A sweaty Darren Criss in nothing but white y-fronts jigging around a millennial-pink motel room to Phil Collins’ ‘Easy Lover’: it’s a cheery prospect, pretty much designed for re-posts on Tumblr.
Yet Criss’s manic energy is the product of his American Crime Story character, Andrew Cunanan, torturing an older man.
With every languid hop Cunanan takes, his victim drifts closer to death. There’s not been such a sadistic visual set to a lurid 1980s banger since Christian Bale went to town on Jared Leto with an axe to a soundtrack of Huey Lewis and the News in 1999’s American Psycho.
Whether the pink motel room encounter, in episode two of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, actually happened has been questioned in plenty of fact-checking blogs. The Versace family, who branded the miniseries “a work of fiction” and criticised its basis in Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favours, must be pleased such blogs exist. But there is a bigger problem.
Though the title character, played by Edgar Ramirez, is portrayed as a sweet, loyal and hard-working man, the series follows the serial killer far more closely than the person whose name the series trades off.
Cunanan is the show’s most exciting character. Casting-wise, it’s a double win – Criss’s Filipino-Caucasian heritage matches Cunanan’s, and in the role he charms and frightens in equal measure.
That charm isn’t played up for telly: Cunanan was known to many as a slick operator who decorated his humdrum background with lies, pretended to be anyone but himself and, as an avid social climber, meticulously researched his suitors/victims so he knew exactly how to win them over.
His chutzpah isn’t only endearing to the characters he encounters as the series unfolds chronologically backwards, though: to the viewer, there’s something enviably daring about Cunanan lying his way into a life of luxury. When he does break for a second to tell the truth, admitting to a random guy in a noisy club that he’s a “serial killer”, it neatly mirrors American Psycho’s Patrick Bateman hiding in plain sight as he tells a woman in a noisy VIP room that he works “in murders and executions”.
After so many lies, that boldness, that “Come and get me if you think you’re hard enough” tone is refreshing. But any viewer unimpressed by that – coming off the back of four murders – might still be won over by the series’ depiction of Cunanan’s naivety and fragility.
When we discover his annoying mum and the struggles he had growing up in relative poverty, it’s – though we hate to say it – easy to sympathise with Cunanan. He simply wants the good life sold to him by the glossy Versace-adorned magazines he sneakily reads instead of doing his deadbeat retail job. But is it acceptable to invite us to sympathise with a monster?
It’s true we see the domestic abuse Cunanan meted out against his own mother (important, because it both happened in real life and is a sad and often silent forebear of many real-life mass-killings). But the camera lingers on his tears, not hers, and because the incident arrives far too late in the series it’s simply not as shocking as it should be.
On a point of indisputable artistic licence, The Assassination of Gianni Versace shows Cunanan as far more beautiful than he actually was. Cunanan wasn’t ugly and certainly used his beauty to disarm, but Criss is prettier, and harder-bodied. Even when he’s meant to be on crack he looks gorgeous.
Though the clothes Cunanan wears were considered uncool even just a few years ago, the cyclical nature of fashion – this is a series apparently about a fashion designer, after all – means that his thin-wire frame glasses, high-waisted jeans, tucked-in polo shirts, high socks, practical white sneakers and even the aforementioned Y-fronts, are pretty on-trend in 2018.
But condemning the show for glamorising a killer is perhaps simplistic.
Putting Cunanan front and centre might actually have a positive impact beyond salacious titillation, reminding the audience that this story is about so much more than Versace himself. Audiences were drawn in by the promise of Penelope Cruz as Donatella Versace and Ricky Martin as Gianni’s lover Antonio D’Amico, after all, not the impending layers of analysis of what it meant to be a gay man in post-AIDS America.
Though we get peeks into Versace’s life, they’re smartly tethered to the other characters. We see how coming out in fashion isn’t unlike coming out in the military. We see Donatella, encouraged by her brother to dress up in bondage-like leather and chains to sell herself, figuratively, to the fashion world, while Cunanan begins selling himself, literally, to older men.
By following Cunanan’s story, we get to see the lives of all his victims, who were destroyed not only by him, but by the homophobia festering within the police, government and American society at large. The story, as the producers have framed it, is as much about the ridiculous social framework that Cunanan was allowed to operate within, as it is the ridiculousness of Cunanan himself.
Darren Criss told Digital Spy exclusively: “It’s pretty clear cut on the moral spectrum where we stand, so I don’t think it glamourises [him]. If anything, it just begs the question of, ‘How do we get here? How does this happen?’ I don’t think it’s glamourising so much as investigating. You know how the story goes, but it’s the why and the how that makes us rethink what we see in front of us.”
So it’s for the best The Assassination of Gianni Versace took artistic licence with the image of the man who killed a bunch of people – rather than the man whose most outlandish move was to shock and awe the world of fashion with his beautiful designs.
