In ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’, Ryan Murphy proves—again!—he can never get race right

Andrew Cunanan was half-white, half-Filipino—and so is actor Darren Criss, who plays the ‘90s serial killer in American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace. That’s the extent of the conversation about race in the current FX series produced by Ryan Murphy, who is also the creative brains behind television hits like Nip/Tuck, Glee, Scream Queens, Feud, and American Horror Story. On July 1, Murphy will join his fellow showrunner Shonda Rhimes at Netflix. The 5-year contract is believed to be the most expensive in television history, putting up to $300 million in Murphy’s pocket.

“His unfaltering dedication to excellence and to giv[ing] voice to the underrepresented, to showcase a unique perspective or just to shock the hell out of us, permeates his genre-shattering work,” Ted Sarandos, chief content officer at Netflix, told Deadline of the deal, adding that Murphy’s stories are “broad and diverse.”

Perhaps. But Murphy’s on-screen history suggests he gives the most depth and complexity to stories of rich, white people. The first season of Feud, for instance, is about Bette Davis and Joan Crawford; the second season will be about Buckingham Palace. Scream Queens was a horror series about a mostly-white sorority in a southern American university. He directed the film adaption of Eat, Pray, Love starring Julia Roberts, which is about a wealthy white woman who travels the world to discover herself (and have good sex).

But Murphy has a glaring blind spot when it comes to telling the stories of people of color. Just look at his biggest television hit, Glee, which was where Criss landed his first primetime role: yes, there is an Asian American girl, an Asian American boy, a disabled boy, a black girl, a Latina girl who came out as bi, one white cheerleader who came out as bi, one white gay boy, one gay boy who passed as white (Criss), and many, many more white straight characters.

“It’s still about whiteness at the center and people of color as accessories who have a little bit of a story line, but are seen as sort of decorative accents,” Ronak K. Kapadia, PhD, an assistant professor of gender and women’s studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago, explained. “He has this sort of shallow understanding of a kind of racial justice project in relation to TV work.”

This season’s American Crime Story, featuring half-Filipino American Cunanan, is a continuation of Murphy’s lack of nuance when he attempts to focus on minority-focused narratives. As noted by Slate’s Inkoo Kang, The Assassination of Gianni Versace is preoccupied with examining ’90s homophobia particularly in rich, white communities—it is not so preoccupied with anti-Asian racism or Cunanan’s potential self-hatred of being Asian.

To Murphy’s credit, he doesn’t exactly whitewash Cunanan. Criss is half-Filipino. You see cursory acknowledgments that Cunanan is Asian and how that plays out in the conservative San Diego community where he lived. It’s an incestuous community—one which Vanity Fair journalist Maureen Orth describes as “Omaha by the bay” in her book, Vulgar Favors, on which the show is based.

When he auditions to be an escort, for instance, Cunanan is told that no one wants a smart Asian—he is not a desired archetype by the rich, white men he wants to attract. Broadway performer Jon Jon Briones, who is Filipino-born, steals the show towards the end of the series as Cunanan’s father, Modesto. We see that Cunanan’s delusions of grandeur, propensity for taking shortcuts, and obsession with materialistic wealth and status stems from Modesto, who in the show (and in real life) fled back to the Philippines in 1988 to evade embezzlement charges. Sometimes, Orth reported, the real-life Cunanan would pretend to be Jewish.

But when Cunanan—real and fictional versions—did acknowledge his Asian background, it was a lie constructed through a fabulist’s filter: his father owned pineapple plantations back in the Philippines, he would say, or his father was the personal pilot of Imelda Marcos, the former first lady of the Philippines who was known for her extravagance and marriage to a dictator.

“This is not just a story about how much alternative sexuality or sex panic there was in the 1990s,” Kapadia said. “It’s also the story about a multi-racial mixed-race person from California in the very moment in which California’s becoming a majority minority state and there were all of the kinds of questions around the new face of America into the new millennium.”

But Murphy doesn’t touch these complex racial points—about how Cunanan may have struggled with his racial identity, about, even briefly, what it was like to be a mixed-race kid going to the exclusive mostly-white private school he attended. Race is not given the complexity of storytelling it deserves—the complexity Murphy so readily gives sexuality.

We will never know Cunanan’s exact relationship to his racial identity, just as we will never know his exact motives for killing. Those explanations died with his suicide on July 23, 1997. But we do know Murphy’s interpretation of Cunanan—and unfortunately, Murphy doesn’t seem to think that race matters at all.

In ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’, Ryan Murphy proves—again!—he can never get race right

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story episode 7, Ascent, advanced preview

Last week, American Crime Story invited us to Andrew Cunanan’s birthday bash aka the beginning of the end. Everything began to fall apart on the day of his birthday, and the latest episode “Ascent,” introduces Norman and how the two met.

So what can you expect to see this Wednesday? We’ve screened the first eight episodes of the season to bring you an advanced preview each week of what you’ll see! Avoiding all spoilers? This is your last chance to turn away now!

