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Pop Rocket Episode 157: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

This week, Guy and the gang discuss The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story. How amazing is Penelope Cruz’ performance? How “true” is this true crime story and does it matter? Plus, Guy is getting into faith-based comedy, Wynter is watching even more stand up comedy, Margaret has some thoughts on The Chi, and Karen discusses The Hollywood Reporter’s feature on Ellen Pompeo.

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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Tuned In: “The Alienist,” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”

*Discussion on The Assassination of Gianni Versace starts at 6:34

Max Greenfield Talks Shocking Versace Transformation, Shares the Real Perk of Working With Ryan Murphy

Although last week’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story premiere offered only a fleeting glimpse of Max Greenfield‘s recurring junkie Ronnie, we saw enough of him to know that the New Girl vet went all in for his role as Andrew Cunanan’s (Darren Criss) wiry, HIV-positive Miami pal. The Emmy-nominated actor’s airtime increases tenfold in tonight’s second episode (10/9c, FX), which finds Cunanan bonding with Ronnie on the eve of Versace’s murder.

Below, Greenfield discusses how he prepared for the physically transformative role, reveals the real perk of being a member of the Ryan Murphy Repertory Company, and explains why the end of New Girl hit him like a ton of bricks.

TVLINE | How much weight did you lose?
Of course that’s your first question. [Laughs] Honestly, I wasn’t actively trying to lose weight.

TVLINE | Oh, come on…
I really wasn’t! I happened to be pretty lean already when Ryan offered the role to me. Also, I didn’t have a tremendous amount of time to physically prep. But I wasn’t like, “You know what I’m going to do to prepare for this one? Eat a lot of pizza!”

TVLINE | So what did you do. Because you did something. You’re emaciated. I saw bones protruding through your skin.
I suppose I tried to [lose] a little bit [of weight]. But it wasn’t a focus of mine. I knew he’d have a mustache. I had a beard at the time, so I created this sort of cockeyed mustache, because everything about this guy is a little bit sad. Even his mustache is a little bit sad. The real focus for me was [emotional]. It was more about the period of time that this represented. It was 1997, a year-and-a-half out from when they figured out the correct medication for patients with HIV. Ronnie was one of these people who had accepted his own death [from AIDS]. And then all of a sudden they found this medication… It was such a fresh time for those people. To know that you were going to die at any moment, and then to suddenly have to wrap your head around the idea that that’s now not going to happen. I can only imagine what an overwhelmingly confusing feeling that must’ve been for so many people.

TVLINE | Is the real Ronnie still alive?
I don’t know. I know he’s a real person. But what was on the page was so important to me that I really wanted to do my best to honor Ryan’s vision in the story as opposed to trying to play a real person.

TVLINE | What do you think Ronnie makes of Andrew?
Andrew shows him friendship and is nice to him. And I don’t think anyone has done that to Ronnie in a very long time. And he’s willing to look past a lot of warning signs before he finally realizes, “I think there’s something really off here.”

TVLINE | This is the second time Ryan Murphy has cast you as a drug addict. What do you make of that?
[Laughs] That is the beauty of Ryan, and why I love him so much. He can look at an actor and see them in ways they can’t even see themselves. And he pushes them to really go there. I can’t think of more rewarding experiences that I’ve had than working with him both times. If you’re not coming [to one of his productions] with all that you have, I don’t know why you bother showing up at all. Having worked with Sarah Paulson on American Horror Story: Hotel and seeing the lengths she goes to when shooting a scene, you go, “Oh, so that’s what this is going to be like.” [Laughs]

TVLINE | I’m guessing things like craft services are next-level on his shows. Is it hard to then to move on to another production and be greeted by, say, a bowl of Cheerios and a week-old box of Entenmann’s?
[Laughs] Can you imagine an all-Entenmann’s craft service? That’s what heaven looks like. When you get to heaven, God points you to the all-Entenmann’s craft service and says, “You can eat all you want and you don’t gain any weight.” The real perk of working for Ryan is this: His crew — from hair to makeup to wardrobe to the camera department, props, sound, across the board — is so good. One of the reasons the performances on his shows are so [strong] is because these people make us look very, very talented.

