people
for the summer, and then Haley and
“In theory, it gets harder every
the-scenes talents will give different
can tune into any episode and know
Andy contemplate calling time on a
year because there are fewer stories
viewpoints on why they feel Modern
the characters in that situation. But
relationship that seemed to be doing
for us to tell,” notes Lloyd. “But we
Family continues to work. For some,
having the show be on for seven
favors for the both of them. Lloyd says
still stumble into stories where we
it’s about the way the family mem-
seasons has allowed us to learn so
avoiding over-sentimentality has been
go, ‘Wow, we could have told this in
bers have changed and evolved as the
much about them. Nobody’s grown
the key to making these moments
the first or second season.’ It was out
show has gone on. That’s certainly
out of their own thing, so you can still
work. “Probably the biggest mistake
there, and we just didn’t think of it
true of the younger kids in the family,
expect the same flaws, but it’s very
you can make in comedy is to reach
until now. The greatest pressure we
who are now young adults. “We got
cool to find, at different stops on the
for emotion that you haven’t earned.”
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O N SET actors know how to block themselves and find marks without having to be told. But if this show is on autopilot, the atmosphere of fun, familiarity and creativity doesn’t let on. “I have the best job,” says Vergara, echoing her fellow cast members. “I get to hang out with family every single day and call it work.” Still, its creators know they’re in the home stretch. An end is in sight, but when will it come? “I think my personal goal at this point would be 10 seasons,” says Levitan. “I don’t know if it’s attainable or not; I think we’ll have to look at it every year, and if we feel like we’re just running out of things to say then it will be time to make that tough call.” “When we sat down in May last year, we had nothing,” Lloyd reflects of this current season. “But we still delivered 22 stories—which took these characters to new places—without too much of a struggle. It tells me there’s a lot of life left.” Ed O’Neill, who knows a thing or two about network comedy after 262 episodes of Married with Children in the 80s and 90s, would like to get to 200 at least. This finale takes Modern FamFAMILY TIES Above: During a break in shooting, Nolan Gould and Ariel Winter forget how to use a sofa. Below: Ty Burrell and Gould rehearse (left) and Rico Rodriguez & Ed O’Neill discuss the ‘double-click’ scene with Christopher Lloyd & James R. Bagdonas.
“THE GREATEST PRESSURE WE FEEL IS NOT TO BETRAY WHAT WE STARTED OUT DOING, WHICH IS DELIVERING A FUNNY, QUALITY SHOW THAT REFLECTS REAL LIVES AND REAL FAMILY EMOTIONS.”
ily to 166, and he didn’t expect to be here. When he first heard about Modern Family—then dubbed ‘My Ameri-
Of course, not having to shoot in
outside notes that the stage previ-
front of a live audience gives the show
ously hosted shows like The X-Files
an excuse to work on location more
and Lost in Space. These comfortable
than its format might traditionally
sets—Mitch & Cam’s hip apartment,
allow; something that has added to
Jay and Gloria’s leopard-print-and-
its authentic feel. The three houses
leather show-home, Claire and Phil’s
that play these families’ homes have
Pottery Barn homestead—were
become popular tourist spots around
modelled on the real houses they
L.A. Two of them are only a stone’s
used to shoot the pilot. They were lit
throw from the Fox lot (Jay and
by James R. Bagdonas, who has also
Gloria’s modernist palace is further
directed multiple episodes, includ-
away, in Brentwood). And the day
ing this season finale. “These sets
before our visit, Jesse Tyler Ferguson
are pretty much practical,” he notes.
had been out on Hollywood Blvd.,
“There are four walls and ceilings,
no particular rush to bring Modern
shooting the other half of the Annie
because the documentary feel meant
Family to a close. But he relates a
scene. “I really took advantage of the
we wanted realistic sets to shoot in.
thought he’d shared with Burrell
surroundings. I found Donald Trump’s
The challenge of that, as a cinema-
earlier in the day. “I told him that
star and took a photo next to it,
tographer and a director, has been
the way to go out is when you start
with me in my Annie dress. People
we sometimes shoot four pages with
thinking, ‘We should probably wrap
thought it was an endorsement; I just
maybe ten actors and they’re mov-
this up…’ That’s much better than,
liked the juxtaposition. Dreams can
ing constantly, so it really does need
‘Oh dear God I want to go on for
happen anywhere, I guess.”
choreographing.”
another year; you don’t get it!’” ★
Stage 5, meanwhile, has been
can Family’—he had taken a courtesy meeting with Lloyd and Levitan because he liked their work. “It’s one of those things that are so inexplicable in Hollywood. I met with them just to tell them, ‘Look, I really don’t want to do another half-hour.’” The script arrived a year later, under its current title. “I didn’t like the title,” he laughs. “But I read it and I thought, ‘This is good.’ And then I read it again and thought, ‘This is going to be a big hit.’”
Nearly seven years later, he’s in
After seven seasons, it’s remark-
home to three of America’s most
able how quickly those problems
■ For an extended photo gallery from
familiar house interiors since the show
can be solved. The cameras become
our Modern Family set visit, go to
started in 2009. A plaque on the wall
characters in their own right, and the
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CHARTED TERRITORY
Gold Derby’s Emmy Odds At press time, here is how Gold Derby’s experts ranked the Emmy chances in the Limited Series & Movie Actor and Actress races. Get up-to-date rankings and make your own predictions at GoldDerby.com
THE HACKER HIT
LEAD ACTOR LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
How Rami Malek bowled over Mr. Robot creator Sam Esmail in one of the most complex lead roles on TV BY ANTHONY D’ALESSANDRO
THERE WAS A POINT during the auditions for
later impress Tom Hanks during his audition for
Mr. Robot when creator Sam Esmail thought he
The Pacific, landing the part of Corporal Merriell
was at the end of his rope. “I’m hearing all these
“Snafu” Shelton, before going on to work with him
great actors from movies and TV, and they had
again in Hanks’s directorial effort Larry Crowne.
interesting choices, but it wasn’t working at all,”
However, much like the anti-corporate slogans
Esmail remembers about his search to find Elliot
Elliot spreads on the web, you could say that
Alderson, the anarchist hacker who suffers from
Malek has gone viral, with Mr. Robot elevating him
a dissociative identity disorder in the hit USA
from supporting roles to leading man.
drama series.
To realize his portrayal of one of the most
One pilot scene in particular, with which Esmail
complex characters on television, Malek studied
would audition actors, was Elliot’s “Fuck Society”
up with Mr. Robot’s technical advisors as well as
rant, which goes down in his head while he’s
the show’s therapist. The show, he says, goes even
sitting disengaged in his therapist’s office. “Then
darker in its second season. “Elliot has a lot of flaws
Rami Malek came in and added this warmth to it,
but a very strong moral center,” Malek explains.
and it changed everything. He added vulnerability.
“He’s a guy who many of us can identify with. We’re
I wanted to hug Elliot instead of saying, ‘Go away;
not all perfect, but we’re trying to do the best we
please stop talking.’”
can and impact our society in a certain way; leave a
The 35-year old actor made his first TV appearance on Gilmore Girls at 23. He would
ways, and he has a unique power to do so.”
