American Crime Story: Why did Gianni Versace die?

The audacious murder of Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace, shot in cold blood on the marble steps of his Miami Beach villa in 1997, has never been a “whodunnit”. The perpetrator is well known.

He was 27-year-old Andrew Cunanan, a serial killer who had already murdered four men before gunning down Versace on a sticky July day over two decades ago. Cunanan killed himself in a houseboat over a week later, following what remains one of the biggest manhunts in US history.

But mystery still shrouds the murder, with numerous conspiracy theories as to why Cunanan targeted Versace and whether the two had been lovers.

The second season of American Crime Story, entitled The Assassination of Gianni Versace, seeks to filter these murky waters, relying heavily on Vanity Fair writer Maureen Orth’s bestselling book on the Versace murder, Vulgar Favours.

The series, starring Édgar Ramírez as Versace, Ricky Martin as his long-term lover Antonio D’Amico, Penélope Cruz as Gianni’s sister Donatella and Glee star Darren Criss as Cunanan, was filmed in Versace’s Miami Beach villa, now a boutique hotel, which looks much as it did when the designer lived there.

The series has received positive reviews from critics and viewers since it premiered in January in the US, with the exception of one family. The Versaces have broken years of silence to publicly condemn everything about the series and Orth’s version of events.

“The Versace family has neither authorised nor had any involvement whatsoever in the TV series about the death of Mr Gianni Versace,” reads a statement released by the fashion house.

“Since Versace did not authorise the book on which it is partly based, nor has it taken part in the writing of the screenplay, this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction.”

Putting aside the family statement for a moment, it must be said that Orth is no slouch. She started following Cunanan after his second murder, analysing the gay scene in California where he had built a life on dreams and lies at a time when most of the mainstream media were nervous about broaching such topics.

She followed his trail from San Diego to San Francisco and on to Minneapolis and Chicago, and was ready to publish a piece in Vanity Fair on the unknown serial killer when she got the news that Versace might have been her subject’s fifth victim.

The story of a serial killer quickly became solely one about the murder of one of fashion’s greatest icons. “Versace’s killing meant calling the piece back, taking it apart on an impossible deadline and trying to stay ahead of what rapidly became the number one story in the country,” Orth wrote recently. 

“The media circus was on; in this pre-social-media time, Cunanan’s murder spree was an early harbinger of someone willing to do anything to become famous.”

Orth had Versace’s name in her notebooks long before Cunanan ever arrived in Florida. She was then the only one on the scene with insider knowledge of the suspect during the manhunt, from interviewing countless of Cunanan’s friends and associates.

Many told her conflicting tales based on Cunanan’s tangled web of lies, but they almost all agreed on one thing: Cunanan had met Versace.

American Crime Story picks up this thread and runs with it, which was always the Versace family’s greatest fear. They not only strongly deny that Versace knew Cunanan, they also denounce rumors that the fashion designer was HIV positive.

The Versaces were able to seal Gianni’s autopsy report and keep it from the press, so no one outside the family knows whether the designer had HIV, a cornerstone of Orth’s version of events.

As the theory goes, Cunanan was worried he had had HIV and suspected Versace was the one who gave it to him. But as the Versace family makes clear in its statement, that version is conjecture: “Orth makes assertions about Gianni Versace’s medical condition based on a person who claims he reviewed a postmortem test result, but she admits it would have been illegal for the person to have reviewed the report in the first place (if it existed at all).

“In making her lurid claims, she ignores contrary information provided by members of Mr Versace’s family, who were in the best position to know the facts of his life.”

Those who were in the Versace villa the morning he died also dispute facts in the drama’s version of events. As an investigative reporter, I covered Versace’s murder in the mid-1990s and recently travelled between Miami and Rome to talk to the people who were around him at the time of his death.

I had previously met Antonio D’Amico, Versace’s partner, now 59, but he had always refused to discuss the case. In the wake of the drama being broadcast, however, he finally agreed to talk to me about that day.

He told me the drama is in stark contrast to the actual events as he remembers them. “What is depicted is not what happened that morning,” he explained, saying that he never once touched Versace’s body, so therefore was not covered in blood as Ricky Martin is in the opening scene. “It is an inaccurate portrayal of [Gianni], of that day and of how we were as a couple.”

“Significant parts of the [series] do not reflect the reality of the events that took place. I feel – together with those who know me well – that my character… is a misrepresentation of myself and what our relationship was like.”

D’Amico only met Martin, who plays him, after filming was finished.

The drama also suggests that D’Amico regularly procured young men for himself and Versace, any of whom could have given the designer HIV. D’Amico has declared that he does not have HIV as proof that Versace didn’t either.

Others around him also suggest that there is no way Cunanan could have stalked Versace and learnt his daily routine, as is depicted in the TV series. According to Charles Podesta, Versace’s butler at the time, they had only just arrived in Florida from the designer’s couture show in Paris. Podesta remembers the details of that morning.

“Gianni stopped by the kitchen to say he wasn’t eating first, as usual,” Podesta told me in an interview in Miami last December. “Instead, he was going to the corner for some magazines.”

