dcriss-archive:

thewrap: Take a sneak peek at our Miniseries/Movies Emmy issue, coming out tomorrow! This issue is #AllTheRage, as it features Judith Light, Édgar Ramírez and Darren Criss of ‘American Crime Story: Versace,’ as well as many other sensational men and women of television and film. Stay tuned for plenty more to come!! #Emmys #ACSVersace
📷 @ecarenphoto, Creative Director @guerin_ad

edgarramirez25: So happy to unWrap this one for you! Thanks to everyone involved, what a great shoot, what a great time we had! Love you Judith! Love you Darren!

dcriss-archive:

thewrap: Take a sneak peek at our Miniseries/Movies Emmy issue, coming out tomorrow! This issue is #AllTheRage, as it features Judith Light, Édgar Ramírez and Darren Criss of ‘American Crime Story: Versace,’ as well as many other sensational men and women of television and film. Stay tuned for plenty more to come!! #Emmys #ACSVersace
📷 @ecarenphoto, Creative Director @guerin_ad

Emmys 2018: Paste’s (Unofficial) Nominations Ballot

As any TV critic who moonlights as an Emmy observer will tell you, the Television Academy’s choices can be… frustrating. The tendency to nominate the same series and performances year in, year out; the reluctance to acknowledge certain challenging titles; the labyrinthine rules: The Emmys are often easy to predict, yet difficult to understand.

With that in mind, my annual mock Emmy nominations ballot is a plea for voters’ consideration, a paean to the medium’s finest and an attempt to highlight those still flying under the radar as voting gets underway. It’s full of tough decisions and merciless cuts—including a few that may have you scratching your head. It’s not predictive, but aspirational. And it’s written in the hope that it might get even a single voter to give a deserving series or performer another look.

Outstanding Limited Series

Alias Grace (Netflix)
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
Howards End (Starz)
The Looming Tower (Hulu)
Twin Peaks: The Return (Showtime)

It’s been a strong year for limited series. As I’ve written for the site more than once, The Assassination of Gianni Versace is a remarkably radical treatment of queer themes, unspooling in reverse chronological order across multiple genres and painted in Miami pastels. Alias Grace is equally ambitious, in terms of both structure (toggling between two timelines) and perspective (that of an accused murderer); Twin Peaks, meanwhile, is so wildly imagistic, and yet so primal, that the eminences at Sight & Sound and Cahiers du Cinéma decided its excellence made it a film. (It’s a TV series. Always has been.) Even the category’s less groundbreaking entries, Howards End and The Looming Tower, are formidable iterations of familiar stories—an embarrassment of riches, indeed.

Outstanding Lead Actor (Limited Series/TV Movie)

Darren Criss, The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
Jared Harris, The Terror (AMC)
Michael B. Jordan, Fahrenheit 451 (HBO)
Matthew Macfadyen, Howards End (Starz)
Kyle MacLachlan, Twin Peaks: The Return (Showtime)
Jimmy Tatro, American Vandal (Netflix)

So, here is where I come across a familiar Emmy dilemma. Criss does career-making work in The Assassination of Gianni Versace, transforming spree killer Andrew Cunanan into a gruesomely magnetic villain/protagonist, and in any other year I’d say you were out of your gourd not to give him the trophy. But MacLachlan does career-defining work as Twin Peaks’ Dale Cooper, earning Emmy nominations for the series’ first two seasons in 1990-1991, to which he adds both Coop’s doppelganger and Dougie Jones in last year’s revival. Criss will have more bites at the apple. I say give MacLachlan the award he’s deserved for almost three decades.

Outstanding Supporting Actor (Limited Series/TV Movie)

Miguel Ferrer, Twin Peaks: The Return (Showtime)
Ciarán Hinds, The Terror (AMC)
Alex Lawther, Howards End (Starz)
Tahar Rahim, The Looming Tower (Hulu)
Edgar Ramirez, The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
Hugo Weaving, Patrick Melrose (Showtime)

In the interest of spreading the love, I left out two performances of note: Cody Fern and Finn Witrock, as murder victims—and, crucially, men in full—David Madson and Jeff Trail, in The Assassination of Gianni Versace. If you’ll forgive me that, then please consider Alex Lawther, an exquisitely funny, never ridiculous revelation as Tibby Schlegel, breathing life into a character that not even E.M. Forster could.

