All 7 Emmy episodes revealed for Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actor (Exclusive)

Gold Derby can exclusively reveal all of the Emmy episode submissions for the 2018 contenders as Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actor. While lead actors and actresses must enter their entire projects, supporting players are allowed to submit just one installment of their limited series. Let’s take a look at the choices made by these seven men: Jeff Daniels (“Godless”), Brandon Victor Dixon (“Jesus Christ Superstar”), John Leguizamo (“Waco”), Michael Stuhlbarg (“The Looming Tower”) and Ricky Martin, Edgar Ramirez and Finn Wittrock (all of “The Assassination of Gianni Versace”).

Martin is submitting the debut episode, “The Man Who Would Be Vogue,” which aired January 17 on FX. Official description: “The murder of Gianni Versace turns the eyes of the world onto Miami Beach.” Among those mourning is Antonio D’Amico (Martin). This is his first career nomination. Watch our recent video chat with Martin.

Ramirez is submitting the seventh episode, “Ascent,” which aired March 7 on FX. Official description: “Andrew Cunanan leaves behind a troubled family life, while Donatella struggles to find her role within the Gianni Versace (Ramirez) empire.” This is his second career nomination following one for “Carlos” (2011).

Wittrock is submitting the fifth episode, “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” which aired February 14 on FX. Official description: “Naval officer Jeffrey Trail (Wittrock) meets Andrew Cunanan for the first time, while Gianni reveals his sexuality to the world.” This is his second career nomination following one for “American Horror Story” (2015).

All 7 Emmy episodes revealed for Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actor (Exclusive)

All 6 Emmy episodes revealed for Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actress (Exclusive)

Gold Derby can exclusively reveal all of the Emmy episode submissions for the 2018 contenders as Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actress. While lead actors and actresses must enter their entire projects, supporting players are allowed to submit just one installment of their limited series. Let’s take a look at the choices made by these six women: Sara Bareilles (“Jesus Christ Superstar”), Penelope Cruz and Judith Light (both of “The Assassination of Gianni Versace”), Adina Porter (“American Horror Story: Cult”), Merritt Wever(“Godless”) and Letitia Wright (“Black Museum: Black Mirror”).

Cruz is submitting the seventh episode, “Ascent,” which aired March 7 on FX. Official description: “Andrew Cunanan leaves behind a troubled family life, while Donatella (Cruz) struggles to find her role within the Gianni Versace empire.” This is her first career nomination.

Light is submitting the third episode, “A Random Killing,” which aired January 31 on FX. Official description: “Chicago real estate tycoon Lee Miglin is murdered in what police describe as a random killing” as his wife Marilyn (Light) grieves. This is her fourth career nomination in prime-time, following ones for “Ugly Betty” (2007) and “Transparent” (2016, 2017).

All 6 Emmy episodes revealed for Best Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actress (Exclusive)

Penelope Cruz Never Wanted Her American Crime Story Experience to End

THE CHARACTER: DONATELLA VERSACE, THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE

For a woman whose family name is synonymous with flashy prints, rock-’n’-roll swagger, and sex appeal, Donatella Versace seems notably reserved. As a young designer, she could be shy, insecure, and comfortable in the shadows—especially the shadow of her older brother Gianni. Even after he was murdered in 1997—and Donatella was thrust into the spotlight as Gianni’s successor—she seemed content to let the public think of her as a garish cartoon, the caricature that performers like Saturday Night Live’s Maya Rudolph extrapolated from Donatella’s surface extremes—bleach-blonde hair, bronzed skin, animal prints, sky-high shoes, and thick Italian accent. In good humor, Donatella even phoned Rudolph to offer a single playful note about her S.N.L. impression: “I can tell from a mile away that your jewelry is fake. You can’t do that to me, darling … I’m allergic to it. I get a rash all over my body.”

Rather than try to dispel her diva reputation, Donatella participated only in select interviews over the years, usually just when the fashion brand needed a P.R. boost. In fact, Oscar winner Penélope Cruz feels so protective of Donatella that even now, months after portraying the designer on The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the actress still refuses to disclose the vaguest details of her own conversations with the designer.