YOU ME HER TELLS A DIFFERENT KIND OF LOVE STORY
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Bryan Cranston All the Way
10/3
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Courtney B. Vance The People v. O.J. Simpson
7/2
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Idris Elba Luther
6/1
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Oscar Isaac Show Me a Hero
17/2
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Benedict Cumberbatch Sherlock: The Abominable Bride
11/1
LEAD ACTRESS LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
ODDS
1
Sarah Paulson The People v. O.J. Simpson
27/10
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Kirsten Dunst Fargo
5/1
3
Kerry Washington Confirmation
5/1
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Felicity Huffman American Crime
13/2
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Audra McDonald Lady Day at Emersons Bar and Grill
12/1
positive mark. Elliot goes about it in some peculiar
Polyamorous Affair Reading scripts for John Scott Shepherd’s ‘polyromantic comedy’ series You Me Her, actors Greg Poehler and Rachel Blanchard quickly realized this wasn’t the salacious stuff one might expect from a story about a three-way relationship. Instead, they saw a thoughtfully-considered take on marital issues with a twist, offering roles the actors
ODDS
consider few and far between in the current television market. “It is a balance of drama and comedy, which I think is just life,” says Blanchard. And the grounded portrayal of a subject rarely depicted on screen wasn’t the only draw— the actors were equally intrigued by the opportunity to work with director Nisha Ganatra, known for her work on Amazon’s Golden
Globe-grabbing Transparent. Shooting 300 pages in seven weeks—a rare feat even within the fast-paced world of television—the stars bonded with ‘third wheel’ Priscilla Faia over extended rehearsals and theater exercises, which included tasks like staring into one another’s eyes for five minutes at a time. Poehler was skeptical of that process. “But by the end, when you’re looking at someone, it’s almost a transcendental experience where you feel like you’re seeing through them, or seeing who they really are in some sense,” he says. The series debuted on DirecTV’s Audience Network on March 22nd, and the actors promise continued complication as it unfolds. Says Poehler, “With a three person dynamic, there’s always going to be a literal oddity to it which leaves one person wanting a little bit more.”
SUPPORTING ACTOR LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
ODDS
1
Jesse Plemons Fargo
7/2
2
Anthony Mackie All the Way
9/1
3
Sterling K. Brown The People v. O.J. Simpson
9/2
4
Wendell Pierce Confirmation
15/2
5
John Travolta The People v. O.J. Simpson
14/1
SUPPORTING ACTRESS LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE
ODDS
1
Jean Smart Fargo
3/1
2
Regina King American Crime
4/1
3
Melissa Leo All the Way
13/2
4
Sarah Paulson American Horror Story: Hotel
15/2
5
Emayatzy Corinealdi Roots
16/1
RAMI MALEK PHOTOGRAPHED BY
Mark Mann
5/6/16 1:23 PM
1
u 3 Q UESTIO NS
Which has been the hardest part to cast in your career?
CARTEL LAND Juan Pablo Raba in Narcos.
Cast Off Essential collaborators for scrambling showrunners, and feared arbiters of actors’ worth, casting directors are responsible for identifying talent, unpuzzling ensembles and launching careers. As the actors they cast enjoy the lion’s share of the Emmy limelight, we put three questions to the people responsible for leading them to the stage. By Matt Grobar
JOHN PAPSIDERA Casual Christopher Nolan’s go-to casting director since Memento, Papsidera’s previous TV credits include Prison Break, Carnivale and Reaper.
CARLA HOOL Narcos Hool worked alongside Carmen Cuba on Netflix’s Pablo Escobar series, specializing in casting an ensemble of Latin talent while Cuba cast the show’s lead roles.
Papsidera: It’s always the small things that inevitably get put under a magnifying glass. On The Prestige and Inception with Chris Nolan were two Asian roles. One was a magician and one was a soldier. We looked forever for those roles. The smaller roles are the hardest thing to do because they need to be alive in a moment, and then leave. Hool: There aren’t a big list of name Latino actors. The same ones always come up—Salma Hayek, Javier Bardem, Antonio Banderas, Benicio Del Toro. That’s something I’m trying to change. In Narcos, Juan Pablo Raba is a great Colombian actor—he plays Pablo’s cousin, and I’ve known him for years but nobody would want to cast him because he was not a name. And now, after somebody gave him a chance, he’s working like crazy. Fiorentino: One of the toughest roles that I had to cast—it was getting the actor that we wanted cast—would have been Alex O’Loughlin in his first series regular role on a show called Moonlight for CBS, in the role of Mick St. John. It was only on for one year, but he was an unknown from Australia. It was incredibly challenging to get the studio and network to sign off on him. It went all the way up the ranks to Les Moonves, who, I’m told, when he saw his screen test, within fifteen seconds said, “Cast him. He’s a TV star.” Saks: I would say that on Elementary, Sherlock was very difficult to cast because we needed to find somebody who took you away from the preconceived notions of Robert Downey Jr. and Benedict Cumberbatch. Jonny Lee Miller was my single choice. If he hadn’t fallen into place, I’m not quite sure what we would have done. Farris: Obviously, Elliot (Rami Malek) in Mr. Robot was a huge challenge. He had to be complicated and cerebral, and a loner, yet interesting enough and talented enough to carry the whole show. That was really tricky.
BARBARA FIORENTINO UnREAL Fighting her own distaste for reality TV, Fiorentino worked with co-creators Marti Noxon and Sarah Gertrude Shapiro on the satirical dark comedy.
2
3
How long does it take to know an actor is right for a role you’re casting? Papsidera: Once in a while, somebody will surprise you with a choice, but most of the time I think you know pretty quick when they come in the room. I’m a big believer that you get a sense of somebody’s essence most of the time—it’s a natural, instinctive thing that I really try and rely on. Hool: I usually know pretty fast. Usually with the first scene. It’s just a gut feeling—I’ve been doing this for a while, so you just know when someone’s right for the role. Fiorentino: A lot of times when someone comes into the room in that first audition, you just know. That being said, especially when you’re casting a television pilot, a lot of people have to agree with that. Sometimes it’s more of a struggle to get everyone who makes those decisions on board with a particular actor. Saks: It can vary, and it’s dependent on the size of the role, and how much the character has to do in a given script. For series regulars, where you’re looking for someone to either carry a series or be part of an ensemble, I usually know after hearing them read for about ten minutes, and speaking with them. But callbacks are revealing as well. Sometimes in a callback we’ll give them additional material to read, or we’ll give them some direction, and things can snap into place. Farris: Casting is pretty instinctual, so I feel like I have a sense pretty quickly if the person is wrong for the part; that’s always the easiest to discount. Knowing that they’re perfect for the part generally takes a bit longer. You certainly know if they’re in the realm. I would say after the first couple of scenes that show various emotions, I’m pretty much there.
MARK SAKS Mercy Street Having cast everything from Elementary through The Good Wife, Person of Interest and Medium, Saks has been behind many of TV’s biggest hits.
After the Oscar controversy shone a light on a lack of diversity, what’s the role of a casting director in ensuring equal representation? Papsidera: For me, it goes back to writers, showrunners and producers, because ultimately, we can open up that box, but they have to take the present. A lot of it comes down to what’s on the page. It has to start there for it to really change. Hool: I mostly do diversity—I do a lot of Latin projects. In my case, sometimes I give my opinion and say, “What if this role was Latino?” But at the end of the day, it’s going to be the producers and the director who are going to decide who they want to cast. We do give our opinions and bring in actors who would fit the role, even if they were considering the role to be white. Fiorentino: The very first television show that I cast was The Shield, and that was a beautiful landscape of diversity, so lucky for me, I kind of came from that place anyway. And when shows are either set in Los Angeles, especially, or New York, the reality is that these are melting pot cities of all kinds of people from all different ethnic backgrounds. You also want to be true to that. Saks: Color-blind casting, all the time. Saying, “Why can’t this role be African American? Why can’t this role be East Indian?” I find most of the producers, studios and networks I work with are extremely accepting of that, and have been for a long time. I’m always questioning my producers: ”What are the boundaries here? What would work best? What can we do, what can’t we do, and why?” Farris: I think the casting director is just one of many who need to be cognizant of this. Certainly, we’re on the front lines. There is a really huge push for diversity by all the networks these days and I think it’s good. But it’s best when it’s organic, instead of shoehorned in.