Outstanding Supporting Actress (Limited Series/TV Movie)

Penelope Cruz, The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
Laura Dern, Twin Peaks: The Return (Showtime)
Angela Lansbury, Little Women (PBS)
Judith Light, The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
Anna Paquin, Alias Grace (Netflix)
Tracey Ullmann, Howards End (Starz)

If you expected me to pick anyone but 92-year-old Angela Lansbury as Little Women’s Aunt March, you had another thing coming.

Emmys 2018: Paste’s (Unofficial) Nominations Ballot

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the death of an icon

COMING OFF THE back of the Emmy and Golden Globe-winning limited series The People vs OJ Simpson: American Crime Story, producer and director Ryan Murphy knew the bar was set high for a second season.

“OJ was a courtroom show, so this had to be different,” he explains.

Nobody can accuse Murphy of repeating himself as the gripping The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story comes to our screens.

Based on the book by Maureen Orth – Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace and the Largest Failed Manhunt in US History – the nine-episode tale begins with serial killer Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) murdering Gianni Versace (Édgar Ramírez) on the steps of his Miami mansion in 1997.

It then traces the path of both characters in reverse, including events leading up to Cunanan’s killing rampage and Versace’s earlier brush with death.

“I was living in Miami at the time and [the assassination] felt very personal,” says Latin pop icon Ricky Martin, who plays Gianni’s long-term boyfriend Antonio D’Amico in his biggest television role to date.

“I remember that the atmosphere in Miami changed completely and people were living in fear because there was a man on the streets killing people randomly.” While the Italian designer’s romance with Antonio is explored in the series, so too is his relationship with sister Donatella, played by Oscar-winner Penélope Cruz.

“I’ve worked closely with House of Versace over the last

15 years, and I always liked Donatella,” says the Spanish actress.

“She is a very strong, affectionate and generous woman. I think I knew every single piece from Versace by the time I was 15 because I was a big fan and I dreamt one day I could wear his designs. Being in his mental space as this character is like a dedication to him because he’s present around every corner.”

The enthralling series pulls back the fabric on the rich and famous entrepreneur’s life to reveal what really went on behind closed doors, where the likes of Madonna, Cher and the late Princess Diana were amongst the regular visitors to his house.

“There is a Madonna guest suite upstairs, which was the first place I went to when we came to film [at the house],” Murphy says. “I heard she used to sit in the bathtub and stand up naked to tease them out in the courtyard [where they were] drinking.”

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is a touching tribute that transports viewers into the life of a global icon, and his untimely death that shook the fashion world.

Steps of death

One of the most significant scenes in the series is the tragic murder of Gianni. Murphy admits the gruesome assassination – filmed on the exact steps where he died 20 years ago outside the former beachside Versace Mansion-turned-boutique-hotel – was traumatic for all involved.

“The crew were crying, the actors were crying because it was the spot he was killed and you could feel his presence,” Murphy reveals of the two weeks spent shooting inside and outside of the property.

“Édgar was lying on those coral steps for two days and they were sharp, so that was awful for him, too. Ricky didn’t want to see Édgar until the cameras were rolling. Édgar had on the prosthetics, with part of his face shot off and covered in blood, so it was tough for Ricky to see his friend like that. He was heaving and sobbing and stayed in that state for a long time.”

Dead or alive

Venezuelan actor Ramírez shudders as he recalls the physically and psychologically draining experience of lying on those steps.

“It was an interesting exercise of trust and abandonment, because I spent days with my eyes closed, being handled by all the paramedics and witnessing all the emotions that Ricky put into it, as he was holding my body and screaming,” he reminisces.

The star says it was imperative that he put himself into a meditative state and keep as quiet as possible to play out the scenes. But it came with its challenges.

