How to Audition for the Emmy-Nominated CDs of ‘American Crime Story’

On July 12, “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace” racked up six Emmy nominations in acting alone, plus one for casting directors Courtney Bright and Nicole Daniels. It’s no surprise to see these big names in the context of Emmy nods, but casting known actors to portray the scandalous story wasn’t always a given at the outset. We spoke to the duo about the ups and downs of casting the FX series.

“We did a deep dive on Gianni and Donatella Versace, Antonio [D’Amico], and Andrew [Cunanan]. We had photos all over our walls and watched any clips we were able to find,” Bright told Backstage. “We wanted to make sure that we got both a physical and personal sense of who these people were.”

When it came to the casting process, the two began their search using actors’ physical likenesses to the actual people as a guiding light, “and then once you see the performance, we can quickly start narrowing down contenders,” said Daniels. “The emotional vulnerability of the acting prompts the physicality.”

Although getting names like Penélope Cruz, Ricky Martin, Darren Criss, and Édgar Ramírez was no small feat, Bright and Daniels noted that one major challenge was the sheer number of roles they needed to fill. Once the principal cast was in place, they had to immediately shift focus onto who could hold court opposite the all-star leads. “There are so many good actors out there who have been around for a while and maybe never got the chance to be in a project like this. We search first for those types of actors,” said Bright, speaking on actors she’d seen for years without being given the chance to book them for a part.

So how can actors get the chance to get in front of Bright and Daniels more than once and land a role when the time is right? “Be prepared,” Daniels advised. “Think of it as a job interview. Do your homework and research, show up on time, study the scenes, and know the lines. Take it seriously.”

“We have no problem if someone messes up and needs to start again, but if you come in, haven’t even looked at the material, and haven’t prepared, you can’t expect much patience,” said Bright. “We want actors to feel good about what they’ve done, but they have to put in work.”

Doing the work will likely get you asked back. “Just because someone isn’t right for the role doesn’t mean they’re not a great actor. We’ll remember someone we know is a strong actor and who we also like personally,” said Bright. “If you have a good vibe, are personable and easygoing, and we can tell you would be good on set, we’ll try you for the next project.” Daniels noted: “We’re always keeping a running tab on the people that we’ve liked.” So don’t get discouraged: the next time could be your moment.

How to Audition for the Emmy-Nominated CDs of ‘American Crime Story’

6 of the Year’s TV Drama Casts Worthy of Emmy Attention

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“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (FX)

Both a character study of killer Andrew Cunanan and a time capsule of 1990s queer culture, the second season of Ryan Murphy’s “American Crime Story” also trumpets the true arrival of Darren Criss. While it’s never been a secret that the “Glee” and “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” star is a certified song-and-dance man, here he plumbed the depths of a sociopath’s psyche, turning his naturally cheery demeanor dark, desperate, and introspective. The power of Criss’ about-face is enough to put him on any awards shortlist, but it helps that he’s surrounded by an ensemble that meets him mark for mark: Ricky Martin, Judith Light, and Édgar Ramírez and Penélope Cruz as the Versaces. —Benjamin Lindsay

6 of the Year’s TV Drama Casts Worthy of Emmy Attention

In the Envelope: An Awards Podcast – Edgar Ramirez

Star of “Carlos,” “Zero Dark Thirty,” “Hands of Stone,” and more, Emmy and Golden Globe nominee Edgar Ramirez has worked as an activist and political journalist, both in his native Venezuela and abroad. This season on the small screen he starred in “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story,” Ryan Murphy’s latest FX miniseries exploring the 1997 murder of the titular fashion mogul, a role to which Edgar brought his intellectual curiosity and nuance. His advice on transforming into a character? Do your homework. | 13 June 2018

Get Inside the Mind of a Murderer With Darren Criss + More L.A. Actor Events

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Find out what it takes to play a murderer.

True crime is all the rage right now in pretty much every medium—from television to podcasts. Recently, FX aired “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story,” which profiled not only the infamous fashion designer’s murder but also dug deep into the life of Andrew Cunanan, the killer who pulled the trigger. Join actor Darren Criss, who portrayed Cunanan in the series, for a screening and Q&A at SAG on May 22 and bring your burning questions about what it was like to climb inside the mind of a monster. (Free)

Get Inside the Mind of a Murderer With Darren Criss + More L.A. Actor Events

Darren Criss Is the Season’s New Song + Dance Serial Killer

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Turns out, you don’t need to be of the screen or stage to be an actor. Case in point: Andrew Cunanan. In the pilot of FX’s “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” alone, we see the 27-year-old slip in and out of elaborate personae and biographical fabrications like a Versace model changing before the runway. Was Cunanan really warding off Gianni Versace’s advances at a San Francisco club in 1990 (as he tells his friends), or was he the young stranger groveling for the fashion designer’s attention with boldfaced flattery and stories of the old country? Did he really work on his military pilot father’s pineapple plantation in the Philippines before moving to America for “the very best education” money could buy, or was he, as showrunner Ryan Murphy tells it, abused as a child and “groomed to inhabit this ‘American Dream’ that in his own family turned out to be a huge lie”? 

While we now know the latter of both cases to be true, Cunanan wore his stories well, fooling Versace and others he encountered along the way. “I tell people what they need to hear,” he tells a male lover in the series’ first hour with chilling matter-of-factness. 

Even Darren Criss, who stars as Cunanan in Season 2 of the Emmys-sweeping true crime anthology series, can’t help but admit that Cunanan’s innovation at times rivaled that of the fashion mogul’s. “[The show has] done a really good job of paralleling these two brilliant men, who are for obvious reasons very different,” Criss says. “Brilliance takes all shapes and sizes, and execution—no pun intended—varies and changes.” 