SUSIE FARRIS Mr. Robot Alongside Kim Miscia and Beth Bowling, Farris was instrumental in casting the USA Network hit, finding Rami Malek for the lead role.
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GU EST COLUMN
TALKING DIVERSITY
CLERKS. The cast of Superstore, led by Ferrera, middle.
Guest columnist America Ferrera says diverse casting in front and behind the camera needn’t be tokenism. IT ONLY OCCURRED TO ME IN RETROSPECT, but when I
signed on to play Amy in Justin Spitzer’s Superstore, it was the first part I’d ever been offered that hadn’t been written as Latina. I never think of myself as a Latino person; I’m simply a person. And as an actor, I feel capable of inhabiting all kinds of roles and telling all kinds of stories. When I read scripts, I can imagine playing many different kinds of roles. And when this script came to me, they’d already begun casting a lot of the roles, including Colton Dunn as Garrett and Nico Santos as Mateo. Suddenly it occurred to me: none of the roles in the script had specified ethnicities, they were simply casting all kinds of people.
It thrilled me that it was being
want to play a role that’s perpetuating
token. It wasn’t about inserting the
the same old stereotypes.
black character, or the sassy Latina
accepted narratives about audiences’
They went out and found funny
lack of interest in films and shows
people and cast them regardless of
starring people of color are lies. Under
their skin color. But this is really rare.
the veil of making business decisions,
The debate that threatened to swal-
we allow the conversations about
low this year’s Oscars continues to
the relative worth of female-led films,
dominate—as it should—but the tricky
or the importance of beefing up the
thing with casting diversely is avoiding
guys’ parts, to go unchallenged, and
the kind of tokenism that only pays lip
when we don’t call out those narra-
service to the issue. The characters
tives, we become complicit in things
in Superstore, I felt, were real people,
staying the same. It’s not true, either,
written with intelligence, humor and
that it’s just white men propagating
depth. And of course, when I stepped
those narratives: we’re all complicit to
into the role of Amy, she became
a smaller or greater degree. The bar
Latina because I’m Latina... It just
that we expect women and people of
wasn’t her only point of definition.
color to clear is often just higher.
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It also isn’t about shaming people
ences. I don’t know any people of
into doing the right thing. It’s really
color who go around thinking, “I’m
about all of those people in positions
going grocery shopping as a Latina,”
of power—and they’re usually good
or, “I’m going to read this book as
people—asking themselves what
an Asian person.” My experience of
they’re doing to change those narra-
growing up in America was in the San
tives. I get the hesitation: everyone
Fernando Valley, with mostly Jewish
wants to get their stuff made, and you
friends. It took me a very long time
will always go down the path of least
indeed to even start relating to what
resistance in this business. But there
it meant to be Latino in America.
is a middle ground to find, where you
It just wasn’t something I grew up
can tell your story without that kind of
thinking about.
compromise.
Tokenism is about inserting diverse
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I do believe that the widely
chick, or the one-joke Asian dude.
We’re all the sum of our experi-
10
always have to think about whether I
done in a way that wasn’t in any way
When I look at the faces on
characters because you feel you
television and compare them with
have to; true diversity means writing
film, I realize how far we’ve come on
characters that aren’t just defined
the small screen. It’s important to
by the color of their skin, and casting
celebrate the success that’s been
the right actor for the role. Diversity is
made even as we acknowledge
on everyone’s agenda today, but it’s
there’s further still to travel. All audi-
something I’ve had to think about my
ences want to see the world they
entire career, because, in a way, it’s
live in reflected on screens big and
like the tax you pay for being a person
small. At a certain point, it becomes
of color in this industry. You don’t get
unavoidable to notice that we’re being
to avoid these questions. It’d be great
ignored. Young people are turning to
to go and audition for roles that don’t
YouTube, Snapchat and Vine to find
have to be representative of every
the content that speaks to them,
Latino person on the planet, but we
and you have to wonder why. Viewers
aren’t always given that freedom. I
don’t want to be pandered to; they
can’t just play a housekeeper or a
just want genuine, authentic storytell-
drug dealer, no matter how interest-
ing experiences. That was what first
ing the character might be, because I
drew me to Superstore. ★
PHOTOGRAPH BY
Eric Schwabel
5/6/16 1:09 PM
To watch additional episodes of this and other 20th Century Fox TV programs, go to TCFTVScreeningRoom.com.
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EMPIRE, TM & © 2016 Twentieth Century Fox Television. All Rights Reserved. FOX TM & © 2016 Fox and its related entities. All Rights Reserved.
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THE WATCHMEN Hugh Laurie and Tom Hiddleston fight a psychological battle with one another in The Night Manager.
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From luxury hotels to shoreline mansions, AMC’s The Night Manager is a glittering advert for the world of international espionage and high‑stakes arms trafficking. As the Arab Spring ignites, two adversaries go to war. The John le Carré adaptation redefines the spy genre for the 21st Century, finds Dominic Patten.
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With a great nimbleness, The Night Manager makes change look very good. “The center of the novel is arms dealing. It was happening in the early 90s, and of course it’s happening now,” reflects Tom Hiddleston on the updating of John le Carré’s 1993 novel for event television. Personified by leads Hiddleston and Hugh Laurie, the Susanne Bier-directed miniseries stands on the giant shoulders of le Carré’s prose, deftly transposing the action from the dank end of the Cold War and South American drug lords to the bloody fallout of the Arab Spring. 14
In the first le Carré TV adaptation in
updated and wedded to the world we
over 20 years, Hiddleston is recruited to
live in,” Hiddleston adds on a LA spring
play former military man Jonathan Pine,
day, as he sits down with Laurie and
the hotel night manager of the title.
Bier to reflect on the series. “Hugh can
Having been seasoned by atrocities
talk about that more because he was
during his tours in Iraq in the preceding
such an admirer of the novel when it
decade, Hiddleston’s Pine is a haunted
came out.”
man suddenly “stirred,” to quote the
“I remember 1993 like it was
show, to coming out from behind the
yesterday,” cracks Laurie laconically,
5-star lobby desk and pressing himself
causing both Hiddleston and Bier to
into action.
laugh deeply. A confessed devotee of
“He’s a deeply romantic character
le Carré’s work, Laurie actually tried
but a closed human being,” notes Bier,
to option The Night Manager when
“and in the course of becoming a real
the book was released, but found the
spy he then becomes an actual human
rights already in Sydney Pollack’s hands.
being as well.”
Pollack’s death in 2008, and the two
Jonathan Pine’s transformation
stunted attempts at making a movie
in The Night Manager begins with
that followed, saw the rights shift back
a chance encounter in the unrest-
to le Carré’s estate. When the author’s
drenched Cairo of early 2011. Managing
sons Simon and Stephen Cornwell
a top hotel in the middle of the uprising
resurrected the project for television
that brought down Hosni Mubarak, Pine
via their Ink Factory shingle, Laurie was
learns some very deadly information.
quickly onboard as a lead and executive
The arsenal he discovers being ordered
producer.
in the middle of the protests in Tahrir
Despite a varied career, Laurie’s
Square is the catalyst for him to leave
seamless performance as the evil and
his crafted life behind and to infiltrate
enticing billionaire has surprised many
the circle of international arms dealing
– a reaction that doesn’t particularly
presided over by the worst man in the
surprise the amused multiple Emmy
world, Laurie’s Richard Roper.
nominee and two-time Golden Globe
“In order for the show to have the
winner. “I simply observe that noth-
same impact as the book, it had to
ing I’ve ever done in my entire career
speak to our political climate now;
has not been prefaced by the words
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THE GOOD WIFE Elizabeth Debicki is The Night Manager’s breakout star.
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DARK WATER At the center of The Night Manager’s impeccably-cast ensemble, Hugh Laurie and Tom Hiddleston shine as Richard Roper, the international arms dealer, and Jonathan Pine, the hotelier thrust into the world of international espionage.