TVLINE | You wrapped New Girl a few weeks ago. Were you more or less emotional during the final days of shooting than you anticipated?
I was way more emotional. I underestimated the impact of leaving that show and the character. There was a real mourning period afterwards.

TVLINE | Were you satisfied by the ending?
Yes. I think what the writers did was a lot of fun. It was like a musician at a concert going, “You know what? Tonight we’re just going to play the hits.” That’s what these last eight episodes felt like.

TVLINE | What do you see as your next career act?
I wish I knew. [Laughs] I want to find a really good piece of material and hope that the people who’ve written it want me to be in it. And if Ryan, [comes calling] I’ll do whatever he wants me to do.

Max Greenfield Talks Shocking Versace Transformation, Shares the Real Perk of Working With Ryan Murphy

What would you ask ‘American Crime Story’ star Édgar Ramírez?

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What would you ask ‘American Crime Story’ star Édgar Ramírez?

AMERICAN CRIME STORY: Writer Tom Rob Smith on THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE – Exclusive Interview

FX’s Wednesday-night second installment of the anthology drama series, THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE, deals not only with the well-known event of the title, but of the murder spree that led up to it. Andrew Cunanan, played in the miniseries by Darren Criss, killed at least four other men – Jeffrey Trail, David Madson, Lee Miglin and William Reese – before attacking Versace, who is portrayed by Edgar Ramirez. Based in part on Maureen Orth’s nonfiction book VULGAR FAVORS, argues that law enforcement was slow to track Cunanan due to the homophobia of the times.

AMERICAN CRIME STORY comes from executive producers Ryan Murphy (who also directed a number of episodes), Brad Falchuk, Alexis Martin Woodall, Nina Jacobson and Brad Simpson. Rather than have a writers’ room for THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE, the executive producers opted to have a single writer for all ten episodes, Tom Rob Smith.

Smith, an Englishman who is also an executive producer on this season of AMERICAN CRIME STORY, created and wrote LONDON SPY and CHILD 44. He talks about his research for the project, and what struck him most in what he found.

ASSIGNMENT X: When the producers came to you, did they say, “We’d like you to write all ten episodes?”

TOM ROB SMITH: No. It just evolved from the fact that we were in a room, and it was Brad, Ryan, Nina and myself, and the book just needed a very particular approach. It wasn’t that we sat down and said we were going to tell the story backwards [as the series does, to an extent]. We didn’t have that concept. It was, we were trying to figure out how to do it organically. The thing with a [writers’] room is, if you have a big room, you have to make those decisions and then send everyone off to write their episodes. And we would move forward a fragment, and then decide to change direction. You’re much more nimble if you’re on your own. I think it just happened like that.

AX: How was it decided that this season of AMERICAN CRIME STORY would be ten episodes, as opposed to twelve or eight or whatever?

SMITH: That was again all decided by the story. We look at them and think, “What is the right number?” They’re like books in a weird way. You’re like, “What are the parts that we have?” No one says, “We want ten episodes,” or “We want twelve episodes.” They say, “What is your story?” And you look at it, and think, “This is how much we have. These are the great episodes.” The quality control on this is so high, they would never stretch it to fill a quota. It was always about, each episode has to feel really satisfying in its own right, almost like a story in its own right. So that’s where it comes from.

AX: How aware were you of the murders at the time they occurred in 1997?

SMITH: I was very aware of the Miami murder, but I knew nothing about the build-up. And I think that’s one of the things, that we take that thing that everyone knows, which is the perception of Miami, and we’re unpacking it, so we’re literally pulling those pieces apart. And that to me was a discovery, too. I went on a journey in a sense that viewers kind of go on, which is, I knew the thing on Miami, and now let’s see what was behind it all.

