Emmy spotlight: Judith Light deserves overdue trophy for ‘tour de force’ performance in ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’

Judith Light makes only two appearances in FX’s “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story.” But boy, does she make an impact, especially in the season’s third episode, giving what Joe Reid (Decider) called “one of the all-time best single-episode performances in a Ryan Murphy series.” It’s a performance that deserves to be recognized at this year’s Emmys, and could bring the veteran Tony and Daytime Emmy-winning actress an overdue first win at the Primetime ceremony.

In the season’s third episode, “A Random Killing,” Light plays Marilyn Miglin, a high-profile cosmetics mogul whose husband Lee (Mike Farrell), a prominent developer and philanthropist, was brutally murdered by Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) in the months leading up to Cunanan murdering famed designer Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez). The Miglins were well-known Chicago socialites, and their marriage is portrayed as one of deep love and mutual respect. However, Lee is also a closeted gay man who regularly hires Cunanan as an escort when Marilyn is out of town.

Though Lee’s brutal murder is the key plot point of the episode, it is Light who resonates, giving a richly layered performance that alternates between stoic anger and deep pain. While it is never clear whether or not Marilyn was aware of Lee’s sexual proclivities, she refuses to allow her husband’s name to be tainted by scandal, and she uses her connections in the police department to squash the embarrassing details of Lee’s death, insisting that Cunanan was nothing more than a common thief and murderer.

Sewell Chan (The New York Times) called the episode “a tour de force [for] Judith Light, whose portrayal of a wife in denial is simply magnificent.” And he’s right. “A Random Killing” gives Light one Emmy-worthy moment after another, beginning with the episode’s cold open, which shows Marilyn’s chilling reaction to the discovery of Lee’s body, a simple mouthing of the words, “I knew it.” Later, when explaining her decision to keep the details of Lee’s death under wraps, she proclaims with equal parts heartbreak and venom, “Dollars, jewelry, socks, suits — that’s all I’ll allow that man to steal from me. He won’t steal my good name. Our good name.” What is Marilyn is trying to protect more: her family’s reputation or the now-shattered illusion of her fairy-tale marriage?

But Light also gets to show Marilyn’s grief in a devastating monologue in which she describes her relationship with Lee — their adventures and their accomplishments, the respect they felt for each other. When she finally breaks down in sobs after being questioned about her lack of public grief, she cries, “Am I a real wife now?” The episode ends with Marilyn selling her cosmetics on The Home Shopping Network and addresses her husband’s murder on air. As the camera slowly zooms in on her, Light delivers a devastating monologue about love and loss, listing all of the things that her husband was to her, that they were a team. “How many husbands believe in their wives’ dreams?” she asks. The episode ends in a close up of Light’s face as she closes her eyes, a moment of stunning emotional impact.

Although Light is no stranger to awards — having won Featured Actress Tony Awards for “Other Desert Cities” (2012) and “The Assembled Parties” (2013), and two Daytime Emmys for her iconic role as Karen Wolek on “One Life to Live” (1980, 1981) — she has gone zero for three at the Primetime Emmys, earning a Comedy Guest Actress nomination in 2007 for “Ugly Betty” and nominations in 2016 and 2017 for Comedy Supporting Actress for “Transparent.” Light’s status as a respected veteran can only help her in the Movie/Mini Supporting Actress category at the Emmys, which counts among its winners such respected actresses as Mary Tyler Moore (1993), Vanessa Redgrave (2000), and Eileen Atkins (2008), as well as Jessica Lange (2012) and Kathy Bates (2014), both whom won for their performances in separate seasons of “American Horror Story,” also created by Ryan Murphy.

Emmy spotlight: Judith Light deserves overdue trophy for ‘tour de force’ performance in ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’


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The Assassination of Gianni Versace

SPOILERS! Ryan Murphy’s second season of American Crime Story came to a tragic conclusion. What did you think? Come join us! | 25 March 2018

The Assassination of Gianni Versace finale recap: Alone

This season of American Crime Story was a drastic difference than the season preceding it. While many were not as informed about the assassination of Gianni Versace, the show did a phenomenal job of explaining the man behind the murder — and what made him who he was.