‘unlikely’ or ‘improbable,’ and that’s how I think of myself,” he laughs. “I take it as a compliment and actually I rather relish it. I made a rod for my own back. For 20-odd years, I played goofy, inconsequential characters as a way of hiding.” Taking a pause, Laurie shifts gears and goes for a lighter ending. “Having said that, I frequently confess to Tom the lengthening list of actors that I would have cast instead of me to play Richard Roper,” he says, to more laughter from Hiddleston and Bier, who both insist Laurie was by far the obvious choice for the character. One reason for that, to paraphrase Roper himself in the David Farr script, is that he and Hiddleston both bring a “little swashbuckling” here and there in
compass; his is completely screwed.
The Night Manager. Plus, as any good
Also in a representative way, it was the
female characters had some substantial
thriller requires, there’s sexual and
right decision—nowadays, lots of spies
elements to play with,” agrees Bier.
political intrigue with co-stars Elizabeth
are women.”
“Jed’s a troubled human being and not
Debicki—as Jed Marshall Roper and
Co-star Debicki chimes in: “It’s so
Pine’s love interest with deep fraught
funny; I have read the book, but I can’t
secrets of her own—and Tom Hollander—
even imagine Burr being a man now.”
as the arms dealer’s foul-mouthed right
Gender played another role in the
“I wanted to make sure that the
just a gloriously beautiful girlfriend.” “We made an active choice that we wanted her to be a real person,” continues Debicki. “To have an internal
hand man. In a pivotal role, Broadchurch
series too. Shifting away from the
struggle and layers, and for them to be
alum Olivia Colman plays Angela Burr,
Bond girls and eye candy that populate
revealed in the same as everybody else’s
the heavily-pregnant head of the Inter-
most spy shows and movies, The Night
characters.” Certainly, as The Night
national Enforcement Agency. It is the
Manager creatives and cast sought to
Manager progresses, both Burr and Jed’s
relentless Burr and her small-staffed and
redefine what it is to be a female char-
nuance become more profound and, at
ill-treated division of British Intelligence
acter in the genre. “There are so many
the same time, more normalized.
that receives Pine’s information and
actresses who play these roles, but
recruits him to take down Roper.
they know in their hearts that they’re
the male roles in a lot of things, were
And that’s where another change
“Imagine if Jonathan Pine in this, or
complex, wonderful, layered human
completely one-dimensional. We’re not
from le Carré’s novel kicks in: Burr was
beings and yet they’re playing people
going to watch that show and it’s not
a man in the book. “It was the right
who are only one strain or another,” says
going to be a great hit,” she suggests.
decision because I think Burr being
Debicki. “But, in a genre where women
“More interesting roles are being written
the absolute opposite in every way to
are very often the object of beauty and
for women and appearing on the page,
Roper is a logical progression,” remarks
nothing else, things are changing. Angela
it’s just not as common as it has been
Colman of the change. “She’s making
Burr is a perfect example of that and so
for men for so long.”
life; he’s destroying life. She has a moral
is Jed, who is complex herself.”
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A PERFECT SPY One of Britain’s most accomplished acting talents, Olivia Colman plays Angela Burr in The Night Manager, an overworked and under-resourced beacon of British intelligence, determined to stop Roper in his tracks.
Oscar winner Bier at the helm, the $30
amidst the fervored ambiguities of
2,” Hiddleston postulates, drawing
million series was shot over 75 days
ambition and national interest that
parallels between Bier’s resonance and
from March to June 2015. The locations
loom over our 21st Century lives.
the world of The Night Manager itself.
ranged from Zermatt, Switzerland
A tone that Bier fostered on the
“She says, ‘You have to be believable
to London and Devon, UK; as well as
set of the production, says Debicki. “I
and credible as the second worst
Marrakesh, Morocco and British banker
think the world Susanne creates is sort
man in the world; first place is already
Lord James Lupton’s 17th-century
of hyper-naturalistic and that’s what
taken.’ Pine takes that to heart. His
home in Majorca. The former stood in
she demands of her actors,” the actor
commitment to the dark side is what
for Cairo, Egypt while the latter nicely
declares. “She never strays anywhere
actually gives him the space to be
portrayed Roper’s well-appointed lair.
near melodrama in any way. Early on,
heroic because the only way to bring
Debuting in the UK in February, The
Susanne said to me, ‘I’m allergic to
Roper down is to get close to him.
Night Manager became a ratings and
fake,’ which I found interesting and
He’s the most method actor of all
cultural phenomenon over its run on
discovered to be very true.”
method actors and his performance is
that side of the Atlantic. “I think it was and is successful because it works on so many different
“It’s something that Burr encourages in the scene in the hotel room in London in episode
immaculate in the process.” Which is exactly what you could say of The Night Manager itself. ★
levels,” asserts EP Stephen Garrett of the BBC and AMC co-production. “If you are looking for a smart Bond-like thriller, it works for you. If you are looking for a psychologically complex Hitchcock game of cat-and-mouse, it works on that level. It is three different love stories in a way; Pine and Roper, Jed and Pine and Burr and Pine, in their desire to bring Roper down. Lastly, I think it is successful because it’s about something going on in the world.” Even more so than back in the 90s, the reality of today’s Britain having long run out of imperial steam, if not influence, permits the well-connected Roper to ferret in and out of the spaces between diplomacy and official armed response with guile and deceit and leave chaos and death in his wake. To that end, against the bloody backdrop of over a decade of terror and war in the Middle East, and the ever-sprawling resulting refugee crisis Europe faces today, The Night Manager provides a degree of clarity D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
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F YC | O U T S T A N D I N G D R A M A S E R I E S
“ONE OF THE MOST SUBVERSIVE SERIES ON TV” “TRULY, THOUGHTFULLY DIFFERENT”– Variety “SUMPTUOUS” “IRRESISTIBLE”
“AS SWEEPING AND ADDICTIVE AS EVER”
– TV Guide
– The Hollywood Reporter
“DAZZLING” – Deadline
OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR
OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR
Caitriona Balfe Sam Heughan
Tobias Menzies
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN
OUTSTANDING WRITING
Jon Gary Steele
Ronald D. Moore, Ira Steven Behr, Anne Kenney, Toni Graphia,Richard Kahan, Matthew B. Roberts, Diana Gabaldon
OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN Terry Dresbach
AND D ALL OTHER CATEGO ORIE ES
STARZ and related channels and service marks are the property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. Outlander © 2016 Sony Pictures Television Inc. All Rights Reserved. Emmy® (and the Emmy Statuette are) is the trademarked property of ATAS/NATAS. PBR4614-16-A
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D THE DIALOGUE EMMY SEASON 2016
★ BOB ODENKIRK & JONATHAN BANKS Better Call Saul
“When Castro emptied out his prisons, and they all landed in Miami, the Catholics sent a bus for them and brought them to Albuquerque. They had taken over the drug trade in 60 days, and I mean brutally.” —Banks
★ ELLEN BURSTYN House of Cards
“I walked my dog in Central Park on the first weekend it was shown, and so many people came up to me who had already seen the whole season.” —Burstyn
★ RASHIDA JONES Angie Tribeca
“I wasn’t looking to return to TV after having a daydream job on Parks and Recreation. I knew how difficult [that schedule] was. In addition, I was writing and producing, but this was non-negotiable.” —Jones
★ WILL FORTE
The Last Man on Earth
“There were just so many amazing shows on the cable channels that were pushing the boundaries, and I think that we got in there at the right time.” —Forte
★ SANAA HAMRI Empire
“I like pushing boundaries. I like being outside of the box. But one doesn’t create just to do that; one creates out of the truth of the character.” —Hamri
★ SISSY SPACEK Bloodline
“When I read something, it’s really about how it touches me and how I connect to it, but mainly it’s the people involved. Bloodline is the ensemble, and you’re only as good as the people you’re working with.” —Spacek
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IT’S ALL G OODMAN ★
★
★
★
an extreme difference in tone from the highstakes crime of Breaking Bad to a quieter, more pensive drama that has dealt with topics as thrilling as elder law and Cocobolo desks. More than once, Banks heaps praise on his co-star for making Jimmy compelling enough to sell that shift. “Taking this show was a huge risk for all of us, but I’ll never stop blowing smoke for Bobby,
Bob Odenkirk and Jonathan Banks on the slow drip of spin-off hit Better Call Saul. BY JOE UTICHI
because he came in, did page after page after page of monologue, and he deserves to give himself credit for pulling it off.” Odenkirk screws his face up, but Banks peryou gotta give yourself so much credit for what you did with this character.” “Yeah, but I had nothing at stake, Jon,” Odenkirk counters. “I had no status in this world as a dramatic actor that I could lose. I was a comedy and sketch writer, and that was who I was, and
I
T COULD SO EASILY HAVE GONE DRASTICALLY WRONG, and for a minute it felt like it might. When Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould announced they were looking to spin Breaking Bad’s zany lawyer Saul Goodman off into his own half-hour sitcom, none of the precedent set by Bad could settle fan fears that it was a big mistake. How could one of the most highly acclaimed crime dramas in television history spawn a law procedural sitcom without fracturing memories of the serious intensity that defined the original? But when a retooled one-hour drama aired last year as Better Call Saul, it felt less like a poor imitation than a stay of execution. Even after Breaking Bad’s grand finale, it promised, there would be more stories to tell in the compelling Albuquerque underworld Gilligan had imagined. Just another taste.