American Crime Story executive producer Ryan Murphy, who helped reverse Marcia Clark’s bad reputation in the anthology series’s first season, recognized that the misunderstood fashion designer was due for a similar close examination. “I always looked at Donatella really as a sort of a feminist heroine in the same way I looked at Marcia Clark,” he told Rolling Stone before the series premiered. “She stepped into an impossible situation, she kept her family intact, she kept her family’s business intact, and she did it with kindness, elegance, and grace.”

To prick holes in an existing public opinion, Murphy needed a superb actress to make audiences sympathize with this wealthy, larger-than-life fashion figure. His first choice for the role had fortunately worked closely enough with the house of Versace to see past the veneer.

“I’ve met her in my life, a few times, at parties and things like that,” Cruz said in an interview. “Every time I’ve seen her, she has been so nice and kind. Versace has dressed me for so many events, and everyone I know [who works with her] … is really, really kind. They all love her. She has all of the same people working with her for 20, 30 years.” The Spanish-born actress has always been fond of Versace and what the brand stood for, and remembers being heartbroken by the news of Gianni’s murder. “I was in New York, and I remember hearing the news and being completely shocked. I was a huge fan of Versace and everything he did.”

When Cruz was offered the role, she knew that she could not accept it without first getting Donatella’s blessing.

“I could not say yes without making a phone call to Donatella, talking to her, and seeing how she felt about me doing that. She was not really involved in the development of the series. But she told me, ‘If somebody’s going to do this, I’m happy it’s you.’ I needed to hear those words before saying yes. I think she knew what I feel for her—a lot of admiration and respect—and that that was going to be there in the way I played her. And I think that was the way that Ryan wanted me to approach this character, and the way he saw her—like some kind of hero. Because she had had incredible challenges in her life, and she has demonstrated so much strength and courage.”

HOW SHE CAME TO LIFE

“The most important thing for me was to get the voice,” said Cruz. “We speak in such different ways. It was not just the Italian accent, which I have done before. She speaks in a very unique way, in a very rock-’n’-roll way. And that was the key for me: to find that essence without trying to do an imitation.”

Cruz had a few months to prepare for the series, during which she watched “videos of Donatella many, many hours a day—video with her in the backstage shows, these interviews of Donatella in Italian, in English. Interviews with people who know her. Interviews with Gianni talking about her. And I was working with Tim Monich, my dialect coach.”

The television format excited her, “Because you get to explore a character and have more time to build it, because it’s not just two hours of a movie.” The medium also came with its own challenge: “I’m not used to that rhythm. Sometimes you get the script, like, a week before [filming]. Or you get huge changes two days before. So we didn’t really know everything that we were going to shoot until a little time before. That’s scary, but at the same time, it’s an amazing exercise for actors, because you have to live so much in the present.”

Cruz was so focused on nailing Versace’s unique accent and speech patterns largely so that she could prepare for these unexpected changes: “You’re going to have to be able to improvise with that accent, and adapt the dialogue if there are changes the same morning. Sometimes I would get a huge monologue the night before, so I had to be able to speak like my version of Donatella in any improvisation or any new text.”

Though she will not disclose what exactly the real Donatella told her during their conversations, Cruz said that they initially spoke for an hour by phone—before corresponding later “in writing … She was very open with me about some things … It was very important to have those conversations.”

Cruz had undergone physical transformations for previous roles—including Sergio Castellitto’s Non ti Muovere, in which Cruz wore prosthetic nose and a makeup-mottled complexion. She figured that playing Versace could require another full, prosthetic-aided transformation. “I’m always open to that. If a character needs a certain look, it’s not about, ‘Does it look good? Does it look bad?’ It’s like, ‘Does it look like [how] it’s supposed to look for that character?’” But because she was working with such a creative hair and makeup team, Cruz explained, “They actually did very little. I had the right wig, like no eyebrows—because they were very blonde eyebrows—but no prosthetic anything. It was just a little bit of makeup in the right places. The eyebrows were crucial because it really changes the expression of your eyes. And the right wigs that looked so real that people were asking me if I dyed my hair.” The subtle transformation helped Cruz ensure her portrayal wasn’t a caricature. “It was important that they didn’t overdo anything.”