That wasn’t his usual routine. His staff regularly brought the morning papers to the outdoor table where he and D’Amico ate breakfast by the swimming pool. He also remembers the distinct sound of gunfire that followed, “a strange noise, several loud pops one after the other”. And it was he, Podesta, who called 911.

While such details may seem banal, in the bigger picture they do beg the question: what other lines have been blurred, by Orth and the programme-makers, between fact and fiction?

American Crime Story: Why did Gianni Versace die?

What’s on TV tonight? Shows to watch on Wednesday 28 February from The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Beindorm

The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, 9pm, BBC Two

If you loved The People Vs OJ Simpson, this latest American Crime Story dramatisation will hook you in once more. On 15 July 1997, fashion designer Gianni Versace (played by Edgar Ramirez, right) was gunned down outside his Miami villa by Andrew Cunanan, and while we get an insight into Cunanan’s mind, it’s Versace’s lover Antonio D’Amico (a painfully grief-stricken Ricky Martin) who you’ll feel for most, as he’s treated particularly harshly by both the police and Gianni’s sister Donatella (Penelope Cruz).

What’s on TV tonight? Shows to watch on Wednesday 28 February from The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Beindorm

What’s on TV tonight: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Rent for Sex

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

BBC Two, 9.00pm

Ryan Murphy’s true crime series follows up 2016’s dramatisation of the OJ Simpson trial with the story of serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who murdered at least five people over a three-month period, including the fashion designer Gianni Versace. Murphy and scriptwriter Tom Rob Smith use the word assassination very carefully here: the operatic opening scenes depict Versace (Édgar Ramírez) as a modern-day Medici prince, dispensing cheerful patronage to all in his Miami Beach fiefdom. By contrast, Cunanan (Darren Criss) is portrayed as a man so insecure in his own skin that he is almost physically incapable of telling the truth: “You tell gay people you’re gay and straight people you’re straight,” exclaims an exasperated friend. “I tell people what they need to hear,” comes the too-calm reply.

Both Criss and Ramirez are excellent and there’s strong support from Ricky Martin as Versace’s bewildered live-in boyfriend and a perhaps slightly too-camp Penélope Cruz as Donatella. Smith’s solid script does a good job of juggling various timelines to show how this particular killer came to be. Sarah Hughes

What’s on TV tonight: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Rent for Sex

TV tonight: ‘Survivor’ tries to ‘reverse the curse’ in new season

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
FX, 10 ET/PT

As the series continues moving backward in time, we get to know more about spree killer Andrew Cunanan’s (Darren Criss) backstory and the how he became intertwined with the men he would later kill. Tonight’s episode shows Cunanan at a particularly desperate period of his life and depicts the beginnings of his relationship with David Madson (Cody Fern), with whom he becomes obsessed. Criss’ performance remains unsettling, managing to make Cunanan terrifying even in episodes without scenes of violence.

TV tonight: ‘Survivor’ tries to ‘reverse the curse’ in new season

What’s on TV tonight

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
BBC Two, 9pm

Ryan Murphy follows up The People vs OJ Simpson with a nine-part “true crime” drama, written by Tom Rob Smith (London Spy), telling the story of the death of the international fashion mogul Gianni Versace, who was murdered by Andrew Cunanan. Versace was the fifth victim of Cunanan’s killing spree, shot dead on the doorstep of his Miami mansion in July 1997. The drama is based on a book, Vulgar Favours by Maureen Orth, which, according to a statement from the Versace family, was not authorised, and therefore “this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction”. The People vs OJ Simpson was also criticised for its historical inaccuracies, but that didn’t stop it from being a quality drama — it was nominated for 22 Emmys, winning nine. The Assassination of Gianni Versace isn’t in quite the same class, but it is stylish and compelling (and the interiors and costume design are impeccable), so don’t let its habit of playing fast and loose with the truth put you off. The first episode opens with the brutal murder and then heads back to 1990, with Cunanan (Darren Criss) encountering Versace (Édgar Ramírez, a ringer for the designer) in a nightclub and later for post-opera drinks. (Versace’s family deny a link between Versace and his killer.) Then we’re back to the crime scene, and the efforts to save Versace’s life and the subsequent police hunt for Cunanan. It really gets going with the introduction of Penélope Cruz as Donatella, who arrives at the Versace compound to establish control of her brother’s empire.

What’s on TV tonight

TV Weekly Now | Best Bets for Feb 28, 2018: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

Well, he always wanted to be famous and he was willing to do quite literally anything to accomplish that dubious goal. In the new episode “Descent,” however, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) has reason to reflect that he should have been careful what he wished for, as he celebrates his birthday in San Diego. Actually, however, there’s scant reason to celebrate, given that there are unmistakable signs that his life is falling apart completely.

TV Weekly Now | Best Bets for Feb 28, 2018: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

Wednesday’s best TV: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; Save Me

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
9pm, BBC Two

The follow-up to The People v OJ Simpson charts the story behind the 1997 murder of the fashion designer outside his Florida home. Darren Criss excels as Andrew Cunanan, a fantasist serial killer who, in this reading, calls to mind Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley. Penélope Cruz and Ricky Martin add star power. Jonathan Wright

Wednesday’s best TV: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; Save Me