AX: Cunanan’s murder spree stretched across the U.S. What kind of research did you do in the different cities and states?

SMITH: The Minneapolis murders, we got all the police files. One of the big gaps was that, [author Orth] must have read the police files, but obviously, you’re getting her fragments. It’s always interesting to get your own, and the Minneapolis police files, they released them without any problem. I think they were like four hundred pages. I think we got a thousand pages on the FBI, I think we had four hundred from the Chicago [police]. So you have these volumes of information. We’ve got a great researcher on the project. We got all of that. In San Diego, these weren’t released by the San Diego police force, we had to the court records. So we got everything that was possible to get. Minneapolis is where the murders start, and they’re a key part of our story. When we say AMERICAN CRIME STORY, this is an American crime story in a geographic sense. We have L.A., we have San Francisco, we have San Diego, we have Minneapolis, we have Chicago, we have New York, we have New Jersey – all of these towns were part of this enormous story.

AX: How is it for you setting a story in the U.S.? You’re British and your other projects have been set in England and Europe. Was there anything you sort of had to absorb about Americans?

SMITH: I don’t know. I just think, we were telling an American crime story for sure, but I think one of the reasons [the first season of AMERICAN CRIME STORY, THE PEOPLE V. O.J. SIMPSON] was so successful is, it spoke to everyone around the world. You go for those universal truths. I do think, pushing all of the universal truths to the side, the minutiae is very important, like going to San Diego and going to Andrew Cunanan’s house, seeing where he grew up. Sometimes those things can be overstated, because they didn’t give you an episode, for example. You don’t get an episode from it. But Andrew Cunanan was very sensitive to class and status. And I was like, well, I get that as an idea. And I went to his house, which was in La Bonita, and it’s a nice house. His parents did well to pull him up out of relative poverty in National City. But even on the street he’s on, which has a slight incline, he was on the bottom of that street, and it went on to kind of a wasteland. And as the houses went up the hill, they got steadily more expensive. And I was like, “Even in this one street, there’s this microcosm of the haves and the have-nots.” He went to La Bonita High briefly, and I went there, and it’s a regular high school, and then he was sent to Bishop’s in La Jolla, and I was like, “This is a world apart.” You turn up and it’s this beautiful courtyard with these whitewashed walls. He was taken from this household that was modest, and given everything. And just when you go into the detail and you see it for real, those things really start to speak to you about the character.

AX: Obviously, there’s a lot of visual oomph in Gianni Versace’s world. Was it easier or harder for you to write with knowing that, “Okay, people are going to be taking in the surroundings,” so you need to give them a moment to look at that before you start the drama?

SMITH: Oh, no. I see it all as one. I see the locations and the clothes, all that detail is storytelling. That opening is the contrasting of these two worlds, this world that someone had created that was down to the ashtray, down to the silk robe, down to the slippers. [Versace] built all of that. He built his own homeware, and so that sense of, look at what he’s created, [and then at Cunanan, who is] someone who was literally down to nothing on a beach, who had this terrible abscess on his leg, he had physically broken apart, and who was in shorts he’d probably been wearing for weeks and weeks, and was in this sweaty t-shirt, and this sense of, look at the contrast between these two men. So I always saw the visuals as being a real storytelling engine and not some kind of secondary thing.

The Versace home is – it’s weird going there, because now it’s a hotel, and I felt this energy of, he’s missing from this space. You really feel it. You feel like, this isn’t just a nice house, this was his. This needs him on some level. I could really feel an absence.

AX: What is it like writing someone like Versace who, in a sense, creates his own world?

SMITH: What I found so inspirational about him, and one of the things was, he’d turn up to Milan, this guy from the south of Italy who was looked down on by the [design establishment], and now he’s such a grand figure that we forget that he was this person who was told “no” by everyone. And even different fabrics – he would refuse to accept “no,” he would say, “I’m going to [use] this fabric.” And I found that refusal to accept the constraints and confines that were presented to him very inspirational. That was a key part. I found that he inspired me as I wrote, if that makes sense. I was like, “This man is amazing.”