The most thrilling scenes for Cruz to film were the brother-sister moments between Donatella and Édgar Ramírez’s Gianni, which unfold throughout the series in flashback scenes.

“Everyone who knew them and spent time with them said they had this amazing brother-sister relationship, and they loved each other so much. But they also had creative discussions that could get very heated, but the [passion came from] respect for each other and love for what they did—[and] their love for fashion. They are artists creating together and challenging each other,” said Cruz, who searched the Internet for videos featuring the brother and sister—in moments that varied from volatile and tense to tender. “I found moments like that … of them backstage [of a fashion show] arguing about, ‘Put it this way, or that way.’ Like right before the models stepped out on the catwalk, they were still arguing with each other—in a very loving way, but always challenging each other.”

Cruz’s favorite episode to film was “Ascent,” the seventh episode of the season, in which Donatella and Gianni clash over creative differences, the stress of running the brand, and Donatella’s reluctance to take over for Gianni, who is ill. Though Donatella has all the confidence in the world in her brother, she has little confidence in herself—an insecurity stoked when one of her sketches is sidelined during a business meeting. Gianni takes Donatella aside, and tells her she will have to step up to the challenge of heading their empire. “This dress is not my legacy … you are,” he says. The episode features another uplifting scene in which Gianni dresses Donatella—like he did all throughout their childhood, when he treated her like his own personal doll. This time, though, he’s dressing her up in a black bondage-collared dress. Later, when told the dress is not selling as the company expected it would, Donatella suggests a more practical design—a creative concession which infuriates Gianni. He takes scissors to the dress, yelling, “Is it normal enough?”

“Édgar and I got into an amazing zone, in terms of how much we enjoyed playing this episode. Because it was all about the challenges of trying to create something special and, in this relationship, how they were pushing each other to get the best from each other,” said Cruz, adding that the dynamic offscreen in some ways matched the relationship on-screen. “I think if you talk to him, he would agree that we enjoyed every single second of shooting that episode, because there was so much love in that episode—for each other, for this brother and sister. And love for their profession, for their job. It was very emotional for me to shoot that one.”

Initially, Donatella suggests that Gianni give his bondage dress to a supermodel like Naomi Campbell, who could own such a provocative look. But Gianni insists that Donatella, his muse, wears his masterpiece, and accompanies her to the event where it will make its debut. Near the end of the episode, Donatella shyly removes her coat and ascends the stairs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Met Gala as her bother watches proudly.

“Gianni was pushing Donatella to really believe in herself. He believed so much in her. So getting up those stairs dressed in that dress was very symbolic. It told so much about their relationship and how much he believed in her, knowing her talent. And that’s what she proved when he was gone—she had to continue with this empire and [overcome a tragedy which left her] so full of pain. She had to have that strength to continue what they started together, but by herself … that theme of her climbing those stairs in that dress—it makes you think about everything that happened later.”

Cruz was so emotionally invested in playing Donatella, she said, that she couldn’t come to grips with the project ending. “Part of me was completely refusing the idea [that we were done]. You know, like, ‘How come [it has to stop]? I don’t get this. This doesn’t make sense.”

Even though she ultimately had to let go, Cruz seems satisfied that she was able to offer Donatella Versace a more nuanced, sympathetic portrait—built from love, reverence, and a carefully studied accent: “It was like my own personal homage to her.”

Penelope Cruz Never Wanted Her American Crime Story Experience to End

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 7 review – Dead Good

When you’re telling a story in long form, you need to pace yourself. With any drama there’s always a beginning, a middle and an end. It’s the classic three-act structure. If your story is a work of fiction, you can add spice and intrigue and, well, whatever you want. You need to keep the audience rapt until the dramatic final scene. If your story is based on reality, though? Well, you need to be smart with how you tell it. Especially if that story is really just ‘a very famous man got shot’.

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace is, as we know by now, told backwards. But consider how it would have played out were they to have relayed the story in a more traditional way, in chronological order. The final instalment, episode 9, would feature the shooting. Requiring some 400 minutes of build-up to the main event, and with Andrew Cunanan’s murders being bunched together in a spree, the audience would have to wait some five episodes to see their first murder. That’s some leap of faith that’s required.

