Playing the iconic, ill-fated fashion designer Gianni Versace, who was slain by a serial killer in 1997, was a “profound, transformative life experience,” says Edgar Ramirez. But it was the themes of prejudice and homophobia in FX’s “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” that really resonated for the Venezuelan-born actor, who on Thursday earned a supporting actor Emmy nomination for his work.
Where are we catching you?
I’m in Atlanta. I’m shooting a movie here. It’s hot. We’re one week away from shooting and in rehearsals right now. This was just such a surprise, honestly. I was trying not to think too much about it in the days leading up to it, because you never know. You can’t obsess about these things, but when they happen, you celebrate the fact that the show got so much beautiful recognition. I’m very, very happy.
Why was playing Versace such a profound experience, as you’ve called it?
It not only allowed me to portray one of the most fascinating characters ever, but it also allowed me to meet some of the most important people in my life now. People who are now family, and that is beautiful. It was also one of those roles, those characters, that brings so much to you. What I love is the complexity of the show, the different layers that the show has. And that’s something that doesn’t happen every day.
The undercurrent of the series is really about homophobia. How does that idea intersect with the search for Andrew Cunanan, the serial killer who murdered Versace?
We have to remember that America in the late ’90s was all about “Don’t ask, don’t tell” — Bill Clinton’s solution to the gay issue. And when you look at the story of this serial killer, the search to find him, the effort to understand what he was up to and what he might do next, what comes up over and over again is this denial of sexuality. And the almost refusal to acknowledge that there was a gay world out there. It played against the efforts to find this guy.
How relevant is the show, those social dynamics, today — is homophobia something you worry about, given the increasingly conservative Supreme Court?
Of course, of course. Clearly. Any type of discrimination or overlooking the rights of any individual, any citizen, is very worrisome. And that’s what makes this show so relevant — it was 20 years ago, and yet we see signs of new forms of discrimination, a political climate where discriminating is becoming a normalized thing. And that is something that is very worrisome. And it’s something that’s very global, it’s all over the world. This show is a good way to revisit history, to see how things were in order to prevent them. So that history doesn’t repeat itself.
The show addresses different forms of homophobia, which isn’t always this open, raging sentiment, as you’ve said, but often a quieter, internalized, and in some ways an even more dangerous thing. Can you elaborate on that?
It’s a lack of knowledge. A lack of contact. That’s the internalized homophobia. It was almost a refusal that was, maybe not an angry, but was a total lack of knowledge that there was a gay culture out there. It’s not the same, today; but of course there’s a lot of work ahead of us and there’s an urgent need to protect the rights of individuals that have been [established] so far. Language is important, the rules of engagement are important, in order for us to coexist respecting and accepting each other. If we foster an environment where we’re allowed to discriminate, then words will be easily turned into action. We’ve seen that in the past. And that’s what’s worrisome.
You went through quite a transformation to play Versace — prosthetics, you gained 20 pounds. What was that like and did the physicality help you connect with, and better channel, Versace?
When I saw myself for the first time it was kind of shocking; I hadn’t really worked with prosthetics before. I was afraid it would look fake. But it was a matter of time and I got used to it. And it did help me embody the role. I do believe in physical transformation a lot. If you feel it in your body, then the character grows in — or out of — you.
Are you fashion conscious yourself?
Well, I don’t follow it to the letter, but I’m not a stranger to it. I pay attention. I have friends in the fashion industry. My style? You gotta be comfortable. I believe in classic pieces, but I also like to play around and have fun.
Tag: los angeles times

latimes_entertainment: Swipe for some of this year’s first-time Emmy nominees! #Emmys
latimesent: “People always ask, ‘What’s it’s like to play a spree killer?’ If you boil it down to just that, that’s not who he was. It’s what we know him for.“ – @DarrenCriss on playing #ACSVersace’s real-life murderer lat.ms/2tm9L01
[UHQ] Darren Criss, Judith Light, Edgar Ramirez and Ricky Martin in the June 21st issue of the Los Angeles Times
‘Assassination of Gianni Versace’ delves into the mind of a killer — and societal prejudice
“American Crime Story,” one of the anthology series from Ryan Murphy’s oeuvre, had a splashy launch in 2016 with its focus on the highly visible O.J. Simpson murder trial — its review of charged, prescient themes like systemic racism, sexism and media culture translated into ratings success and award show acclaim. This year’s follow-up to the FX franchise, titled “The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” set its sights on a case that grabbed headlines but whose societal imprint hadn’t generated nearly the same examination.