AX: Do you have any other projects we should know about?

SMITH: I’m doing a show for BBC2, MOTHER, FATHER, SON.

AX: And what would you most like people to know about THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE: AMERICAN CRIME STORY?

SMITH: I’m fascinated by crime stories, because I think they’re about society. I feel like they soak up something about society, tell a bigger story. And this really does. It tells a story about America at that time and about identities, aspirations, it’s emotional. But I also think this was the largest failed FBI manhunt of all time in Miami. This has enormous scale. And how this kid in La Bonita ends up causing the pandemonium to tip over Miami to me is a very interesting story to tell.

This interview was conducted during FX’s portion of the Television Critics Association (TCA) press tour.

AMERICAN CRIME STORY: Writer Tom Rob Smith on THE ASSASSINATION OF GIANNI VERSACE – Exclusive Interview

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The Culture Gabfest “Nobody Bonks Me on the Head With a Baguette” Edition

This week, the critics discuss Season 2 of Ryan Murphy’s true-crime series American Crime Story, which stars Édgar Ramírez as Gianni Versace, Penélope Cruz as Donatella Versace, and Darren Criss as Andrew Cunanan. How does it stack up against the critically acclaimed first season, The People v. O. J. Simpson?

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is the Apotheosis of Ryan Murphy

When the news surfaced that American Crime Story’s debut season would tackle the O.J. Simpson trial, adapting Jeffrey Toobin’s book The Run of His Life, Ryan Murphy hardly seemed to be the ideal shepherd, given his long standing penchant for sensationalism, debauchery, and razor’s edge manipulation of stereotypes, for the most polarizing criminal trial in living American history.

Against all odds and conventional wisdom, the season was a spectacular success that the set the stage for the re-litigation of every media sensation of the 1990s from the Menedez Brothers and the rivalry between Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan to the subject of the long awaited second season: the murder of Gianni Versace. Key to The People Vs OJ’s success was the diminishment of Murphy’s sensibilities in favor of black voices, like director Anthony Hemmingway, and most notably in “The Race Card” episode helmed by John Singleton and scripted by Black Panther screenwriter Joe Robert Cole. The episode contributed more than any other towards a recontextualization of the trial and the racial dynamics of post Rodney King Los Angeles for the generation grappling with the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The debut of The Assassination of Gianni Versace is, in essence, a complete inversion of what made The People Vs OJ a success. From the shifting focus from suspect to victim to swapping LA for Miami, and a central figure who evaded identification with the marginalized group he was a part of to a central figure within it, the discontinuity is striking. What amplifies that effect and makes The Assassination of Gianni Versace a truly distinct entity from The People Vs OJ is that instead of holding his natural inclinations back, Murphy has found the ideal canvas for his masterpiece.

Instead of employing stylistic tics or callbacks to create a sense of continuity or familiarity between the two seasons, Murphy enacts a hard break by employing Francis Ford Coppola and Brian De Palma as the foundational influences that Murphy subverts and ultimately queers. The story of Gianni Versace, as seen through the eyes of Murphy and his collaborators is as much a meditation on the myth of the American dream as The Godfather and Scarface, both of which they leverage in constructing the fashion mogul’s world.

The first episode opens with Versace waking up, ensconced by a rococo inspired decor, clothed in a bright pink robe, and accompanied by a swelling, operatic score. The camera lingers over the architecture that shifts to a procession of more typically Italian styles reaching back to the neo classical. Versace is constructed in all the same grandeur using all the same devices as Coppola used to lift the Corleones into mythic status, but the preponderance of crane shots and the ostentatiousness of it all are where De Palma emerges in the episode’s visual grammar.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is explicitly an Italian-American immigrant story evoked through the iconography of his home country that Versace wove into his home and business, but it’s also the end of a rapid ascent into the dizzying heights of the American dream whose cartoonishness frequently equals Scarface‘s Tony Montana, the peak of 1980s hyper consumption as a film aesthetic. Instead of Montana’s infamous neon lit globe, Versace’s ego expresses itself as his famous Medusa headed logo, working it and its border into every aspect of his life, from the elastic band on his briefs and his slippers to the tiled floors and wrought iron gates of his home.