So, sensibly, The Assassination of Gianni Versace opted for a reverse narrative style that allowed us to get the money ‘shot’ nice and early. The only downside to toploading a nine-episode run? There’s a very real chance that things will start to tail off a little towards the end. And, for the first time here in episode 7, ‘Ascent’, that’s exactly what we’re faced with.

In one way this lack of any real story is quite useful. We see Cunanan helpless and pathetic and understand his ‘social climbing at any cost’ mentality and where it comes from. But for a show that’s brought us murder, plotting, style, tension and real verve, this week’s was – dare we say it – just a wee bit dull.

Even the episode’s highlights lack any real punch. Sure, we see how Andrew seduced David in San Francisco and how he came to meet Norman. But we already know the details from earlier weeks. That said, there is some solace to be taken from occasional details. David’s childhood tale of a promise made to a bullied friend was touching. And when Andrew steals the memory for his own purposes later on, repurposing it for personal gain, he sullies such a sweet thing in a way that only a truly damaged sociopath can.

Again, we have to applaud Darren Criss’ performance here. At once he makes Cunanan a dead-eyed narcissist and a vulnerable kid. A spoiled brat at home with his mother and a charming socialite while out for an evening at the theatre in the company of older gentlemen.

For a few weeks now we’ve complained that The Assassination of Gianni Versace was lacking the ‘Gianni Versace’ part. This week we were treated to a healthy dose of the man – although ‘healthy’ may be the wrong word, given that we see the fashion designer struggling with what seems to be HIV, something Versace’s family have always disputed. He debuts a daring new dress with his sister Donatella as his model, as part of a symbolic ‘handover of the business’, it seems.

As touching as this should be, it just lacks any real drama. Again, there is one sweet moment, when the two sit down to design a dress together. But the lack of scope in the episode and the rather ropey set design left us cold.

There are two episodes left. We’re still yet to really see what Andrew Cunanan’s motive was for killing Versace, if there even was one. Plus, of course, we still – when we go back to the future – have the manhunt. Here’s hoping episodes 8 and 9 pick up and this was just a minor blip to an otherwise gripping crime drama.

Our hunch? This was a six-part series stretched a little too far.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 7 review – Dead Good

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, episode 7, review – all blinged up with nowhere to go

★★★☆☆

I believe that for a woman, a dress is a weapon to get what she wants.” So declared Donatella Versace with a power-pout and a toss of her peroxide mane. Sadly, it wasn’t sartorial weapons she needed.  

Last night, we reached the seventh episode of the high-camp docudrama The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (BBC Two), which continues to chart the events that led to the 1997 shooting of Italian designer Gianni Versace (Édgar Ramírez) on the doorstep of his Miami mansion.

In 1992, Versace was diagnosed with a rare form of ear cancer, forcing younger sister Donatella (Penélope Cruz) to take the fashion house’s reins. Almost literally so – a leather-strapped bondage dress became the siblings’ first collaboration. Meanwhile in San Diego, delusional sociopath and budding serial killer Andrew Cunanan (creepy Darren Criss, who, along with Cruz, is the star of this show) conned his way into a lavish new life by targeting wealthy older men.

The first of his targets, architect Lincoln Aston (Todd Waring), ended up savagely beaten to death – a shock scene of gore amid the gloss. The second, silver fox businessman Norman Blachford (Michael Nouri), allowed Cunanan to move into his minimalist mansion. “Oh, if only they could see me now,” murmured Cunanan, taking in the ocean view from a vast glass balcony. “Who?” asked Blachford. “Everyone,” came Cunanan’s chilling reply.  

Written by British export Tom Rob Smith, this was a souped-up soap opera, dripping in gaudy bling and unfolding in designer beige interiors. All gilt mirrors, baroque chairs and creamy soft furnishings, it’s styled like a luxury hotel lobby and rollicks along like an afternoon true-crime movie, albeit a well-appointed one. You half-expect Columbo, Murder She Wrote’s Jessica Fletcher or Hart to Hart’s millionaire spouses to turn up and solve the impending murder.