I was lucky enough not to have been famous enough as a comic actor that I had anything to work against.” Banks rolls his eyes. “Bobby will yammer and yammer, as he always does, but this is what it fucking came down to: he did it.” “Two years from now, then I will brag.” “Well I’m gonna brag on you now, because you deserve it.” Of course, like so many of Walter White’s clients chasing after their hit of Blue, the voracious appetite of Breaking Bad fans has them clamoring to find out when their favorite characters might crossover into Jimmy’s world. This
“Breaking Bad ended before people were done
Their process, instead, has been to find the story
year’s arc marked a welcome return for Mark
with it,” says Bob Odenkirk, who plays Saul’s pre-
in the telling of it, and it’s only in the hopeful minds
Margolis as the villainous Cartel boss Hector
Bad alter ego Jimmy McGill. “That was a big boost
of fans that it might one day wrap up with Saul
Salamanca, witnessed before the stroke that
for us. If that show had gone three more seasons,
Goodman shaking hands with Walter White. This
rendered his character motionless and silent in
and then we tried to do Better Call Saul, there
was the same approach taken for Breaking Bad too,
Bad. ”Albuquerque’s not the biggest city in the
would have been nowhere near as much goodwill
so why break with a winning formula?
world,” argues Odenkirk, “and it’s not at all over-
and hunger for more.”
“People have an immense amount of patience
populated, so you’d run into each other in these
“It was the storytelling,” agrees Jonathan Banks,
for well-crafted storytelling and they don’t really
the other Bad holdover in the cast, who plays Mike
need those bells and whistles,” continues Oden-
Erhmantraut. “It’s like the ending of Les Miserables,
kirk. “What you get in Saul is the very high standard
says Banks of the real Albuquerque. “A couple
where you don’t want it to stop.”
[Vince and Peter] set themselves, and we all get to
of retired police officers I talked to said that
trust that we’re going somewhere.”
when Castro emptied out his prisons, and they
As the two actors sit down to discuss the recently-wrapped second season, Odenkirk cred-
Banks thinks that if Better Call Saul does no
circles. These people are out in the world.” “There’s a real underbelly of the drug trade,”
all landed in Miami, the Catholics sent a bus for
its Gilligan and Gould for finding a way in. “They
more than tap the rich backstory of these char-
them and brought them to Albuquerque. Put
created a show that, from the start, felt bold and
acters, it’ll have heightened the experience of
them to work in the Octopus Car Wash for a
unique and surprising. It wasn’t playing into your
Breaking Bad no matter where it ends up. “There’s
month, got them a room. They had taken over
expectations, and that’s a big thing. It didn’t feel
a lot to be seen. You’ve never seen Mike be treated
the drug trade in 60 days, and I mean brutally.”
any responsibility to Breaking Bad; they just let it
gently, for example, and I have a feeling it’s one of
be what it was, and they’re finding what that is all
those things where the weakness in the beast is
this season, and Jimmy hovering nearby ready to
the time.”
when somebody shows tenderness. But I like the
tag along, it’s probably safe to assume we will,
mystery of Mike. He was separate in Breaking Bad
soon, witness the emergence of slimy Saul. This
February, Gilligan and Gould stressed repeatedly
and he’s separate in Better Call Saul. He lives out
season’s final moments hinted that Jimmy’s
that they don’t have as much of a grand plan for
there…somewhere else.”
legit days may be numbered, after all.
This is no exaggeration. At a PaleyFest event in
the show as fans and critics would like to believe.
Still, if the Mike we meet in Saul isn’t too far
With Mike inserting himself into that world
“It’s a bit of the Wild West,” Odenkirk says, to
They’d expected that Jimmy might have adopted
removed from the one we meet in Bad, it’s in
follow Banks’ Albuquerque tale. “You can imag-
the Saul Goodman moniker by the end of Season
Odenkirk’s fragile, naïve Jimmy McGill that we
ine this shit happening. You can pull all this stuff
1, but the writing hasn’t led them there to date.
find a real distance still to travel. Not to mention
off, and nobody can find you.” ★
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sists. “No, you do. I know you’re self-critical, but
Dan Doperalski
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JO NAT HA N BAN KS : G ROO M I N G BY ST E P H A N IE H O BGOO D FO R E XCLUS I VE A RT I STS M AN AG E M E N T US I N G P E T E R T H O MAS ROT H ; BOB ODE N K I RK : G ROOM I N G BY K AT BA RDOT
BURSTYN’S LAMENT ★
★
★
★
rare visit by her daughter to vent her frustrations, culminating in a spectacular loss of control in one scene that is as raw and heart-stopping as anything the Oscar-winning Burstyn has done. The response was immediate, Burstyn says, reflecting a world in which this season, as always, landed on people’s Netflix accounts in one burst. “I walked my dog in Central Park on the first weekend
As Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn joins the cast of House of Cards, she reflects on the illogic of the presidential race and film financing. BY JOE UTICHI
it was shown, and so many people came up to me who had already seen the whole season,” she laughs. “I’ve never done anything in my career that has gotten as much attention as House of Cards.” Burstyn appears in five of the season’s 13 episodes, and in three of her appearances, she is directed by the woman behind Claire, Robin Wright. Burstyn, who is looking to make her first film as a director with a feature called Bathing Flo, watched her carefully. “It was a kind of in-and-out relationship with Robin,” she recalls. “She’d be in
E
LLEN BURSTYN IS MAD AS HELL, and she’s not going to take it anymore. “I’ve never seen anything like it in my life,” she exclaims, her warm voice rising an octave or two as she does. She chuckles at a thought. “And I’ve had a very long life.” Of course with Burstyn, as with so many others this year, the frustration has surfaced through watching the race for the Republican nomination, in which Donald Trump has taken a commanding lead on a platform that includes rhetoric about building a wall to keep out Mexican “rapists” and “temporarily” barring all Muslims from entering the country. “I can’t understand it,” she continues. “The only thing I can think—and this is just a hypothesis; I have nothing to base it on—is that the fact we elected a black president has excited an underlying racism, and it has come to the surface. Now they’re saying, ‘OK, it’s our turn. The racists get a turn.’ I can’t imagine any other election year that there could be this ridiculous and overpowering support for that particular candidate.”
the scene with me, and then the next moment she’d be behind the camera, changing the shot. I was interested in watching that change of character. She’s very popular on set; they have different directors, but I think the crew all favor her.” Progress on her directorial debut is slow, but hopeful. She plans to star in the film too, and thinks she might be on the cusp of securing finance. “Whether or not they’re going to close the deal remains to be seen.” So much of the development process, she says, relies upon the algorithmic calculation of risk, and much as Burstyn might appreciate the reality of that, she can barely countenance the logic of it. “What happens is you submit your script with an idea of what the budget might be, and the
It’s a different kind of approach from that of Frank Underwood, the fictional president of Netflix phenomenon House of Cards, who favors a subtler,
for the office, if not each other?’ It’s just so uncivil,
financier will offer you less than that. In order to
and I don’t know what happened.”
do it for less, it means cutting out the art, usually.