Before he died, Versace harnessed America to reinvent himself as a modern figure equal to a Medici, but despite the lavishness of his interior life, he’s depicted as a provincial, nearly anonymous lord in public, shedding the robe and slippers for nondescript sunglasses, a black top whose embossed logo is barely visible, and shorts. It’s a construction of Versace himself as a microcosm, but it also goes on to define the public/private bifurcation of queer life that held sway over the 1990s.

Darren Criss, as Versace’s murderer Andrew Cunanan, embodies the most dangerous of all possible outcomes of the twilight existence of queerness in the 1990s, an iteration of the charismatic con man that has been a staple of gay narratives from Patricia Highsmith’s The Talented Mr. Ripley to Steven Jay Russell, the subject of the Jim Carrey vehicle I Love You, Phillip Morris. Criss as Cunanan is an embodiment in line with the former, taking on the role of a chameleon who “tells people what they want to hear,” or as a frustrated lover claims, tells gay people he’s gay and straight people he’s straight, leaving the impression of being a complete artifice.

Cunanan’s disturbing fixation on Versace leading up to the murder, told in successive flashbacks, is where the other element of the De Palma influence comes into play as Murphy weaves their tightening orbit into his own queering of the quintessential De Palma erotic thriller typified by Body Double, Dressed to Kill, Raising Caine, Femme Fatale, and Passion. It’s a queering that Murphy has honed more or less in parallel to Hannibal showrunner Bryan Fuller.

Criss, despite being part of a star-studded cast whose crown jewels are Edgar Ramirez as Versace and Penelope Cruz as his sister and ostensible heir Donatella, unquestionably delivers the breakout performance, more or less playing a different character in every scene. It’s a remarkable evolution for an actor best known for a banal stint on Glee, fleshing out a musical supervillain pioneered by Neil Patrick Harris, and copyright infringing musicals executed with his college classmates. What elevates Criss’ performance isn’t that he leans into every fraudulent identity that Cunanan adopts, its how he tackles the ebb and flow of Cunanan’s manic swings, throwing himself bodily into it.

A series based on a murder spree that included the very public shooting of a major public figure is in some respects an odd, if not outright questionable choice to frame as an erotic thriller in the context of the Pulse shooting in Orlando and the slowly closing fist of the Trump administration, seconded by the man responsible for triggering an AIDS epidemic in Indiana, but such is the uncharacteristic nuance of Murphy and the rapidly evolving conception of queer pain and death in American film and television.

Despite the raging debate around the “bury your gays” trope, queer film has been focused on harnessing and reclaiming and recontextualizing the ravages of the AIDS crisis through And the Band Played On, The Normal Heart, and BPM in tandem with coming of age dramas like Pariah, Moonlight, and Call Me By Your Name. In a sense, The Assassination of Gianni Versace shares tragedy and death as a common marker with contemporary AIDS crisis chronicles, but Murphy and company break away from that emerging movement by framing Versace as a martyr and presenting the show as much as an opportunity to celebrate his impact on fashion and queer aesthetics as it is a mourning of his passing.

In probably the most productive execution of his love of camp and melodrama ever seen, Murphy builds a conception of Versace as a martyred saint of the gay world by mining the Catholicism inherent in Versace’s nationality. The most striking and seemingly absurd example, the simultaneous death of a dove from a bullet fragment, is true except for its whiteness. A mourning pigeon was, in reality, killed along with Versace, but the show exploits the potential symbolism of a snow white dove, laid out parallel to Versace in the morgue, drawing an inescapable symbolic link with the Holy Spirit, frequently depicted as a dove in catholic art and literature. Another key instance is a complete fabrication, Versace’s partner Antonio D’Amico, played by Ricky Martin, holding his limp body in his arms in imitation of the Pieta.