“When they put me on the gurney for the first time, I did have a panic attack,” he admits.

“My mind knew that it was fine, but my body was reacting in a surprising way to what everyone was saying around me and we had to stop rolling so I could get up and remind myself I was still alive!”

No acting required

For Martin, being cast in his most significant acting role came with all the emotions you’d expect: nervous excitement and exhilaration. A close friend of Ramírez’s, the She Bangs and Livin’ la Vida Loca performer vividly recalls the morning he arrived to film the scenes in which Antonio discovers the body on the steps and holds the dying designer until the ambulance arrives. “It was a luxury to be able to walk into the actual home that Gianni and Antonio shared, because all I had to do was touch the walls and I could feel the emotion; it was vibrant,” he says.

“I got there at five o’clock in the morning on the day we were shooting those scenes and I started working on my emotions inside the home. When I finally got outside and saw my friend Édgar lying on the steps covered in blood, I just started hysterically crying.”

Playing a murderer

At the same time his co-stars filmed Gianni’s horrific death, former Glee headliner Criss was in a different headspace portraying the killer who had been obsessed with the designer for most of his life.

“I can’t tell you how weird it felt for me to be walking around the house dressed as Andrew Cunanan,” Criss remembers.

“I was wearing the outfit that he murdered Versace in and walking around inside the house. But when I took a picture of the pool and saw myself in the reflection, sprayed with blood, I said, ‘Oh my god, I’ve got to delete this photo, it’s horrible and irreverent because Andrew never made it inside the house!’”

Being Donatella

Superstar Lady Gaga was originally intended to play Donatella. However, when scheduling clashed with her film A Star is Born, she was forced to pull out. With the other cast already in place, Murphy reached out to Cruz.

“I thought because she was friends with Donatella she could be an advocate for her,” Murphy explains of Cruz’s first TV role.

Meanwhile, the actress admits she was “shocked” when she got the call.

“I was silent on the other end of the phone for a while, wondering what Donatella would think,” she explains of her reaction.

But she embraced the opportunity, which required a three-hour process of multiple wig changes, contact lenses and those unique Donatella snow-white eyebrows to transform her for the cameras.

“In the end, I hope Donatella understands when she sees this that we are showing what a heroine she was. This is a beautiful love story between brother and sister, and what she went through to keep her brother’s dream and the House of Versace alive.”

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the death of an icon

‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace’ star Edgar Ramirez on the story’s backdrop of prejudice

The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story may carry a banner suggesting genre thrills but, just like the first season of the American Crime Story strand – The People v OJ Simpson, which won the Primetime Emmy for best limited series in 2016 – the second instalment offers much more than true crime intrigue.

Once again executive produced by Ryan Murphy for the FX cable network, the second season is based on the non-fiction book Vulgar Favors by Maureen Orth and centres on the story of Andrew Cunanan, the young man whose cross-country mid-1990s killing spree culminated in the murder of international fashion icon Gianni Versace.

Yet it was the story’s backdrop of cultural homophobia and prejudice that struck actor Edgar Ramirez as he portrayed Versace in the years leading up to the murder – years in which the Italian designer came out as gay and was hit with a serious illness. The Versace family said the illness was cancer, but Orth’s book suggested the designer was HIV positive when he died.

“It was something that we all discovered as we were doing the show, something that gives an amazing quality to the story,” says Venezuela-born Ramirez, who co-stars with Darren Criss, Penelope Cruz and Ricky Martin. “Although just the title – The Assassination Of Gianni Versace –  has a political overtone, it was actually the subtleties that helped us come to the conclusion that homophobia was the underlying subject of the whole story.”

Through the course of the investigation into the Cunanan killings, says Ramirez, “the element that always comes up is this sort of refusal to acknowledge the existence of a gay world out there. [It went] all the way from raging homophobia to mere ignorance, which is a very dangerous form of internalised homophobia. [Because] it was only gay men that he was killing, it most likely did not seem like a public threat for the authorities at the time.”