It’s that word—“uncivil”—that best describes
With The Last Picture Show, Peter Bogdanovich
more indirect style to advance his agenda. Burstyn
the machinations of Underwood et al. in House of
brought the script to the company that made
joined the cast this year as Elizabeth Hale, the
Cards. This season starts with Frank separated from
it, they liked it, and they gave him the money he
First Lady’s stone-cold mother, amidst a fictional
his wife Claire, whose own political aspirations are
needed to make the film. He cast it with the actors
White House world in which murder, extortion
ready to be realized. Claire, meanwhile, returns to
that he thought were right for the parts. Now it’s
and political game-playing are the orders of the
her family home on the pretext of caring for her sick,
the reverse. You must get well-known actors, stars,
day. For all the insanity of House of Cards’ fourth
elderly mother. And if Claire ever seemed cool and
to commit to doing it, and they want them all to
season—and there is plenty of delicious insanity
distant before, this is the season in which we learn
work for scale. It’s ridiculous.”
this season—it has felt uncomfortably tame next
where that came from.
to the bombast of this election cycle. “It seems crazy,” Burstyn says. “I’m just
“I did want the audience to see me and go,
That system doesn’t make room for new talent, she says. “When we did The Last Picture Show, the
‘Ah, now I understand where Claire gets her sharp
whole cast was unknowns and we all got careers
stunned. That’s why it’s so important that we get
edge from,’” says Burstyn. “Elizabeth has a lot of
from it. Well, I don’t think this could be done now.”
either Hillary or Bernie into office.”
resentment about Claire’s relationship with her
The Last Picture Show, The Exorcist, Alice
father. I think she’s actually jealous of Claire. And
Doesn’t Live Here Anymore—these films that
flying between supporters of the two Democratic
Though she shares a concern that the vitriol
Claire’s so cool that it was hard, really, to relate to
helped define New Hollywood in the 1970s and
candidates is splitting a vote that could keep the
her in a loving way, even if she had tried.”
made Burstyn’s name—none of them would
Republicans out of office. “For a while I thought
The cold, uncaring way these two powerhouses
pass the commerce test today, she says. It’s with
we were looking pretty virtuous by comparison.
behave around each other, in the somehow
a sigh that she signs off, to gather resolve to
But I’m afraid that’s degenerated now. I just want
claustrophobic surroundings of an echoing
keep fighting for her new passion. “Trying to hold
to get them all together in a room and say, ‘Folks,
mansion that has seen better days, becomes one
onto the beauty of a film,” she opines, “and not
we’re all human beings here. We’re all Americans.
of the most beguiling aspects of the show this year.
just the bare-bones storytelling… You know.
Could we just quiet down and have a little respect
Elizabeth, in the late stages of cancer, uses the
It’s a real war.” ★
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A JONES FOR SATIRE ★
★
★
★
Rashida Jones gets laughs on Angie Tribeca by playing it straight. B Y A N T H O N Y D ’A L E S S A N D R O
F
OR A PHYSICAL TV COMEDY loaded with gags, one in particular sticks out for Angie Tribeca star Rashida Jones, during the episode The Wedding Planner Did It: Tribeca turns to a surgeon, played by Adam Scott, and says, “While I have you here doctor, I’d love you to check out this mole.” The surgeon responds, “That’s a suspicious mole, you should have it looked at.” And there’s Jones with an animal trainer between her legs, wrestling a live mole to her face while it poops on her hands. “For me, that’s the heart of the show,” says Jones remembering the scene.
is more subtle on Angie Tribeca, and that characteristic kicks the onscreen hijinks to a higher echelon of hilarity. Her Angie is tough-ass (she destroys her plywood dummy during a fighting sequence), she’s fearless about going the distance (goes undercover as a nude model and wears a wire), and like any career-obsessed, single woman on TV, is afraid of marriage (she lost her old partner Sgt. Pepper, played by James Franco, on the job, but he’s coming
technical stuff that has to be worked
back in Season 2).
zany, call the straight man; or in this case,
in,” explains Jones. Case in point, during
the woman. That’s what Steve and Nancy
the pilot, there’s a scene where Angie
she’s doing,” enthused Steve Carell about
Carell did when they tapped Jones to play
questions the mayor’s wife, played by Nancy
Jones at the Television Critics Association
the no-nonsense LAPD detective of the
Carell. During their exchange, Mrs. Perry
winter tour. “She makes it look effortless.
RHCU (Really Heinous Crimes Unit) in their
offers Angie a ridiculous amount of food,
But she plays the part and commits to it,
TBS comedy series, Angie Tribeca, a police
which she scarfs down. With each take,
giving it depth amid all the absurdity and
comedy that has resurrected the satirical
all the action has to be reset, the actors
the silliness. She’s the lynchpin for the
physical comedy genre made famous by the
repositioned, and food wiped off their faces.
entire show. We met with a lot of funny
1960s show Get Smart and the early 1980s
On Parks and Rec, Jones says, “It was a little
people. It’s such a specific tone. It’s not
short-lived Police Squad, which ultimately
looser. Rarely were there marks on the floor,
about being funny, but understanding
blossomed into the Naked Gun movie
because there were two or three cameras
when to pull back, and not have a self-
franchise.
capturing what was happening naturally.”
awareness of being funny.”
“I didn’t read for it,” says Jones. “Steve
As the Harvard-educated daughter of
“There’s a high level of difficulty to what
Angie Tribeca returns June 6 for
and Nancy emailed me directly and said,
award-winning musician and producer
Season 2. The timing couldn’t be more
‘We have this script. We have you in mind.
Quincy Jones, she quickly rose in Hollywood
perfect, as it raises the show’s profile
It’s really dumb and we hope you like it.’
as an actress who could balance equal parts
during what is a very competitive Emmy
I liked it very much, but I wasn’t looking
drama and comedy. While many remember
nom period. Season 2 will send-up
to return to TV after having a daydream
Jones as Ann Perkins, the level-headed
shows like Fargo and True Detective, and
job on Parks and Recreation. I knew how
best friend to Amy Poehler’s scatterbrain
will feature such guest stars as Heather
difficult [that schedule] was. In addition,
Pawnee, Indiana government official Leslie
Graham, Mary McCormack, Noah Wyle,
I was writing and producing. But this was
Knope on Parks and Rec, one of Jones’
Maya Rudolph, Eriq La Salle, Danny Pudi,
non-negotiable.”
early breaks was on David E. Kelley’s drama
Busy Philipps, Kevin Pollak, Rhys Darby,
Boston Public in which she played the high
Ed Begley Jr, Joe Jonas and Joey McIntyre.
to sharpen up her comedic timing on
school secretary, embroiled in a romance
Some of Angie’s headaches include drug-
Angie Tribeca. “Every single scene is highly
with an English teacher, and penning a sex
dealing lifeguards, and the murders of a
choreographed as there are several visual
advice column in the school newspaper.
sushi chef and a boy band bad boy.