Fighting neck and neck with the dead dove for the most daringly absurd allegory in the episode is a woman who Gianni had previously, politely, turned down for an autograph tearing a Versace ad out of an issue of Vogue and racing under the police tape to sop up some of his blood off the steps before racing back to her husband, expectantly holding open a ziplock bag for it. It’s a heady intersection of the borderline heretical cult of saints in Catholocism and the secular, yet sometimes equally ecstatic cult of celebrity that was truly exploding at the time. The sequence seals Murphy’s case for Versace as a martyred saint, but it may also be the purest distillation of what informs Murphy as a writer and a director, encompassing his fixations on celebrity, ostentatious wealth, the gothic, and religious transgression in a few perfectly structured seconds.

These motifs are the strongest forms of the discontinuity between seasons, establishing the more fanciful, idealized tone relative to The People Vs OJ, but also clearly defining the series as a celebration of Versace as a larger than life figure, rather than a maudlin fixation on the irrationality of his death, placing it adjacent to Dome Karukoski’s Tom of Finland.

The debut episode lays out a rich tapestry with many threads to pull on as the season continues, most notably Penelope Cruz’s arresting, irony free portrayal of Donatella, circling the narrative back around to Coppola’s looming shadow and thoughts of how power, prestige, and family intertwine in the Italian imagination. “Now is not the time for strangers,” she opines at a family meeting addressing the ultimately aborted transformation into a public company, “now is the time for family.” The scene ends with a slow pan out from her fingers wrapped tightly around a wrought iron railing topped with her brother’s dominant motif into the tiled courtyard, signaling that she is just as much a power fantasy as her brother was.

Cruz as Donatella Versace does more than leave a window open for feminine fantasy in the fantastical, fundamentally queer world of the show, however. She serves as a startling and explicit embodiment of the family’s impact, arriving in an outfit that makes plain just how formative of an influence Donatella was on Lady Gaga’s overall look and dominant silhouette long before the two met and collaborated. That metafictional dynamic also comes into sharp and incredibly poignant relief with the inclusion of Ricky Martin as D’Amico, who takes on the role as a publicly out and embraced gay man in 2018, recreating events in the mid to late 1990s when his sexuality was a constant topic of tabloid speculation and cruel homophobic jeers.

What absolutely has to be understood, celebrated, and duplicated about The Assassination of Gianni Versace is that it’s a queer centric exploration of queer culture that is unambiguous and unapologetic in its embrace of itself. As much as the flowering of supporting characters like Riverdale’s Kevin Keller into powerful and consequential figures represent a kind of progress and an outlet that should continue to be pursued, we need to continue to push for narratives that privilege and center queer lives, communities, and modes of being.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is an unprecedented opportunity to once and for all reject the notion of queer narratives as niche productions, narrow in scope and inconsequential in viewership. It offers the tantalizing chance at a vindication that queer lives and queer culture are as rich, idiosyncratic, and deserving of center stage as its tragic hero was.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is the Apotheosis of Ryan Murphy

Why’d It Take Us This Long To Catch Onto Darren Criss?

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This month, FX premiered its long-awaited sequel to 2016’s cultural event, The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story. There was a lot riding on The Assassination of Gianni Versace. Season 1 of the Ryan Murphy anthology series didn’t just show up during awards season. It dominated awards shows while becoming a must-watch show. The Versace season of American Crime Story may not have the culturally-halting effect of the O.J. Simpson season of the show, but it does have something remarkable we need to discuss. Versace has finally given Darren Criss a place to shine.