On Wednesday, the story came to close, taking us back to 1997 when Cunanan shot Versace in Miami. That haunting moment is instantly brought back as Cunanan approaches Versace on his doorsteps and shoots him point-blank execution style.

The finale focuses on how Cunanan evades the police and finds refuge in a houseboat on Collins Avenue that he breaks into. It is here where he spends his last days hiding out, watching the news talk about the manhunt focused on him. He spends his day listening to the radio and watching his family members and friends go on national television to share their thoughts about him and if they saw this coming.

This level of “celebrity” makes Cunanan happy and he celebrates by wrapping a scarf around his neck and flaunting around in excitement — he thinks he’s finally made it.

These moments are short-lived as the police inch closer and closer to discovering his whereabouts. The first place they go? His mother’s home, where she is pulled out of her apartment to be brought in for questioning as all of Miami is on the lookout for her son.

The authorities inform Marilyn Miglin (remember Lee?) that the man that shot Versace is the same man that murdered her husband. In their questioning, they also go to Ronnie who insults the police for not finding Cunanan earlier and stating that he was out in the open and wanted to be seen — they just didn’t look his way.

Much to Cunanan’s displeasure, he is unable to find a way out of Miami which inevitably leads him to the houseboat he takes over. He almost gets caught when he sneaks onto a boat and the owner comes in but manages to run away and watches the cops from the houseboat as they look around for an intruder. When push comes to shove Cunanan resorts to eating dog food and decides to call his father in the Philippines to get his help.

His dad tells him not to worry and that he will soon be on his way (despite the warrants out for his arrest). However, Andrew soon learns his father plans to bank on his newfound fame and sees him on the news talking about Andrew and how he plans to make a movie about Andrew’s life. At this point, Andrew truly feels alone and isolated in the world, trapped in the houseboat all alone.

The finale also closed the chapter on Versace’s life by showing Donatella and Antonio preparing for his funeral. Antonio learns that all of Versace’s properties are under the control of the board and he will soon be homeless — without Versace, the love of his life. Cunanan decides to tune in to watch Versace’s funeral which is taking place in Milan with guests like Princess Diana and Elton John in attendance.

At some point, a man enters the houseboat to check in on it only to realize someone is already inside. Cunanan hears him coming and shoots off his gun to scare the man away. Unfortunately, these are the last few moments of his life as the police begin to surround the home, demanding he come out.

Andrew walks into his room, gun in tow, and has a few moments of contemplation and even sees visions of his younger self, sitting next to him. The entire season comes down to this very moment, the man we have gotten to know, for all the good, the bad, and the unfortunate, is realizing where his actions have brought him.

When Cunanan refuses to surrender, the cops cut off the power and throw in smoke bombs to smoke him out. Unbeknownst to them, Cunanan decides to take matters into his own hands and shoots himself in the head. The somber moment switches to the conversation between Cunanan and Versace where Versace politely declines Andrew’s offer to spend more time together.

While Versace’s remains are placed in an altar in Lake Cuomo, Cunanan’s remains are placed in a mausoleum amongst many others. For a man that fought tooth and nail to gain attention, he finds his resting place lost amongst the crowd. What an ironic twist in his life, right?

This season was so extremely addicting to watch, and every moment was so pivotal to the character development of Andrew Cunanan. It was an intricately woven storyline that illustrated the life of a man who no one truly ever knew. The nod to the 90’s and homosexuality was a big theme in the season and highlighted the discrimination of the time. Darren Criss was hands down the standout performer of the season and his portrayal of Cunanan will be one for the books–hopefully Emmy books, right?

For many episodes of the season, he single-handedly took on most of the work and carried the show on his back. And while the season had its share of ups and downs, we will surely miss seeing Criss’ angsty manipulative portrayal of Cunanan.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace finale recap: Alone

Versace Killer Andrew Cunanan’s Suicide Depicted In ‘American Crime Story’ Season Finale

Andrew Cunanan’s story ends in Miami in 1997. Police cars roar through the night while Andrew hides in plain sight. Andrew breaks into an empty houseboat and drinks some champagne. On TV, newscasters mourn Gianni Versace. Andrew seems shocked by his own deeds when they anounce that he’s the prime suspect in the killing. Helicopters stalk the sky.