Here’s the official synopsis for episode seven, “Ascent,” from FX:

Andrew Cunanan leaves behind a troubled family life as Donatella Versace struggles to find her role within the Versace empire.

We’ll finally see more of Donatella and Gianni Versace in this episode for more than a couple of minutes. Antonio D’Amico is in this episode, too, but he unfairly only gets 2-3 lines. Donatella is dealing with finding herself. Gianni is at the beginning of an illness and preparing to leave Donatella in charge, but she severely lacks confidence. This causes a fight between the two.

Not only will we see the beginning of Norman and Andrew’s relationship, but we get a few scenes of Jeff Trail and Andrew from back in the day. Fans will also learn why Andrew Cunanan pursued Norman in the first place, as well as the first time he sees David Madson.

Lines to look out for. Can you guess who delivers them?

  • “I believe, for a woman, a dress is a weapon. To get what she wants.”
  • “You have the opportunity to be great. And you choose to assist.”
  • “Can’t sell a clever Filipino, even one with a big d*ck.”
  • “It doesn’t matter really. They talk about us. They love it, they hate it, but they talk about us.”
  • “My brother is stubborn. Don’t forget that. He is stubborn about life and he will beat this sickness.”

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story episode 7, Ascent, advanced preview

massifurlan: TOMORROW NIGHT 7 PM ON FX. The Assassination of Gianni Versace. Nooo I didn’t kill Gianni! #gianniversace #italiandesign #americancrimestory @americancrimestoryfx#americancrimestoryfx #acsversace #americancrimestoryversace @acsversace #penelopecruz#donatellaversace @fxnetworks @penelopecruzoficial @donatella_versace

Dailybreak.com

I’m beginning to think this show isn’t really about Versace. Yes, he appeared in Cunanan’s drug-fueled dream tonight, but he’s barely been in the last four episodes as we travel back in the timeline to a year before the murders. To be honest, I can’t say I really mind. Versace’s story seems rather one-dimensional. He and Donatella clash while managing their fashion empire and Donatella hates Versace’s partner, Antonio. Every appearance by these three seems like a repeat of that storyline. OK, we get it.

The portrait of Cunanan, a pathologically lying psychopath wrapped in self-loathing and designer clothes, has been much more compelling. I think a lot of that is owed to Darren Criss for laying on the charisma thick like honey. Finn Wittrock and Cody Fern have also sparkled as two of Cunanan’s friends-turned-murder victims, Jeff Trail and David Madson.

In this episode, we finally discover how Trail and Madson met, which has been bugging me for the last two episodes. They were introduced at Cunanan’s birthday party, thrown by his sugar daddy, Norman Blanchford. There were no murders this week and all these fringe characters converged at one party, including his friend Lizzie (Annaleigh Ashford), Lee Miglin (Mike Farrell), Trail and Madson. There is no indication this actually happened (the party did, but Trail is the only one confirmed to have been in attendance), but knowing what we know now, it was a thrilling assembly of personalities. I also quite enjoyed the super b*tchy interactions between Cunanan and one of Blanchford’s friends, who was clearly onto his trickery.

From day one, I understood that a lot of this show’s plot was invented for dramatic effect. I’m starting to grasp that maybe 75 percent of the show is made up. Investigators that know Cunanan did certain things at certain times (like that L.A. hotel stay was totally real). But almost every conversation is fictional. That seems crazy to me, because if someone told such tall tales, was flashy with money and had so many friends, you’d think people would know more about him and remember talking to him. That, or the other people in the conversation are dead. This is frustrating, but leaves a blank canvas that gives the writers a lot to work with.

Once again, Cunanan was portrayed as pathetic in this episode. He’s trying desperately to make Madson love him and he shows off hard. The rejection only makes him plummet further into drugs, lies and sorrow. Now it makes sense why he gets so pissed when Madson eventually rejects his proposal. The same goes for the sneaky postcard he sent Trail’s father – this is why Trail is so unhappy to pick him up at the airport. This rejection and the jealousy Cunanan feels when he thinks Madson and Trail are a couple is a clear motive for murder. Case closed.

What about Versace, though? It’s beginning to seem that it was not personal at all. It wasn’t an affair gone wrong or anything juicy. Versace was just an obsession; a symbol of all Cunanan wasn’t. He got caught in the crossfire of Cunanan’s twisted mind.

I loved the interaction between Cunanan and his mother this week. Finally, we see where this guy actually came from and from her dingy apartment to her frumpy housecoat, it’s not what you would expect. You think that Mama is going to talk some sense into her child, but no. She seems delusional in her own way, obsessed with how much everyone else has and how much she lacks. This is where he gets it from – she isn’t going to save him or do anything to prevent the awful things about to happen. It finally makes sense…a little.

Luckily, we get more of Mrs. Cunanan and her unhelpful wisdom next week, along with more on how Cunanan met Norman Blanchford. This oughtta be good.

Dailybreak.com