The second season focused on the mysterious backstory of spree killer Andrew Cunanan, a gay gigolo and prolific liar who killed four men before his infamous 1997 murder of groundbreaking Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace — one of the few openly gay celebrities of that time. (Cunanan, 27 at the time of Versace’s murder, would kill himself days later.)
In the midst of unpacking all of that, the drama presented a striking portrait of homophobia in the 1990s by examining the injustice that was steeped in societal prejudice — particularly in regards to how police officials handled the case — and the toll of hate, from outside and within.
“The underlying theme was homophobia,” said Edgar Ramirez, who played Versace. “The show talks about the open and raging political homophobia on one side, and it also talks about the internalized — and even more dangerous — homophobia within. What I love about this whole project is how, almost in the likes of a Greek tragedy, it touches upon subjects that are important and that are culturally and socially relevant today more than ever.”
In addition to Ramirez, the ensemble cast included Darren Criss as Cunanan, singer Ricky Martin as Versace’s longtime boyfriend, Antonio D’Amico, and Penélope Cruz as Versace’s sister and design partner, Donatella.
The dramatization is based on the book “Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History” by journalist Maureen Orth and begins with Cunanan gunning down Versace on the front steps of his lavish Miami Beach home before pivoting into a reverse chronological narrative as a means of studying Cunanan’s psyche and motives.
Criss, who before “Versace” had largely been known for his bright-eyed turn in Murphy’s musical series, “Glee,” was struck by the psychological mapping the role required.
“There’s a lot of different ways we could have written Andrew, because there’s a lot of different ways anybody can glean who he was or what really made him tick,“ Criss said. “People always ask, ‘What’s it’s like to play a spree killer?’ If you boil it down to just that, that’s not who he was. It’s what we know him for. But if you think of all the worst things that anybody’s ever done in their life, the amount of time they spent doing that horrible thing is in the severe minority of the infinite minutes, hours, seconds, moments of their life. Again, I’m not saying this by any means exonerates him from those horrible minutes of his life, but it does beg the attention of the other moments.”
Even before it premiered in January, the drama was denounced by those close to Versace. D’Amico came down hard on the drama after photos from the series leaked online saying the production was taking too much poetic license with its interpretation of events; and Versace’s family, in a statement, referred to the series as a “work of fiction” and noted they were not involved in the making of it.
That’s not to say Cruz and Martin — the only main cast members playing real life people who are still alive — didn’t have contact with Donatella and D’Amico, respectively.
“If [Donatella] would have told me, ‘I don’t want you to this,’ I don’t think I could have done it,” Cruz said, “because I am playing somebody who is real and it’s about this tragedy that happened to her brother. But she said if somebody was going to play her, she was happy it was going to be me. She said, ‘Ask me anything you want.’ We talked for about an hour.”
Martin used his conversations with D’Amico as an opportunity for emotional guidance. “I just asked a bunch of questions: ‘What did you feel when you were being interrogated? How did you feel when [Versace] came out and he acknowledged you for the first time as his partner?’ He was so generous, but once again, it was difficult for me to ask the questions because I know I was bringing him to places that he hadn’t been in 20 years. But he was very open.”
While Versace’s name brings heft to the narrative, the drama was just as invested in bringing attention to Cunanan’s lesser-known victims — Gulf War veteran and Cunanan’s good friend Jeffrey Trail; architect and Cunanan’s unrequited love David Madson; real estate mogul Lee Miglin; and cemetery caretaker William Reese — and the people whose lives were affected by those murders.
One performance that drew attention was Judith Light’s portrayal of beauty product empress Marilyn Miglin, the wife of Cunanan’s third murder victim. "A Random Killing,” the third episode of the season, suggests that Cunanan was a paid escort who had a relationship with Lee (played by Mike Farrell) and killed him while his wife was out of town on business. (The Miglin family has denied that Lee ever met Cunanan.)
Light says she hadn’t known much about Cunanan’s killings prior to joining the series. But she remembers the ethos of the time distinctly.
“I didn’t really know much about Cunanan’s prior victims,” she said. “So I wasn’t too familiar with the Miglin case. I remember the Versace killing, and I remember it was a very powerful, visceral experience. One of the most important factors in watching this is to see that, to whatever degree, we still have that [homophobia] going on in our culture.”