The fact that a character like Cunanan was also a sociopathic spree killer—best known for assassinating Versace in 1997 before taking his own life a week later—is just the cherry on top of the young actor’s most formidable and emotionally demanding role yet. 

Cunanan’s murderous tendencies aside, his gift for storytelling is mirrored in the man playing him. During a December interview over coffee in Brooklyn’s Williamsburg neighborhood, Criss peppers in asides: “That’s a whole other story in and of itself” or “That’s a whole other hour, we won’t go there.” But the thing is, Criss—especially for actors—has quite the story to tell. 

As a talent who rose from “Harry Potter” parody fame to become a standout supporter on “Glee,” a replacement in Broadway’s “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying,” and “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” and now a leading role on what he admits is “a pretty hot show [with] a lot of buzz attached to it,” the first piece of advice Criss has for any actor is to embrace an entrepreneurial spirit. He began his career in his native San Francisco at a very young age, first performing professionally at age 10 at the locally esteemed 42nd Street Moon theater company and as part of the American Conservatory Theater’s Young Conservatory program. 

“That, to me, was where it all kind of got fostered,” he says. “And of course I did high school theater. The real backbone is high school theater.” (One of his favorite talking points with a new acquaintance is “[Tell me] what shows you were in, and I’ll try to guess what parts you played.” It’s a game he quickly proves adept at over the course of our meeting.) 

Criss’ acting roots took him to the University of Michigan, where he received his BFA in theater performance—and by his senior year, fans were recognizing him on the street for an extracurricular student project gone viral. Featuring music and lyrics by Criss and A.J. Holmes, “A Very Potter Musical” was a comedic riff on J.K. Rowling’s beloved fantasy series that starred Criss as the titular teen wizard. It began as the sort of one-off “silly shit” that many a musically inclined theater student might create in his four years on campus. But when filmed in the university’s black box theater and pushed online at the advent of social media, “A Very Potter Musical” became somewhat of a subculture phenomenon among fans of the magical franchise. 

“That’s kind of what changed everything, because after graduating, this thing that was just a fun story that we did our senior year became immortalized on an alternate platform,” Criss says. “That small, scrappy thing took on a life of its own, and from the unexpected success of that show, we became a theater company.” Founded in 2009 and set on “creating accessible, quality theater for the modern era,” StarKid Productions exists in Chicago’s vibrant theater scene to this day. 

“It was the first point that anybody had acknowledged something that I had done without knowing me in a personal way,” Criss recalls. “It was my first brush with ‘being known.’ ” 

While a desire for fame or recognition hardly seems of high value for Criss (“I take my work very seriously, but I don’t take myself seriously at all”), it’s a push-pull relationship between the public and private that certainly informed his take on Cunanan. Versace’s killer was obsessed with the rich and famous and had dreams of making his own way into society’s upper echelons. All of his lies were intended to make him appear better than he was. Within that, there was an underlying desperation to every move he made. “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” is in part meant to explore how that desperation came to be. 

“I wasn’t interested in doing the boogeyman serial killer,” Murphy says by phone. “Cunanan was not a person who tortured pets and animals as a child. So the question is, then, how did he become a psychopath?”

The No. 1 question people ask Criss about playing Cunanan also comes back to its natural, psychopathic emotional heft: “Is it crazy to be in a dark place?” While the role does require a certain level of brutality and psychiatric unease, the actor has two things to say to that. First is that it’s “no crazier than being a cisgender, heterosexual 20-something playing a gay singing teenager,” as he did on Fox’s “Glee,” also from Murphy. In other words, he’s embodying a character. “I’m not playing myself,” he says, “but you have access to emotions that those people go through, and you find as many common denominators as possible.” And second is that we all may be surprised by Cunanan’s less obvious, more human characteristics. 

“We know Andrew was made famous by horrible things, but we don’t really know a lot about his life and who he was,” Criss says. “He was a really joyous, likable, affable, energetic young man…. You really question at what point could this have been you or any of us or anybody we know and love? Are we as awful as the worst thing we’ve ever done?”

Upon a bit of self-reflection, Criss says it’s that ever-present dichotomy of right and wrong, friend and foe, that keeps him acting in the first place. 

“That’s probably why I like acting so much: It bends people’s sense of empathy for the human experience,” he says. “I’m excited for people to experience something [with this show]. I don’t think people really know what’s coming, and that excites me endlessly.”

Something New

Darren Criss insists that despite his credits, he “kind of fell into musical theater by bizarre providence” and that he still views himself as “the actor who sings, not the singer who acts.” That made the opportunity to tap into the psyche of a murderer for nine hours of prestige TV all the more appealing. Ryan Murphy, for one, knew Criss had it in him all along. “The only person in the world who could play Andrew Cunanan is Darren Criss,” the creator says. “For several reasons: One is the obvious correct ethnicity. I thought that was very important to get that right. It would be a disservice to cast an Italian-American as a Filipino-American. But the other thing that was important to me is that I knew that it was going to be a very big, Shakespearean role. I don’t think that there’s going to be a bigger role on television next year in terms of difficulty. It’s him going through the deepest sociopathic impulses and emotional problems. I just thought that Darren is prime. He’s just turning 30 [and] I think that he’s ready to graduate to more difficult material and really try something hard…. I think people will be surprised and startled by his performance and excited because it’s the announcement of something new in his life.”

Darren Criss Is the Season’s New Song + Dance Serial Killer