via TheWrap’s Instagram Story | 21 May 2018
Author: acsversace news
TV writer, director and producer Ryan Murphy has become American television’s most valuable man recently signing a five-year, $300 million deal to create TV exclusively for Netflix. But the creator of ‘Nip/Tuck’, ‘Glee’, ‘American Horror Story’ and now the ‘American Crime Story’ anthology series still has a few more shows to come out before he switches to Netflix. One of them is ‘American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace’. | 21 May 2018

jamiemakeup: Mornings with a heavenly crew @kindramannmakeup @lightaaron @sascha_breuer #jamiemakeup
via TheWrap’s Instagram Story | 21 May 2018
via TheWrap’s Instagram Story | 21 May 2018
sascha_breuer: Killer Portrait of @edgarramirez25 shot by my talented friend @robertascroft #hair & #malegrooming @sascha_breuer #hairbysaschabreuer using @baxterofca @starworksartists & @blossommanagement.gmbh #ACSVersace #edgarramirez #emmymagazine @americancrimestoryfx @darrencriss @ricky_martin @penelopecruzoficial on Magazine
Darren Criss on mastering the ‘emotional Tetris’ of ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO INTERVIEW]
Darren Criss doesn’t want to humblebrag, but he had a very memorable encounter at the Met Gala earlier this month. He was approached by someone who had just seen his performance as serial killer Andrew Cunanan on “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” — and who had no idea of his song-and-dance history as Blaine Anderson on “Glee.”
“He was like, ‘Oh, man, everyone’s gonna think you’re this killer now.’ He didn’t know what I had done before and he didn’t know anything about ‘Glee,’ and I was really thrilled,” Criss tells Gold Derby in an exclusive video interview (watch above). “I was like, ‘This is great.’ If I can keep that up, to me, that would be a huge accomplishment because the goal is to continually keep people on their [toes].”
Criss certainly did just that with his haunting, unnerving turn as Cunanan, who killed four men in a cross-country murder spree before fatally shooting the fashion designer in broad daylight in July 1997. A man of many alias and personas whose true self will forever remain unkowable, Cunanan was a complex role as it is, but it was made even more complicated by the limited series’ storytelling structure, opening with the murder of Versace (Edgar Ramirez) before going backwards in time.


