If you’re a little late to one of the first must-see TV events of the year, Criss plays the serial killer Andrew Cunanan in what is arguably one of the most complicated roles Murphy and his team has ever created. Versace‘s version of Cunanan is very similar to Maureen Orth’s depiction of the murderer in nonfiction book Vulgar Favors. This portrayal paints Cunanan as a charming killer who cannot be trusted as long as his lips are moving. There’s a sensuality to the character, a characterization that aligns with his status as a male escort but also stands as an overt depiction of raw sexuality that LGBT characters are rarely allowed to display on TV. There’s a danger to every move he makes and every lie he tells, but underneath that danger is a sort of manic, self-hating energy, some nebulous thing that immediately signals to the reader or viewer that this character is not well. And on top of all of these things, in Versace the Cunanan character has to be able to carry the story while competing against stronger, more established characters like Gianni Versace and Donatella Versace. This means holding his own against great performances from Edgar Ramirez, Penélope Cruz, and Ricky Martinall without becoming too sympathetic. As history reminds us, Andrew Cunanan murdered five people before killing himself. Even in the middle of a miniseries where he is cast as a protagonist, Cunanan should never be hailed as a hero.

And yet after watching the first eight episodes of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, Criss has been able to balance all of these conflicting and complicated themes beautifully.

There are many roads that led to Criss being the perfect choice to portray Andrew Cunanan. The actor’s biggest break actually came from Ryan Murphy, a show creator who is now partially known for collecting his favorite actors and actresses. After Criss starred in an arc on the ABC show Eastwick, Murphy cast the musically-inclined actor as Glee‘s Blaine, a character who quickly become a major love interest for Kurt (Chris Colfer). After his five-year run on Glee, Criss went on to portray another influential LGBT character, the lead and titular character in Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Criss and Cunanan are both relatively the same age and look similarly. Cunanan killed himself when he was 27 years old, and Criss is currently 30. Both are even half Filipino. There are a shocking amount of similarities, especially when you consider Criss is now living a life Cunanan always craved.

But more than perhaps anything else, Criss is an actor who was almost destined to happen. Before being a YouTube star was an actual profession, Criss’ work made an impression on the platform. Through StarKid Productions, a musical theater company Criss co-founded along with some University of Michigan classmates, Criss’ name was attached to two of the biggest amateur musicals to grace YouTube — Me and My Dick and A Very Potter Musical. Part 1 of Me and My Dickcurrently has over 1.8 million views and scored a place on the Billboard 200 charts. A Very Potter Musical has over 14 million views and two sequels. That’s not all. Criss’ version of “Teenage Dream” for Glee earned a place on the Billboard Hot 100 for a period of time and is still regarded as one of the best songs from that song-filled show. That’s not even mentioning the fact that Criss’ run as J. Pierrepont Finch in the Broadway revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying — a role he somewhat ironically took over from Daniel Radcliffe — made a shocking $4 million. Darren Criss was going to happen.

So what’s taken us so long? It seems to be a combination of lack of roles on creators’ part and lack of interest from Criss. The actor was on Gleeuntil 2015 and part of the traveling tour of Hedwiguntil later 2016. He’s been busy, and we as audineces have had a million other projects to pay attention to. However, now the actor has the time, the platform, the intricate role, and the guiding creator to become a household name.

It’s time for us all to embrace how incredibly talented (and incredibly creepy) Darren Criss is. If you’ve been a longtime Criss fan, congratulations. Your time has come. As for everyone else, welcome to the club.

Why’d It Take Us This Long To Catch Onto Darren Criss?

Past Tense, Pretense, and Conditional Tense in “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” – Libretto for a Tragicomedy

musexmoirai:

For anyone who wants an extremely long, overly wordy, somewhat pretentious deep dive into the premiere episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, please enjoy this thing I wrote. Can’t wait for the second episode!

I’m plugging this great in-depth analysis on episode 1 by frequent collaborator and contributor musexmoirai (with some input from yours truly). Give it a read and leave your thoughts!

Past Tense, Pretense, and Conditional Tense in “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” – Libretto for a Tragicomedy