What intrigued Jones was the chance
gags in any given scene. I say, ‘It’s a booby
Leslie Nielsen was known for sarcastically
Says Jones about Season 2: “Our hope is
trap,’ and then someone is touching the
winking at the camera as calamity flew
that it will be a little drier since the audience
boob on the mannequin. There’s so much
around him on Police Squad. However, Jones
is accustomed to the way we tell jokes.” ★
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Whenever a comedy scene requires
Stefan Studer
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ST YL IN G BY B RAD GO RES K I; M A KE U P BY JA M I E G RE E N B ERG ; H A I R BY KY LE E H E AT H
WILL TO SURVIVE ★
★
★
★
As The Last Man on Earth eyes its third season, Will Forte reflects. B Y A N T O N I A B LY T H
ITH THE LAST MAN ON EARTH closing out its second season and renewed for a third, Fox’s hit comedy is currently top of the network’s game. This past season, the show has evolved through location changes, cast expansion, surprise guest stars and creator Will Forte’s decision to stand aside as showrunner—a choice Forte says didn’t change his experience all that much. “I thought I would have a chance to have a little bit more of a life doing the second season,” he says, “but I’m too much of a control freak I guess.” And with streaming services offering more creative freedom than networks—or even cable shows—have enjoyed in the past, Fox has gamely kept up with this brave new TV world. As Forte says, “content-wise they’ve allowed us to do just as many kind of weird risky things as we would’ve done if we were on a cable channel.”
W
What are some takeaway lessons learned from Season 2? You just get to know the characters better. You get to know the process better, which makes everything so much more efficient. You get to know the actors better, the writers. We have just a really delightful group of people involved in the making of the show from the writers’ room to just an awesome crew. Everyone just gets more and more comfortable with each other. I feel like we grew as storytellers in that second season. That karaoke duet of Falling Slowly with Sudeikis—how much rehearsing did
There are so many gems in this second
but I felt like it was a really cool thing to get
that take?
season—Will Ferrell’s guest spot to name
to stretch and do a kind of different mode.
What people might not know is that we do
one. Do you have any personal favorites?
There wasn’t a single joke in that fourth act
so much karaoke, we sing that song with
Well, there are so many favorites. I just love the
of the tenth episode, so I was really proud of
each other all the time. When we lived in the
people I work with so much, you know. It’s an
that show and excited that Fox would let us
same city we’d go to karaoke, just the two
embarrassment of riches to get to work with
do something like that, and it seemed like the
of us, and just sing together. I went to New
Kristen Schaal and Mel Rodriguez and Mary
viewers were okay with us doing it too.
York a week-and-a-half ago and we went to dinner, and sure enough we ended up at
Coleman and January Jones, but then to get
How much creative leeway did Fox give
to bring Jason Sudeikis into the mix, you know,
you in general?
we’re like brothers from all that time we spent
Well, I definitely think that we got into the
What’s your favorite duet other than
together. So, to get to have him be back in my
situation with Fox at exactly the right time
Falling Slowly?
life in that way after we traveled so much road
for a weird show like this, because when
We love doing Always and Forever. I Can’t
together was a really special experience. I’m so
we came up with the idea for the show
Fight This Feeling is one that we do a lot.
excited that Will Ferrell came and did that part
we definitely felt like it seemed more of
and Fox was really good to us to let us do that
like a cable-type idea. I think at that time
What’s up next for Season 3?
episode that was basically just Jason alone
there were just so many amazing shows on
I don’t know. It’s going to be tricky because
with Mark Boone Junior.
the cable channels that were pushing the
we love trying to keep people guessing
boundaries, and I think that we got in there
where the show’s going to go, and so now
we ended the first chunk of shows in the
at the right time so that Fox wanted to try
it just gets harder and harder. Once you’ve
second season with Mary doing surgery on
something that might be more cable-like. We
covered more territory it gets harder to find
Boris and cutting that together with Jason
haven’t changed the show at all because it’s
another way to do that, but we’ve got just
hurtling through space towards Earth. That
on Fox. We might have thrown some swear
a really wonderful group of friends who are
was an exciting thing for me because you
words in. In fact, for sure we would throw
awesome writers that will hopefully figure
know we’re doing just a little dumb comedy,
some swear words in there.
out something exciting. ★
One of my other favorites was just how
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karaoke. We are just karaoke buffoons.
PHOTOGRAPH BY
G ROO MI N G BY KI M VE RB EC K
Steenburgen and Boris Kodjoe and Cleopatra
Stefan Studer
5/6/16 12:18 PM
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EMPIRE STATE OF MIND ★
★
★
★
If you look around you, America is very diverse, and the diverse people are watching television. Minorities are not a minority—they’re a majority. That’s the truth that everybody’s scared to talk about. I’m not scared to talk about it, because I know it’s the truth. Empire is about being inclusive of everybody and everybody’s issues—I feel like that’s what the world is now. The world was always that way, it’s
Director and executive producer Sanaa Hamri on musical innovation in Empire. BY M AT T G R O B A R
just now we’re realizing and we’re no longer scared about telling what the real truth is. What still needs to happen in television to further the progress we’re seeing? In order to make great art, we need to be fearless, and being fearless means embracing differences as well as not categorizing—what, where, how, who—just telling great stories. I’m multiracial; I know sometimes when I walk in a room, not many people look like me, but at this point, it doesn’t
S
ANAA HAMRI IS AN INNOVATOR. As executive producer and director on Fox’s record-breaking series Empire, the music biz vet continues to pave the way for the family drama’s success. The show’s Season 1 soundtrack grabbed a Grammy nomination last year, and in Season 2, Hamri has facilitated the presence of even more music per episode, all the while incorporating live instrumentation. Taking a break from post-production on the tail end of Season 2, Hamri addressed the process of executing Empire’s big song moments, her dream cameos for the series, and the bottom line on diversity.
really matter to me because I have my own voice. We all have different voices, and we need to embrace those voices because ultimately, that’s what audiences want. They want the truth, and to have fun at the same time. What do you think about the way in which the show portrays women? Women need to be depicted as they truly are, from all walks of life. On Empire, you have Cookie, who was in jail, got out of jail, and she’s the smartest
Season 1 begins with Lucious abdicating
is, Lil Wayne and 2 Chainz wound up doing a
one. Our genitalia shouldn’t dictate what we do
the throne of his own will, but in Season 2,
video that was an homage to that rap battle. So
with ourselves, in terms of excelling. That, to me,
he is forcibly removed by a vote. How will
I feel like we need to be unique, in our own way,
is from the dinosaur age. We’ve got to move on.
this reversal change the dynamic of the
to lead the way.
Because later on, much later from this interview,
show going forward?
the genders are going to collide and it’s not going
Right now, where we are in the season, Lucious
You’ve pushed the music of Empire forward
has to take his empire back. His son took it from
in new directions, increasing the amount of
him and he has to take it back. What will he do
musical numbers per episode and bringing
What has Season 2 meant for the people
to take the empire back, and how is that going
live instrumentation into the mix. What’s
behind the series?
to affect the family? What is he teaching his
behind these ambitions?
Season 2 is about the emotional connections
sons through his actions? It’s a tangled web,
I’m a person who always wants to innovate, and
between each of the characters, and about
and that’s why the Shakespeare reference of
I like pushing boundaries. I like being outside of
transitioning and evolving as artists. I think we, the
King Lear is the best way to put it, because it is
the box. But one doesn’t create just to do that;
behind-the-scenes people, are doing that as well.
intricate, and that’s where we are right now.
one creates out of the truth of the character.