The wife of Lee Miglin, Andrew’s wealthiest victim, is interviewed by police. They tell her Versace’s death is connected to her husband’s. She furiously wonders what the police have been doing in the time between Lee’s murder and Versace’s. They attempt to evacuate her from Florida for her safety, but she refuses and demands security instead. She heads to work on her broadcast at a home shopping network.

The next day, Andrew steals a car. Police establish a perimeter and are checking all cars in the area. Andrew somehow manages to avoid the checks but ditches the stolen vehicle. He screams and screams and screams.

Andrew’s mother is also interviewed by police. She wonders aloud when they’ll kill Andrew. As day passes into night, a media circus swarms around her house. She’s taken by police for interrogation.

A drug dealer that Andrew had stayed with is taken into police custody. Police aggressively question him about Andrew’s whereabouts but he dodges questions and sasses the detectives.

“The other cops weren’t searching so hard, were they? Why is that? Because he killed a bunch of nobody gays?” he asks.

“You think this is a joke?” asks a cop.

“Is he a joke to you? The truth is you were disgusted by him long before he became disgusting,” the dealer retorts, assuring them that Andrew is not hiding. “He’s trying to be seen.”

Andrew attempts to steal a boat to get off the island. On TV, Lizzie (Andrew’s best friend) pleads for Andrew to turn himself in. Later, David Madson’s father, interviewed by some news network, wonders why his son wound up with such a heinous person.

In the Philippines, Pete Cunanan gets a call from Andrew. He says he’s coming to America to help his son. Pete reassures Andrew that everything will be OK.

“I’m out of time…” says Andrew as the payphone disconnects the two.

On TV, Pete denies that Andrew is a homosexual. He says that he’s been “manipulated” by older men. Pete bizarrely explains to newscasters that Andrew and he discussed a movie deal about their life stories. He tells the anchor he can not travel due to his own criminal record. Filled with rage, Andrew shoots the TV with his gun.

At Versace’s funeral, Donatella wonders what Versace’s boyfriend Antonio D’Amico will do now. She subtly tells Antonio that he will not be welcome at Versace’s homes. He begs Donatella to shelter him.

“I loved him, Donatella. He was my life. And suddenly I don’t matter. I don’t have a home. I have no rights. I have nothing,” he pleads. She does not demure.

Andrew watches the funeral on television. He drops to his knees and prays with the mourning family.

The next day, the owner of the houseboat arrives home. Andrew fires warning shots as he opens the door. SWAT teams gather around the houseboat. The walls literally begin shaking as helicopters circle the shelter. Police cut the power to the home and fire smoke bombs in an attempt to get Cunanan out.

Seeing a vision of himself as a child, Andrew reclines on a bed. He puts the gun in his mouth and fires. As the shot reverberates through the home, a memory plays: Cunanan is at the opera with Versace.

“It feels like destiny,” Andrew tells him as he leans in for a kiss.

“Another night, another stage,” says Versace as he dodges.

Andrew’s body is hauled off by police. Miglin’s wife, finally able to rest, discusses letters she receives from Lee’s proteges. She wonders why she never knew about his secret lives.

In Italy, Donatella admits that on the morning Gianni was killed she ignored a call from her brother. D’Amico swallows a pile of pills while Donatella lights candles for her deceased brother. A maid finds him unconscious while Donatella silently mourns.

The final shot is Andrew’s tomb, in a barely-marked mausoleum.

Creator/producer Ryan Murphy could have told the story of Andrew Cunanan, a plucky and drug-addicted gigolo, as comedy. But by portraying Andrew’s sordid tale as the cosmic interplay of ill-fated destinies, Murphy’s story ended like most tragedies do: in death and mourning. The seriousness of the series, which had been a matter of speculation for months before the show debuted, has been cemented with operatic gravity in the final episode.

Murphy also seals his series with some last statements on gay identity, tying up the through line of his anthology. D’Amico is left with nothing, as his marriage to Gianni was never legal. Pete’s denial of Andrew’s homosexuality only proves that Andrew’s life of lies was — in a way — necessary for his own survival. Miglin’s lost charities —which he needed to keep hidden from his wife — are left without their benefactor. Madson’s father wonders what troubles brewed beneath his murdered son’s perfect veneer.