That function as a sociological yearbook is ultimately what binds “Versace” to “The People v. O.J. Simpson.”
“They’re very different stories,” Criss said. “But they’re excellent examinations of a time period that allows a certain thing to happen, which ends up being a crime — but how that crime affects the social landscape is also a crime.”
‘Assassination of Gianni Versace’ delves into the mind of a killer — and societal prejudice
A case for ‘Twin Peaks’ and twin nominations for Laura Dern and Jeff Daniels
“Big Little Lies” and “Feud: Bette and Joan” made the limited series Emmy categories the races to watch last year, offering a wealth of first-rate acting and entertaining and intimate moments. This year’s races don’t quite offer the same appeal, though my dream — and, yeah, it’s a surreal one containing plenty of low-frequency ambient noise — is that David Lynch will finally win a trophy on prime-time television. What would he say? Would Candie, Mandie and Sandie accompany him to the stage? Emmy voters: Make this happen!
In the meantime, biding time in the Black Lodge, let’s offer a few thoughts on this year’s primary limited series categories.
LIMITED SERIES
“Twin Peaks”
“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”
“The Looming Tower”
“Godless”
“Howards End”
Possible spoilers: “Genius: Picasso,” “Patrick Melrose,” “American Vandal,” “Top of the Lake: China Girl”
In the mix: “The Sinner,” “The Alienist,” “Alias Grace,” “The Terror,” “Waco”
Analysis: I’ll wait until after the nominations before embarking on a full-court-press hard sell for “Twin Peaks.” “Versace” figures to be its primary competition; it’s an ambitious and often alienating follow-up to the Emmy-winning “The People v. O.J. Simpson” that was less about the titular event and more a look at the heartbreaking harm of homophobia on a national and personal scale. It was lurid, uneven and often inert, but also a fascinating depiction of what it was like to be gay in America in the ’90s. It will be interesting to see just how deeply voters invest in Ryan Murphy’s divisive series.
LEAD ACTOR, LIMITED SERIES/MOVIE
Darren Criss, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”
Kyle MacLachlan, “Twin Peaks”
Al Pacino, “Paterno”
Benedict Cumberbatch, “Patrick Melrose”
Jeff Daniels, “The Looming Tower"
Michael B. Jordan, “Fahrenheit 451”
Possible spoilers: Antonio Banderas, “Genius: Picasso”; Jesse Plemons, “Black Mirror: USS Callister”
In the mix: Daniel Brühl, “The Alienist”; Evan Peters, “American Horror Story: Cult”; Matthew Macfadyen, “Howards End”; Jared Harris, “The Terror”; Taylor Kitsch, “Waco”
Analysis: Daniels has been on a phenomenal run since Aaron Sorkin cast him in the Emmy-winning “The Newsroom” six years ago. He figures to pull in two Emmy nominations this year — here for his turn on “The Looming Tower” as the FBI investigator tracking Osama bin Laden and over in supporting for playing a trigger-happy outlaw on Netflix’s “Godless.” (Laura Dern, another national treasure, figures to pull off an Emmy double-dip of her own for “Twin Peaks” and “The Tale.”)
Daniels is one certainty in a competitive category that doesn’t lack big names and outsized performances. “Paterno” wasn’t anything special, but Pacino was convincing in the way he humanized the disgraced Penn State football coach without excusing his complicity in the child sex abuse scandal that rocked the school. He’s in, as are Cumberbatch, Criss, the electrifying MacLachlan and probably Jordan for his expressive turn in “Fahrenheit 451.”
SUPPORTING ACTRESS, LIMITED SERIES/MOVIE
Laura Dern, “Twin Peaks”
Nicole Kidman, “Top of the Lake: China Girl”
Penélope Cruz, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace”
Judith Light, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace”
Merritt Wever, “Godless”
Angela Lansbury, “Little Women”
Possible spoilers: Naomi Watts, “Twin Peaks”; Jennifer Jason Leigh, “Patrick Melrose”; Ellen Burstyn, “The Tale”
In the mix: Julia Ormond, “Howards End”; Elizabeth Debicki, “The Tale”; Philippa Coulthard, “Howards End”; Tracey Ullman, “Howards End”; Sharon Stone, “Mosaic”
Analysis: Betty White was 92 when she earned her last Emmy nomination in 2014 for hosting “Betty White’s Off Their Rockers.” Lansbury, who turned 92 in October, would join her as the oldest Emmy nominee for her turn as Aunt March in the BBC production of “Little Women,” which aired on PBS’ “Masterpiece.” Lansbury has hinted it might be her final role. She has 18 previous Emmy nominations — 12 for “Murder, She Wrote” — but has never won. Playing the opinionated matriarch, Lansbury was dependably amusing and a complete joy to watch. Who wouldn’t want to see her finally win?