With each episode, we are drawn more under Cunanan’s spell, courtesy of Criss’s stellar performance. That, the show is telling us, is why Versace died in the first place: because Cunanan managed to charm – and harm – so many others before him. What it’s also telling us – under the radar – is how he got away with it for so long.
Tag: darren criss
Darren Criss reveals what ACS: Versace and Glee taught him about the gay experience
While viewers in the US have already been treated to the harrowing series finale of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, there are still two episodes left to air in the UK.
Darren Criss plays serial killer Andrew Cunanan in the Ryan Murphy-produced series, chronicling his murderous rampage back in 1997 which concluded with the fatal shooting of world-renowned fashion designer Gianni Versace.
The award-worthy performance sees Darren Criss at his finest, and is worlds away from the last gay character he played in one of Ryan Murphy’s television shows, Glee.
Gay Times sat down with Darren during his visit to London to find out what, as a heterosexual actor, he has learned about the gay experience having researched the characters.
“They are two very different roles,” he told us. “Glee was really an extraordinary beam of positivity – especially for primetime television with mass appeal for young people. It was a wonderful example to set on television, and to be a part of that was really a thrill.
“The Assassination of Versace is really the opposite end of that spectrum where you’re really displaying the turmoil of that gay American identity. Particularly through the navy and military and what people had to go through, and still have to go through.
“I think it’s cool that I’ve been able to be a part of telling both sides of that narrative, and see how far we’ve come and how far we have left to go.”
One of the main points Darren took away as a viewer of American Crime Story is the intense political and social climate around LGBTQ people serving in the US military back in the 1990s.
It was the era of the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy being introduced, where LGBTQ recruits were expected to hide their sexual if they wanted to serve. Openly gay people were prohibited from enrolling completely.
“The great thing about this season of American Crime Story was really learning more about – and this is not about the character I played, but rather being a part of the show and watching it – the gays in the military episode,” Darren told us.
Jeffrey Trail – who was one of Cunanan’s five victims – did an anonymous television interview back in 1993 before the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy was introduced by the Clinton administration, revealing the struggles LGBTQ recruits faced.
That moment in history is featured in an episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, outlining the rife homophobia that existed around the time Cunanan committed these atrocious murders.
“It was really illuminating because it’s something that we know about and it’s still talked about in the United States. It still continues to be a divisive topic in our country,” Darren continued. “It’s sort of an abstract concept because most of my friends aren’t in the military, so I’m not as close to it as some people are.
“To me it seems very clear-cut, but when you get into the complexities of what it means to people, like how do you do marry an identity between two things that mean a lot to you. There was a lot of stuff that was explored that I necessarily wasn’t as familiar with, and I was thrilled that it was told on television. I’ve never really seen anything like that before.”
Darren added that although Andrew Cunanan’s sexual identity in part informed his actions, that inner conflict is something all humans can relate to on some level.
“I think even beyond it necessarily being a gay narrative, it’s a human narrative,” Darren told us. “Irregardless of anyone’s sexual identity they’re just fascinating human tales.
“You don’t have to be Chinese or African or any other race or identity to understand the triumph of certain historical events, or the struggle and conflict we’re all familiar with.
“Conflict is what makes drama. When you witness these conflicts within these young men and women in our show, you can’t help but relate to their resilience or their ability to get through it.
“It’s been a real privilege to be a part of that, because to me it’s less about gay identity and more about human identity.”
Darren Criss reveals what ACS: Versace and Glee taught him about the gay experience
Darren Criss responds to Versace family’s reaction to American Crime Story
Darren Criss has responded to the Versace family’s anger about American Crime Story: The Assassination Of Gianni Versace, admitting he understands why they feel so negative towards the show.
The second series of Ryan Murphy’s crime anthology focuses on the killing spree of Andrew Cunanan, who murdered Gianni Versace and four other men in 1997.
The Versace family issued a statement calling ACS a ‘work of fiction’, saying: ‘The Versace family has neither authorised nor had any involvement whatsoever in the forthcoming TV series about the death of Mr. Gianni Versace. 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.’
And Darren – who plays Cunanan in the drama – admits that if he was in their shoes, he would react in the same way.
The 31-year-old told Metro.co.uk: ‘If any of these things happened to somebody I loved, I’d be equally as vocal about it. And if I had the public platform the Versaces have, I’d do the exact same thing. They have every right and reason to feel the way they do. Who wouldn’t understand that?
‘Obviously, my heart goes out to them, regardless of us doing the show. I’m a fan of the Versace house, and it’s a horrible thing to try and bring to light. But I hope they understand we’re not exploiting the story for commercial value. There’s a larger story at play here – the landscape at the time, and of course the other victims who until now haven’t really had a lot of voice.
‘I would hope they’d understand that. And I would like to think that if I had a chance to meet Gianni Versace, he would understand we’re trying to create some light out of this darkness.’