Again, it would have been easy to portray Cunanan as some kind of grotesque joke, but Murphy’s depiction of both Andrew and his victims as sympathetic people in dire situations due to the cruelty of homophobia elevates what might have been a schlocky, neon-drenched massacre to higher levels. While we were promised a vampy story of the Versace family’s downfall, Murphy’s bait-and-switch allowed the auteur to explore uncharted territories of the gay zeitgeist.

Versace Killer Andrew Cunanan’s Suicide Depicted In ‘American Crime Story’ Season Finale

“ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”, Finale – Blog – The Film Experience

Episode 8: “Creator/ Destroyer”

Though the penultimate episode is a deeper origin story for Andrew, we open again a Versace vignette: their only appearance in the episode. But this one does not feature Edgar Ramirez, or Penelope Cruz. We see Gianni as a young boy in Italy, developing a passion for dressmaking. His mother is supportive enough to not only understand this passion, but fosters it. “You can do whatever you want in life, but you have to work for it.” Despite his classmates’ teasing and the repression of other adults, Gianni takes on the craft from his mother.

The show continues to make thematic connections between Andrew Cunanan and Gianni Versace, implying that their life paths and goals were remarkably similar. They are both immigrant stories chasing the American Dream against a system and a society that constantly looks down upon and underestimates them. They are two different sides of the same coin. I think the show is oversimplifying a much more complex issue and boiling it down to thematic parallels, but it is effective in the context of a somewhat fictional miniseries…

We then go to 1980s San Diego, to Andrew’s childhood. His family is moving into an up-and-coming neighborhood. His three older siblings and his mother are helping with the furniture, while Andrew reads a fashion magazine. We quickly see that he is given overt and outlandish special treatment by his father Modesto (played by Jon Jon Briones, in a remarkable one-episode showcase). Modesto has placed his dreams and ideals of success into Andrew: he is special, he deserves only the best, and the world owes it to him.

It is here where we see the origin of Andrew’s delusion about what he thinks his life should be, and his inextinguishable desire to attain the unattainable. It’s all he ever learned from his father. He was given the master bedroom while his other siblings had to share a single room. His father buys him a car before he is old enough to drive. He inherits this entitlement just as he would inherit the cycle of abuse toward his mother.

We can also trace Andrew’s magnetic charisma and talent of spinning lies into entrancing stories back to Modesto. There is another sequence that juxtaposes two interviews, replicating the device in episode five, where Versace’s coming out profile in The Advocate was paired with Jeff Trail’s CBS piece about the military. Andrew applies for the best private school in the state while his father applies for a job at Merrill-Lynch. Modesto sells his life story as the ultimate American Dream narrative: he was born in the Philippines, joined the U.S. army in hopes of moving there, and took himself and his family from poverty into one of the best neighborhoods. He sells himself as a success story, just like Andrew will do countless time in the future. The firm buys it, and hires him.

Andrew is also accepted into the school. But he is aware of the enormous pressure that this means for him and his family. His father only sees him in terms of potential, of how much money he will be able to earn, and what he will be able to achieve.

As his father is putting Andrew to bed, the series heavily implies that he constantly molested him, and that his favoritism and endearment for him had much deeper roots, and consequences. There is no real-life evidence that supports this claim that the show makes. It’s something that makes narrative sense and adds a layer of complexity to Andrew’s actions, but at the same time feels like an effort to justify them. Villains are scarier when we can’t understand them, and the show continues to make an effort to make us try to empathize with him.

We catch up with Andrew in high school. He is much closer to the charisma machine that we’ve come to know all these episodes. He’s fully in charge of the image he projects, not caring if the appears flamboyant, queer, or different. He’s just interested in appearing at all.

He has been keeping a secret relationship with an older man, that he desperately wants to make public. He dumps Andrew when he tries to take him to a high school party, which Andrew decides to attend on his own. As he walks through the sea of judgmental teenagers, he takes control of the dancefloor in the most head-turning red leather jumpsuit, fully aware that every glance in the room is upon him.

Feeling bad for him, Lizzie (the delightful Annaleigh Ashford returns again) joins him to try and save him. We see them striking up a real connection, until she has to confess that she is in fact a married woman who has tasked to chaperone this party. In a way, they are both putting up fronts. Andrew is intrigued with her. And what was perhaps his only true friendship starts then.