We love the success. What we love the most is
When you mention live instrumentation, it’s
being able to move audiences, and I think we focus
How challenging is it to execute Empire’s
something that has been very important to me
on that.
big song moments time after time,
because young people need to learn how to play
given the time constraints of television
instruments—there’s so much digital music. So
The showrunners have indicated that they
production?
any time we have a chance to have a live band
will be pulling back on the amount of guest
Whether it’s the look, the style, the choreog-
and show the process, I try to keep it as real as
stars going forward, but are there any dream
raphy, the tone, I’m always competing with
possible. It helps people understand the art of
cameos that come to mind for you?
my past self, and I’m also always watching the
making music.
I want to see different types of musical artists showcasing their work, as long as it works within
we’re leaders in that; for example, in one of our
Empire is a show that has been embraced
story. I really want D’Angelo to perform on the
episodes, we had a rap battle between Jamal
by black viewers, who rarely see television
show with his band—again, I’m always going to
and Hakeem. It was slightly hyperreal and I had
catered to them. Is this show an example of
push for live instrumentation and musicianship. I
Funkmaster Flex there, who’s an amazing DJ
the way in which issues of representation
would love to have [saxophonist] Maceo Parker
from HOT 97, because I wanted that authentic
might be shifting in TV?
on. There are so many great artists out there that
vibe. It was funny because a lot of rap battles
I think there was always this Emperor’s new
don’t have the exposure, whether it’s Lianne La
are not done that way, but the point of the story
clothes thing about who’s watching television.
Havas or Judith Hill. ★
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latest that the music industry is doing. I feel like
to really be about male and female anymore.
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HA I R BY DAM O N YOU N G ; M AK E UP BY AU TU M N M OULT RI E
BLOODLINE IN THE SAND Sissy Spacek settles into the complex world of the Netflix drama.
★
★
have a sense of the whole arc, or are you just going along for the ride? Kind of going along with the roller coaster, and that’s been the challenge for me. You’re building towards something, is the way I’m used to working. And this, it’s more like real life. You’re just in it, and you don’t know where it’s going, and you’re flying by
B Y G R E G E VA N S
★
How do you approach that? Do you
the seat of your pants. Kyle Chandler and Linda Cardellini have
★
done this before, worked in this kind of television successfully and brilliantly, and they have been really generous and have shared a lot with the rest of us. From them, I’ve found that you may not know where you’re going, so you can’t set something up here early on that’s going to have the big giant payoff over here, but you just have to
A
CTRESS SISSY SPACEK NEEDS NO INTRODUCTION, and her inspired turn as matriarch Sally Rayburn is just the latest coup in a distinguished career. Known broadly for her work with cinema’s greatest auteurs—among them, Terrence Malick, Brian De Palma, and Robert Altman—over the course of her 44-year career, Spacek has been learning from the best in the business from the very beginning, and continues to do so. Indeed, the transition from movie stardom to serialized Netflix drama was a daunting, yet exciting adjustment, she says.
keep each moment real. It’s really about being in the present moment, which is kind of like being in a prizefight with your hands tied behind you. You get pummeled. And then there’s the added challenge in playing Sally, who is the only member of the Rayburn family who isn’t completely in the know about what happened with Danny. Sally is in the dark. She’s still grieving the
When approaching Bloodline, which were
you’re trying to put in nuance and behavior
loss of her husband and the loss of her son,
the names that jumped out at you? What
and create characters within a family drama
her firstborn, which I’ve always said is like
were the exciting elements?
that’s also a psychological thriller.
the first pancake—you have to throw it out.
Glenn and Todd Kessler and Daniel Zelman—I
The sad thing about film is you get a
But she carries a lot of guilt. She was so
was a fan of Damages and I’d seen some early
character that you love and then it’s over.
young when she had him; she really didn’t
shows in this template, with television with
The beautiful thing about working in this
always do the right thing, in terms of his
no commercials, and I thought people were
medium now is that you establish these
upbringing.
doing really great work in it. It’s really all about
relationships with people you’re working with
being part of telling the story, and there were
and they just get deeper and deeper, and it’s
fracture, that distance between her family,
beautiful and fabulous stories being told this
a whole new world.
but not really knowing what it is, and so
way. I wanted to experience it, and it was a
I think in this season, she’s feeling that
for me, it was about seeing the crack in
scary thing, just jumping in and committing
Bloodline is just your latest success in a
the armor with each one of my children,
to something like that. The hardest thing was
career of celebrated roles. How do you
still trying to parent them, and buoy them
being away from home for so long.
consistently pick projects of this level of
up and say, everything’s going to be okay.
quality?
But there’s something so enormous that
investigation when you’re trying to find a
When I read something, it’s really about how
they’re holding back from Sally. I just think
character. The challenges of this have been
it touches me and how I connect to it, but
there’s times when she looks at them and
that you don’t have the time, because you do
mainly it’s the people involved. Bloodline is
can kind of see through them, knows that
some great scene that was just invigorating
the ensemble, and you’re only as good as
there’s something that’s going on, but she
and then… oh, there’s a new episode. Okay,
the people you’re working with. I’ve been
doesn’t know what it is.
I’ve got, what, ten pages to learn? You don’t
fortunate to work with people that knew far
know where it’s going to go, so you don’t have
more than me from the very beginning—it was
When you were shooting your heavily
an overview of it like you do in a film.
on-the-job training.
emotional shower scene in episode
Actors can be like puppies. It’s like an
five, did your iconic scene in Carrie
But I think at my age, it was just a wonderful and terrifying thing to jump into
The world of the show is also one that’s a
come to mind?
something that’s so different. Film was all
bit unstable—you never quite know where
It’s funny. I’m like, “Well I’ve done the
about planning and nuance. It’s fleshing it
you’re going to end up, in time and place,
second shower scene, but this time I
out, it’s investigating it, and you just turn it
in the next moment.
had my clothes on. Awesome.” It did in
wrong side out, trying to figure everything
Right. Is it a flashback? Is it a flash forward?
retrospect, because we refer to it as “the
out. Bloodline starts and then it just goes, and
Is it present time?
shower scene.” ★
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BILLIONS
MASTERS OF SEX
HOMELAND
PENNY DREADFUL
HOUSE OF LIES
®
©2016 Showtime Networks Inc. All rights reserved. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. Emmy is a registered trademark of the Television Academy and NATAS. “Homeland”: ©Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved. “The Affair”, “Penny Dreadful”, “House of Lies”, “Billions”,
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2016
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★ | flash mob
THE CONTENDERS EMMYS PRESENTED BY DEADLINE, APRIL 10, LOS ANGELES
RE X /S H U T T E RSTO CK
Top row: Gina Rodriguez of Jane the Virgin; Rick Famuyiwa, Kerry Washington & Susannah Grant for Confirmation; Felicity Huffman & Regina King of American Crime; Anthony Anderson of Black-ish; Tom Hiddleston & Hugh Laurie of The Night Manager. Middle row: Jay Roach, Anthony Mackie & Bryan Cranston for All The Way; Linda Cardellini of Bloodline. Bottom row: Patrick Stewart of Blunt Talk; Daniel Webber & JJ Abrams for 11.22.63; Frank Grillo & Jonathan Tucker for Kingdom; Ilana Glazer & Abbi Jacobson for Broad City; Eva Longoria of Telenovela.
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“One “One “One “One “One “One “One “One of of of of of of the of the of the the the the the the best best best best best best best best TV TV TV TV TV TV TV TV dramas dramas dramas dramas dramas dramas dramas dramas of of of of of of all of all of all all all all time.” all time.” all time.” time.” time.” time.” time.” time.” ––VARIETY –VARIETY –VARIETY –VARIETY VARIETY ––VARIETY –VARIETY VARIETY
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FOR YOUR EMMY CONSIDERATION - OUTSTANDING DRAMA SERIES AND ALL OTHER CATEGORIES
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