The actor continued: ‘So much of what Andrew did is shrouded in mystery. We don’t know what he did in that car or in that room. We’re not that moral authority on that. It’s not an expose of what really happened behind closed doors.
‘All we know is the facts that we do have, and the things we fill in are not for spectacle or show, I’m interested in the emotional truths, because we can’t paint the factual truth in the white space.’
Criss – who was best known before ACS for his role as Blaine in the hit series Glee – also insisted that they weren’t trying to glamourise the killings of Gianni Versace, Jeffrey Trail, David Madson, Lee Miglin and William Reese.
He said: ‘If someone perceives it as being glamourised, that’s out of our hands. I don’t think we do it. The nice thing about starting backwards is that we know what he’s done.
‘It’s so clear in my mind that it’s obviously deplorable, it’s pretty clear cut on the moral spectrum where we stand. We’re asking how did we get here, how did it happen.’
Darren Criss responds to Versace family’s reaction to American Crime Story
Darren Criss on the Lorraine Show – Full Interview (April 18th, 2018) | Source
We need to talk about Darren Criss’s killer performance in The Assassination of Gianni Versace
There’s a bravura moment in The Assassination of Gianni Versace – American Crime Story when murderer Andrew Cunanan, resplendent in a red PVC jumpsuit, dances wildly on his own in front of a group of bemused partygoers.
It’s not quite up there with Cunanan dancing in only a tiny pair of orange pants to Philip Bailey and Phil Collins’s Easy Lover as one of his pick-ups, a closeted gay elderly gentlemen, writhes in terror, his face a mask of gaffer tape. But it’s close.
If you haven’t seen The Assassination of Gianni Versace yet, then please, run directly to iPlayer with your arms outstretched and feast on any episodes that remain there. It’s brilliantly written by British screenwriter Tom Rob Smith (who also wrote one of my all-time favourites, BBC2’s London Spy, in 2015) and has an astounding central performance from Darren Criss as Cunanan.
I’d never heard of Criss (he was in Glee, which passed me by) but as Cunanan, he delivers the performance of a lifetime. (Cunanan murdered fashion designer Gianni Versace in July 1997, the culmination of a serial killing spree that left five men dead. Cunanan later killed himself as police closed in.)
What Rob Smith and Criss have done is make a whole person, someone who exists outside of those few bare details. Versace hardly appears in the series, which belongs almost entirely to Cunanan/Criss, as we witness a damaged life spin slowly, then quickly, then completely, out of control.
Cunanan seems at first the quietest of whirlwinds, a handsome boy who drips with charm and affability. But – and this is what Criss and Rob Smith are so good at conveying – there’s something a bit off, something not quite right you can’t put your finger on. Like a photo that’s a little out of focus. And then the killing starts. Brutal, swift, out of nowhere. Yet you’ve been expecting it all along, and not just because this is an infamous story. It’s because Criss’s Cunanan trembles with murderous fury, even when he smiles. Particularly when he smiles.
Rob Smith, who is so adept at digging into the dark mud of broken lives, cleverly throws out any accepted version of narrative to play around with the timeline, and with Cunanan’s descent.
So it’s only in this week’s eighth, penultimate, episode that we learn of his twisted childhood as the “special” son of a narcissistic, fraudulent, abusive liar of a father and a fragile, emotionally vulnerable mother.
Criss’s Cunanan is terrifying. Good-looking, personable, but you don’t want him around. There was a point in one episode, when he rang the doorbell of the man who would become his next victim, when I shouted, “Don’t answer the door, don’t let him in!”
Despite all of those very generous outward charms, you know straightaway why people around him find him unsettling to be with and uncomfortable to know. He’s obsessive and forces his way into “friendships” with unwilling men who just wish he’d go away. Or he preys on older gay men who’ve never been able to come out.
Of course, none of this is easy to watch, which is just as it should be. Cunanan’s story was inescapably one of obsession and violence. But as a cautionary tale about someone who wants above all else to be famous, it’s very, horribly, modern.
We need to talk about Darren Criss’s killer performance in The Assassination of Gianni Versace

lorraine: ‘This is from Coachella and my publicist was trying to get me to take it off and I was like, ‘No way! I’m meeting Lorraine, I’ve got to look pretty today – this is a big deal for me!’’ 🙌 @darrencriss ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
@lorrainekellysmith #glee #darrencriss#assassinationofgianniversace #gleek #coachella
Maxine Peake & Tony Pitts and Anna Rosling Ronnlund & Ola Rosling and Darren Criss, Steve Wright in the Afternoon – BBC Radio 2
Darren Criss will be on the Steve Wright in the Afternoon show on BBC Radio 2 this afternoon (2pm UK time)
lorraine: I’m meeting @reallorraine, I’ve got to look pretty today – this is a big deal for me!’ We’re LOVING the nails, @DarrenCriss 💅
Darren Criss Attributes His Success in TV Drama to His Character in Glee | Lorraine