If the show has made something clear over and over, is that anything that flies too close to the sun will eventually crash and burn. The life that Modesto has made for himself and his family will crumble. He had been engaging in fraudulent stock investments for years. The police are now after him. In a matter of hours, he leaves his job and his family behind, running away to the Philippines.

Andrew refuses to believe that his father, this omniscient figure that has become the moral guiding light for every action that he has done or will do, would abandon them like that, with no plan. So he chases him down to the Philippines, and finds him hiding in the shed of an uncle he’s never met.

This final confrontation between Andrew and his father puts together all the themes of the show in a superbly acted showcase for both performers. It’s about immigrant sacrifice, it’s about the faults and privileges of the American Dream, it’s about abandoning your identity in pursuit of a better one, it’s about not being able to escape who you are and where you come from. It all escalates to a physical confrontation, in which Modesto dares Andrew to kill him, taunting him that he is not “man enough” to do it. Knowing that their relationship is now broken forever, Andrew returns to the U.S. He distances himself from his father, not realizing that he will still carry on everything he taught him for the rest of his life. He could not kill him.

In the last scene, Andrew applies for the job at the pharmacy that we saw him miserably working at the start of the last episode. When the manager asks him what his father does, Andrew tells him he owns pineapple plantations in the Philippines, shedding him from his life, but effectively becoming him, as well.

While last week’s episode felt satisfying in that it neatly tied all the plot points that we’ve seen through the show together, this week felt emotionally satisfying in offering a deeper look into Andrew’s psychology and motivations. The show’s tendency to portray him a victim of circumstance rather than someone fully accountable is questionable. But, as a character study, this is nevertheless an episode with plenty of nuance and outstanding moments.

Episode 9: “Alone”

On the season finale for the show, Andrew’s life finally gets to a crossroads that for once he can’t charm, con or murder his way out of. As we focus on the final day of his life, with the cops slowly encircling him until he decided to take his own life, we also see the lasting effects that his actions had on every character that he came across; and how he was left to die, as the title indicates, all alone.

The episode opens with Gianni Versace’s assassination. After eight previous backtracking episodes, we now understand the emotional baggage that led Andrew to the steps of that mansion, and suddenly that scene (which also opened the series), is charged with deeper meaning.

Andrew savors his “victory” for a few hours before his dire reality sets in. He struts around the city with a proud smirk on his face; he treats himself to a bottle of champagne. He then watches on TV that the police have successfully identified him, and for a moment, is also proud of that. But he now needs to be on the move.

He tries to leave Florida, but there’s a police checkpoint on every exit out of Miami Beach. In a first display of the desperation that would stick with him from then until his very end, he screams under a bridge, trapped and realizing he is being cornered. He stays at an empty boat for some time, and eventually breaks into a house that would become the place of his death.

From the moment he sees his face on television, to the final pull of the trigger, images of every person whose life he forever changed appear both to him and in separate scattered scenes for the audience. For him they are the ghosts of his past coming back to haunt him. For us, they are reminders that even though we’ve been watching mostly fractured, episodic and self-contained parts of this story, it’s all one whole narrative, where one action led to the next and its consequences rippled throughout.

We get the triumphant return of Judith Light as Marilyn Miglin. The FBI has tracked her down to Tampa to let her know that the man who killed Versace is also the main suspect in her husband’s murder. She is outraged at how the police is only starting to act now that a famous person was involved, even if they’ve had Andrew’s information for months.

This is a sentiment that has been brought up since the first episode through the various depictions of police negligence and incompetence, and it’s brought up again when Ronnie (Max Greenfield) is taken into custody and accused of protecting Andrew. Yes, they talked about Versace together, he says. All the time. They fantasized about having his life, about not being constantly overlooked and tossed to a corner.

The ghosts of his actions also appear to Andrew in the confinement he has created for himself. He catches Marilyn’s appearance in the Shopping Network, where she delivers yet another impassioned speech about creating a perfume for her mother. As she says this, we see the police barge into Andrew’s own mother’s house; another relationship he has destroyed.

Pictures of Jeff Trail and David Madson appear on television, in what is basically now a 24-hour news cycle coverage of the manhunt for Andrew. This is the only mention or appearance we get from them. This speaks to the act of turning victims of a serial killer into mere statistics, which the show actively tried to contradict by showing us their backstories. The fact that this is all the screen time they get makes this even more resonant; we know the people that they were.