Ramirez — a former student journalist who has previously earned acclaim for playing famous real-life figures in the 2010 miniseries Carlos (in which he portrayed the Venezuelan terrorist known as Carlos the Jackal) and 2013 feature The Liberator (in which he starred as the country’s celebrated 19th-century military leader Simon Bolivar) – says that when it comes to these roles, he is “relentless when I do my research. I had access to some of [Versace’s] closest friends. I was very lucky they trusted me with their insights.”

What he did not do, though, for personal as well as legal reasons, is contact the Versace family, which includes Gianni’s designer sister Donatella, also prominently portrayed in the series by Cruz.

“The family went through one of the most excruciatingly painful experiences that a family can go through in life,” Ramirez explains, “and it all happened in the public eye. I felt that it was not right to approach them.”

Religious roots

At the same time as the series tracks Cunanan (played by Criss) and his complex relationships with his earlier victims, it also follows Versace through the business and personal ups and downs of his final years. The key to playing the character through those times, suggests Ramirez, lay in understanding the “cultural and religious imagination” that goes with the Catholicism of Mediterranean countries.

“I was brought up Catholic and it’s a world of miracles and a world of redemption,” the actor explains. “So while it’s impossible for me to know where Gianni’s head was at the time, I’m sure he believed in miracles. You can see it in his work, which was full of symbolism. And that was maybe where my head was at.”

Reaction to the series from the LGBTQI+ community and from Versace’s friends has been “very positive”, Ramirez reports. “People that were close to him and have seen the show have expressed very nice things about the experience of watching him again.”

The Versace family, on the other hand, issued a statement just before the show’s premiere saying that since it did not authorise Orth’s book or have any involvement in the screenplay, “this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction”.

In response, Ramirez — who in parallel to his acting career serves as a goodwill ambassador for Unicef in Venezuela — takes the high (and diplomatic) road. “I didn’t see anything angry [in the Versace family statement],” he says, “or that they were against the show, as some media have pointed out. They basically said that they considered the book a work of fiction, and if the show is based on the book then the show is a work of fiction. I thought it was very polite and understandable.”

‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace’ star Edgar Ramirez on the story’s backdrop of prejudice

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

Feinberg Forecast: Reading the Tea Leaves As Voting Gets Underway

Best Limited Series

FRONTRUNNERS

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (FX)
The Looming Tower (Hulu)
Godless (Netflix)
Patrick Melrose (Showtime)
Genius (National Geographic)

Best Actor in a Limited Series or a Television Movie

FRONTRUNNERS

Darren Criss (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)
John Legend (Jesus Christ Superstar)
Al Pacino (Paterno)
Benedict Cumberbatch (Patrick Melrose) — podcast
Jeff Daniels (The Looming Tower) — podcast
Antonio Banderas (Genius: Picasso)

Best Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Television Movie

FRONTRUNNERS

Jeff Daniels (Godless) — podcast
Edgar Ramirez (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)
Brandon Victor Dixon (Jesus Christ Superstar)
Tahar Rahim (The Looming Tower)
Peter Sarsgaard (The Looming Tower)
Bill Camp (The Looming Tower)

MAJOR THREATS

Ricky Martin (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)
Sam Waterston (Godless)
Scoot McNairy (Godless)
Bill Pullman (The Sinner)
Alex Rich (Genius: Picasso)
Michael Shannon (Fahrenheit 451) — podcast
Hugo Weaving (Patrick Melrose)

POSSIBILITIES

Cody Fern (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)
Jason Ritter (The Tale)
Beau Bridges (Mosaic)
Alice Cooper (Jesus Christ Superstar)
Dylan Baker (Little Women)
Robert Forster (Twin Peaks)

Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Television Movie

FRONTRUNNERS

Merritt Wever (Godless)
Nicole Kidman (Top of the Lake: China Girl) — podcast
Penelope Cruz (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)
Judith Light (The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story)

Sharon Stone (Mosaic)
Ellen Burstyn (The Tale)

Feinberg Forecast: Reading the Tea Leaves As Voting Gets Underway