There are two episodes of the nine-part series still to come, but thus far a convoluted flashback structure has prevented it from hitting the heights of its predecessor, The People vs OJ Simpson. While the time-hopping approach might fill in the background and motivation, it hardly adds much in the way of forward momentum. The hypnotic horror we saw earlier in the series – episodes three to five were masterful, the next two less so – has given way to middling drama. As a guilty pleasure, though, it’s grim, fascinating and just gripping enough.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, episode 7, review – all blinged up with nowhere to go

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story: Ascent – S2

The lies continue to slip off Andrew Cunanan’s tongue. He changes his
surname, his parentage, his racial identity, his education, his occupation and even his interests more frequently than his socks. He even utilises other people’s memories if he feels it would impress or endear him to someone.

But if you’re wondering why so many apparently intelligent people fell for his fantasies, this episode explains it a little. We see how he cleverly targeted Norman Blachford (who survived Andrew’s killing spree) and how he dazzled David Madson (who did not) with his apparently glamorous lifestyle. Darren Criss is equally dazzling as Cunanan.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story: Ascent – S2

What’s on TV tonight: The City & the City, Sounds Like Friday Night and Have I Got News for You

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

BBC Two, 9.00pm

It’s been fascinating to discover the “true” story behind the 1997 murder of fhion designer Gianni Versace in Ryan Murphy’s glitzy drama, which has expertly depicted the inner world of the perpetrator, a Walter Mitty-style serial killer called Andrew Cunanan (a career-defining role for Darren Criss).

This episode, however, has a mid-series lull about it as Cunanan ascends to the higher echelons of gay society, shaping himself meticulously into the posh, preppy eye-candy who saw a sugar daddy (or two) as his way to the top. Elsewhere, the Versace siblings return at last. Gianni (Edgar Ramirez), now in failing health decides to champion his insecure sister Donatella (Penélope Cruz in a frightful wig) and turns her into both designer and muse.

Despite a lack of characters to root for – the Versaces’ moments of vulnerability dissolve into tedious histrionics and are eclipsed by Cunanan’s cold-blooded machinations – it’s all quite a fabulous mix of fashion, high society and brutal murder, with some interesting commentary on homophobia in the Nineties as well. Vicki Power

What’s on TV tonight: The City & the City, Sounds Like Friday Night and Have I Got News for You

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: Songs and Score, a playlist by Malinda Kao on Spotify

The Assassination of Gianni Versace Spotify playlist | updated to the finale and includes the official soundtrack

Adagio in G Minor • Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life • All Around the World • Capriccio, Op.85 – Letzte Szene: “Kein andres, das mir im Herzen so loht” • Andrew on the Run • Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi, Act 1: “Oh! quante volte” (Giulietta) • Donatella • Autopsy • All of Them • Gloria • Easy Lover • Back to Life (However Do You Want Me) • You Showed Me • Sposa son disprezzata • I’ve Done Nothing • Idea to Kill • A Little Bit of Ecstasy • Be My Lover • This Is the Right Time • A Certain Sadness • It’s Magic • St. Thomas • Are You Mad? • Pump Up The Jam • Drive • David Murdered • Tick Tock Polka • Attempted Suicide • Fascinated • Sensitivity • I’m Afraid • Interviews • Self Control • Balcony Reception • Get to Know Me • Freedom! ‘90 – Remastered • Sérénade mélancolique, Op. 26 • Runaway • Donatella’s Spotlight • String Quartet No. 13 in A Minor, Op. 29, D. 804: I. Allegro ma non troppo • Anachronism • Come Giuda • This Is Not for You • Raise the Flag • Hazy Shade of Winter • Touch Me (I Want Your Body) • Whip it • Blue Monday • Modesto on the Run • Vienna • Houseboat • Sailboat Break-In • Calling Modesto • The Man I Love • Nothing Like You • Basilica • Psalm 23: The Lord Is My Shepherd • Person of Interest • Surrounded • Another Stage • Hunt Is Over

*We couldn’t figure out which scenes the tracks “I’m Afraid” and “Nothing Like You” are from and simply put them in order of the soundtrack list. If you have any idea, please drop a line! 

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: Songs and Score, a playlist by Malinda Kao on Spotify