Weaved through the episode it’s the Versace family dealing with Gianni’s sudden loss. Donatella and Antonio are two other people (along with Marilyn Miglin, and even his own mother) whose life Andrew indirectly and forever changed by the murders.

We see Antonio’s deep mourning and pain over the loss of his life partner, and Donatella’s steel front against it all. She needs to keep her composure, and take the reins of the company, like her brother pushed her to. We also see how the family dynamic is irreparably broken. Without Gianni, Donatella and Antonio have nothing to offer each other. Donatella goes as far as to refuse to let him stay in one of the Versace houses. “I’m sorry for your loss,” she tells him, as if they both had lost different people.

Andrew watches Versace’s funeral on television. The more time he spends trapped in this house, and with himself, the more confined the spaces feel, the sweatier he is, the more claustrophobic and suffocating the filmmaking became. Andrew takes in the grief of the packed cathedral, and grieves himself. He also watches Liz Cote give an on-air testimony about still caring for him, knowing that what he cares most is what other people think of him. Liz truly was the only person in Andrew’s life who ever made a true connection with him.

So then Andrew turns to his father for comfort. The man he tried so hard to deny and let go of on the last episode, but that eventually molded him into the man he became. He calls him in the Philippines, begging for help and rescue. Modesto says that he will be there immediately, charges against him be damned. He tells Andrew to be ready. He has a plan, the plan Andrew always knew and wished he had.

But then Modesto appears on Andrew’s television, bragging about the way he raised him, sharing intimate details about his childhood, saying that he will sell Andrew’s life rights to Hollywood (an ironic statement in a series made about him). He’s clearly not coming. In another display of rage and desperation, Andrew shoots the TV, right at his father image; finally killing him in his mind. Perhaps too little too late.

The police finally catch up to Andrew’s whereabouts. In a matter of hours, he is surrounded and out of options; out of places to hide, people to run towards, lies to tell. He heads to the bedroom, where he encounters the last person whose life he destroyed: his younger self. Both Andrews watch TV together, the young boy amazed and entranced at the coverage he is getting.

Andrew then shoots himself, after one last look in the mirror at the man he became. Immediately after pulling the trigger, we cut back to the opera sequence with Versace, all the way back from the premiere episode. In what now seems confirmed to be a fantasy scenario, Gianni and Andrew have one final conversation. Andrew admits that this (what was perhaps the pinnacle of his ideals: Versace’s life, feeling wanted and successful and accomplished) actually feels like hell.

The last sequence of the series is not of Andrew, but rather of how the survivors of this story are left to deal with the wreckage that Andrew left behind. Antonio has seemingly lost any will to live without his lover. Marilyn Miglin keeps slowly unveiling a whole new side of her husband’s life that was unknown to her. And Donatella, away from the funeral and the cameras and the business obligations, finally allows herself to grieve, and breaks down. These people had everything ripped away from them. The man responsible is dead. How to move on from here?

While this series was very much Andrew’s story, his actions had long-lasting consequences way past the murders and his own suicide.

The show is now over. I may need some time to fully sit with it as it was not an easy watch. It was a raw and often uncomfortable look at difficult issues that are still widely relevant inside the gay community, shown through the lens of a serial killer.

But I do think we will look back at it as a powerful piece of queer art. Its performances are incredible, especially Darren Criss’s, doing the best work of his career. The series was not at all the kitschy, soapy crime drama that was advertised. It was a necessary and beautifully crafted deep dive into a subculture of society that is never represented with such honesty, willing to portray the ugly side as brightly as what makes it soar. It wasn’t O.J., and perhaps it was a mistake to expect that. Versace is its own thing: ethereal, painful, a strange and unsettling product of beauty.

“ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”, Finale – Blog – The Film Experience


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ACS S2E9 – “Alone”

The People are … throwing awards at Darren Criss for his performance on American Crime Story. The biggest takeaway from the series is that he is a STAR. Natalie and Maren are read your praise, your feelings on the finale/series as a whole, and break down the search for Andrew, A-list stars attending Gianni’s funeral, and more! | 24 March 2018

iTunes


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Let’s talk TV! ACS: Versace

A chat with Paste Magazine TV Editor Matt Brennan about The FX series The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story. Dan and Matt talk about this riveting series and some of the standout performances. Plus stay until the end for a couple shows Matt suggests we should all be watching. | 23 March 2018

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: S02E09: Alone

A fumbled finale ends an almost classic season

As a character study of Andrew Cunanan, The Assassination of Gianni Versace has been a resounding success, but the other themes and stories attempted by the show feel incomplete as Alone brings season two to a close. I’ve been say for a few weeks now that American Crime Story has to address the failed manhunt for Andrew in the same detailed a nuanced way that it has approached the story of Andrew and his victims, except Versace. As much as I’ve loved the show, from A Random Killing onward it’s been exceeding my expectations each week, there has been that seed of doubt, a feeling of dread that the show had left itself with too much to do by having the manhunt be the main focus of the final episode.

It’s true that the mixture of luck, media mistakes, and law enforcement screw-ups have featured in more episodes than just the first and last, but they never felt as vital to the story as the investigation into Andrew’s motives, and the refreshing focus on the lives and connections between Andrew and his victims.  Alone feels like a microcosm of this season’s greatest strengths and its greatest weaknesses.

Everything to do with Andrew is solid gold as usual. Darren Criss’ name is already on that Best Actor Emmy, especially considering that most of his screen-time in Alone takes the form of a one man show. The major challenge of this episode is to try and fill in the blanks between Andrew murdering Versace and his eventual suicide. Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favours tries to recreate the timeline through possible eye-witness accounts leading to Andrew eventually hiding in the houseboat but it’s still nothing more than vague speculation, supplemented by the media storm caused by Versace’s murder. Tom Robbin Smith, while being given a definitive end-point with Andrew’s suicide, has to fill in the blanks from point A to point B.

This is an extremely difficult task since only Andrew knows what happen during this span of time, and he took that information to his grave. This is where the realm of fiction comes in to pick up the slack. Obviously, some will have a problem with Smith’s direction here, especially since he uses narrative devices that to make the story a story. This lack of information means that this is no longer the Andrew Cunanan created through a mixture o0f fact and fiction, this is the fictional Andrew, and considering how well Andrew created his own narratives again and again, it’s really quite ironic that his story ends in this fashion.

So, here we have Andrew on the run. At first he is living off the thrill of getting away with murder yet again. His dream of being somebody is fully realised, with his infamy acting as a dark parallel to Versace’s fame. Versace was an instantly recognisable cultural icon, who was, like most high-profile celebrities, approached by fans (and fake Donatella’s) everywhere he went. Andrew is now just as recognisable, his past anonymity no lost because he has killed a celebrity. At first, with celebratory champagne in tow, he is intoxicated by this brand of fame. He is finally a someone, even if it means that he has no means of escape from Miami.

This feeling starts to sour almost immediately, as he binge-watches news coverage of his own manhunt as he is all but imprisoned in the houseboat. With his spree effectively over, the direness of his situation hits home. There is no way out, pummelled by footage of David and Jeff, with David’s father arguing his son’s innocence. It’s almost like Andrew is watching his growing psychosis on the small, and then larger screen. From appeals from his friends, and his father’s predictable betrayal, Andrew learns the hardest lesson of the fame he has been craving: that everyone wants a piece of him.  Despondent and alone, with the police now crashing through the door, Andrew goes for the only option that makes sense to him by committing suicide.

Andrew’s last days are clearly the best part of Alone, it’s everywhere else that it stumbles. One of the most interesting parts of Vulgar Favours was the sheer number of Andrew’s friends and loved ones that came forward to make a quick buck. Modesto is clearly the worst of the lot, and he really was in talks to sell the film rights to Andrew’s story, but this is an avenue of the whole sorry mess that was begging to be explored further. While Judith Light makes a welcome return as Mrs Miglin share with both Donatella and Andrew’s mother’s status as the women left behind, American Crime Story never fully realised the potential of these characters.