SUPPORTING ACTOR, LIMITED SERIES/MOVIE
Jeff Daniels, “Godless”
Edgar Ramirez, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”
Michael Shannon, “Fahrenheit 451”
Michael Stuhlbarg, “The Looming Tower”
Peter Sarsgaard, “The Looming Tower”
Ricky Martin, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”
Possible spoilers: Bill Camp, “The Looming Tower”; Brandon Victor Dixon, “Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert”; Jason Ritter, “The Tale”; Sam Waterston, “Godless”
In the mix: Bill Pullman, “The Sinner”; Tahar Rahim, “The Looming Tower”; Scoot McNairy, “Godless”; T.R. Knight, “Genius: Picasso”; Hugo Weaving, “Patrick Melrose”; Cody Fern, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”
Analysis: After Daniels and Shannon, this category comes down to a question of voters sifting through the members of the “Looming Tower” and “Versace” ensembles, with Dixon being a wild card for his intense portrayal of Judas on “Superstar.” (The mesh glitter top costume will fix him in many voters’ minds.) Choosing among Sarsgaard, Stuhlbarg, Camp and Rahim for “Looming Tower” is impossible, but Rahim — a star in his native France who has worked with filmmakers Asghar Farhadi and Jacques Audiard — deserves special mention for providing the series its moral center.
A case for ‘Twin Peaks’ and twin nominations for Laura Dern and Jeff Daniels
‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ and ‘black-ish’ lead our 2018 Emmys buzzmeter
It’s the year(s) of Peak TV when there’s so much quality programming on the air that it seems there’s just never enough time to watch everything. All of which makes the Emmys a confusing time for many. How can you know what series might rise above the others come awards time if you haven’t seen them all? That’s exactly why we have a panel of professionals to guide you through it. Here, our Buzzmeter experts tell us what they think will stand out in 14 key Emmy categories come nomination day July 12. Have other suggestions? Let us know in the comments.
Our panelists:
Lorraine Ali/Los Angeles Times; Tom O’Neil/Gold Derby; Matt Roush/TV Guide; Glenn Whipp/The Envelope
Their picks in the key categories:
Limited series frontrunners: ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ | ‘Looming Tower’ | ‘Godless’
“Ryan Murphy’s adventurous study of a gay psychopath, told in reverse chronology, was unexpectedly fascinating and unsettling. But in terms of pure entertainment, how I loved the female-driven Western shenanigans of ‘Godless.’” –Matt Roush
Critics’ Picks
“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
“Twin Peaks: The Return”: Glenn, Matt, Tom
“Looming Tower”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
“Howards End”: Glenn, Matt, Tom
“Godless”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
“Genius: Picasso”: Lorraine
”Alias Grace”: Lorraine
”The Terror”: Lorraine
Limited series actor frontrunners: Kyle MacLachlan, ‘Twin Peaks’ | Darren Criss, ‘Versace’ | Al Pacino, ‘Paterno’ | Michael B. Jordan, ‘Fahrenheit 451’
“Traditionally, this category is claimed by big movie stars like Al Pacino, who won twice (2004, 2010), but recent champs have been appealing newcomers like Riz Ahmed and Courtney B. Vance. That’s good news for Darren Criss.” –Tom O’Neill
Critics’ Picks
Kyle MacLachlan, “Twin Peaks”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
Darren Criss, “Versace”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
Al Pacino, “Paterno”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
Jeff Daniels, “The Looming Tower”: Glenn, Matt, Tom
Benedict Cumberbatch, “Patrick Melrose”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine
Michael B. Jordan, “Fahrenheit 451”: Glenn, Matt, Lorraine, Tom
Antonio Banderas, “Genius: Picasso”: Lorraine, Tom
‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ and ‘black-ish’ lead our 2018 Emmys buzzmeter