As someone who can vividly recall Ricky Martin’s height of fame in the 90s I’m shocked at how angry I am about his character being so wasted. Antonio, despite the potential story possibilities of being Gianni’s proud boyfriend, the series squanders it while trying to land some shock value with his fictionalised suicide attempt. For the last time, I have to criticise the lack of Gianni Versace in this show. Literally the titular character, Versace was very rarely a character in his own right. Most of the time, and in Alone especially, he has been used as a parallel for other characters, but Andrew especially. His last act in the show is to symbolise the gap between himself and Andrew in life and in death. Versace gets a beautiful mausoleum to rest, and Andrew a mere paupers grave.

6/10 – The Assassination of Gianni Versace may not be in the same league as OJ, but overall it was filled with tremendous performances, topical if not fully realised issues, and one of the fully realised portrayals of a serial killer from series MVP Darren Criss.

Season Score: 8/10

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: S02E09: Alone

Is ‘ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ EXACTLY What the LGBT+ Community Needs Right Now?

Like many avid TV viewers, LGBT or not, I’ve been glued to American Crime Stories: The Assassination of Gianni Versace, starring the charismatic Darren Criss as serial killer Andrew Cunanan. Apart from being a compelling and sinister true crime series, the piece highlights a number of key issues for the gay community (the show primarily features gay men, mostly white gay men, so we’re not likely to see any Trans issues or issues surrounding gay people of colour here). For example we see the trials of being a Gay man during the HIV/AIDS epidemic; how gay couples struggle to function in a world that denies them equality and frowns upon their “lifestyle,” and the way the police treat crimes involving gay people.

There has been a call recently to see more LGBT+ drama and characters where we see more than issues around HIV, coming out, discrimination etc., and with good reason. For many people in the straight, mainstream world, whose only association with gay people comes through the TV screen, it’s understandable that they should harbour homophobia when all they see is a life full of sickness, depravity and social exclusion. It’s true that seeing LGBT+ characters on screen who live happy lives and are seen as more than just their sexuality or gender orientation can help to change values and opinions as well as being aspirational viewing for young LGBT+ people. We certainly need to see more LGBT+ characters in leading roles, we need to see more such characters living happy, healthy lives and we need to see more drama where the source of conflict is not a character’s sexuality.

However, what ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace does is to highlight important issues around homosexuality and gay life—many of which are still important today, and some which are important for preserving a “gay history"—but also shows a gay person who is flawed, who is violent, certainly not camp or comical in the stereotypical sense that we are used to seeing. Darren Criss’ portrayal of Andrew is a far cry from characters in Will & Grace or Modern Family, and in sense I think that’s why the series is needed for the LGBT+ community. There are some insinuations that Andrew’s actions may be partly a result of the societal reaction to gay people—particularly during the HIV/AIDS crisis—but ultimately he is a serial killer all of his own making. We accept that while most straight, cis gendered people are nice, that a select few are horribly people. The same should be true of LGBT+ people. Seeing every gay person as hilariously funny, fashionable, camp, flirty though essentially sexless which we are used to from many mainstream comedies can be seen as helpful in softening gay man in the public eye, making us seem less threatening or strange; but it’s not a fair depiction of real life. There are gay men in all walks of life, and some of them are not very nice. Expand that across the whole LGBT+ spectrum and the myriad different types of personalities multiples.

If we want fair and varied representation in the media then we should champion works like ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace, with all its grit and grime, just as much as romances like Call Me By Your Name or comedies like Will & Grace. We’re moving into an interesting period in LGBT History. A period where there is a growing shift towards social acceptance and legal equality even in countries and communities where half a century ago that would have seemed impossible; but these are far from certain times. It’s important to recognise moments in our past—which this show does brilliantly—when, to coin a modern phrase—the struggle was real; we also need to support fair representation in the media —the good, the bad, and the ugly; and ultimately we need to support members across our whole community and other oppressed and minority groups. The UK (where I live) is among the most LGBT friendly and inclusive places on the world and we have the "gayest parliament” with more LGBT MP’s than any other government in the world. But that doesn’t mean our rights couldn’t just as easily be taken away. Seeing LGBT+ people as just that—people—can only help to normalise and humanize our way of life. We could be your best friend, your child, your teacher, your doctor, but we could also be that annoying neighbour, that violent thug at the pub, or worse still, a serial killer. We could be whatever our straight cis gendered counterparts could be, and that’s why ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace is exactly what the LGBT+ community need right now.

Is ‘ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ EXACTLY What the LGBT+ Community Needs Right Now?