TCA: Darren Criss Has the Role of a Lifetime in FX’s “Versace”

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For former Glee star Darren Criss, the only thing to be gleeful about while tackling his latest role was getting what the actor describes as "the role of a lifetime.“  In FX’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the latest installment of the hit Ryan Murphy limited series franchise, Criss not only portrays spree-killer Andrew Cunanan, the man responsible for the brutal slaying of famed fashion designer Gianni Versace and several other men, he embodies him.  It was a challenge Criss relished and with which he wanted to take great care.  "I think the actor’s job is to find the empathy in anybody [he is playing],” Criss (pictured above and below) told MediaVillage in a recent interview.  "I don’t care if it’s a football player or a scientist or in this case a ‘serial killer.’  You have to take into account not only the worst moments but the best moments and find as many common denominators between you and that person as possible.

“That’s a lot easier than you think,” he continued.  "[Andrew] is not your classic American serial killer as we know them, where there are a lot of tells. He was loved by many, was an enjoyable, delightful, smart kid brimming with potential, so you kind of reverse engineer that and latch onto those things.  You then have to ask yourself at what point could this have been me, and what point in my life could I have done these things that we would conventionally understand as the most abominable?“

The Assassination of Gianni Versace begins with the murder of the designer on the steps of his Miami mansion in 1997 and backtracks through the lives of both Cunanan and Versace (Edgar Ramirez).  For Criss, it was re-enacting the gunning down of one of the world’s most respected fashion icons – at the very location – he found most difficult.

“Yes, that was an overwhelmingly emotional day,” he admitted.  "We spent a lot of time in that mansion and there I was, dressed as Andrew, with his likeness put on my face and hair.  Andrew never made it inside the mansion, but there I was having lunch for a couple of weeks.  That wasn’t lost on me.“

According to Criss it was the knowledge of what he, as Cunanan, would be depriving the world of that weighed so heavily on him.  "You have this overwhelming sense of what was and could have been, then what was taken away,” he recalled.  “The O.J. story, for example, was shot on sets, but this is where it happened!  These are the stairs, it was the street, everything is as it was with the only difference being 20 years have passed and the bloodstains have been removed.  I had a moment when I walked into the building and really could feel Gianni’s presence.

“I found myself walking in there and kind of talking to Gianni,” he continued.  “Being like, ‘Look, man, this is a horrible thing that happened here and I’m so appreciative of what you gave the world.’  It certainly gave me a new appreciation of his legacy.  Hopefully, we can start a new story dialogue that he might’ve been interested in and would have liked people to [know about].  I guess I found myself trying to make peace with it.”

Despite having to humanize Cunanan in order to portray him, Criss wants two things known.  One: He’s not fond of serial killers.  Two: while based on real events, the series is not a documentary.  He’s appreciative of the fact that much of Cunanan’s dialogue and the events are conjecture, with only Cunanan and his victims, all of whom did not survive his wrath, a party to them.

That’s something executive producer and writer Tom Rob Smith was also aware of, as he told MediaVillage.  “I made sure that the stuff I put in supports a greater fundamental truth, so the smaller inventions never contradict what I knew to be a greater truth,” he said.

“There has been a great sense of care that Tom has taken with Andrew,” explains Criss.  "I think only he and I get to share this almost fondness, which I am scared to say, but it’s your job [as an actor] to humanize the person you play.  As an over-empathetic person, I enjoy the challenge of people looking in and me saying, ‘How could you possibly find something good about this person?’  But there’s still that bleeding idealist [in me] who wants to find the good in everybody.  I have to find that and exploit it as much as possible because we will [only] see the worst if not.“

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, premieres Wednesday, January 17 at 10 p.m. on FX.

TCA: Darren Criss Has the Role of a Lifetime in FX’s “Versace”

Ryan Murphy Responds to Versace Family Calling ‘American Crime Story’ Fiction

Ryan Murphy has responded to the Versace family calling his anthology drama “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” a work of fiction, by saying he doesn’t believe that to be true.

“We issued a statement saying that this story is based on Maureen Orth’s book, which is a very celebrated, lauded work of non-fiction that was vetted now for close to 20 years,” Murphy told Variety at the premiere event for the FX anthology drama in Los Angeles, Calif. “That’s really all I have to say about it, other than of course I feel if you’re family is ever portrayed in something, it’s natural to sort of have a ‘Well, let’s wait and see what happens’ [stance].”

Murphy also pointed out that on Sunday Donatella Versace, the fashion icon’s sister and vice president and chief designer of the Versace Group, made a complimentary gesture towards series star Penelope Cruz, who portrays her in the show and has long been acquainted with her.

“Donatella Versace sent Penelope Cruz a very large arrangement of flowers yesterday when she was representing the show at the Golden Globes,” Murphy said. “I don’t know if she is going to watch the show, but if she did I think that she would see that we treat her and her family with respect and kindness. She really is a feminist role model in my book, because she had to step into an impossible situation, which she did with grace and understanding. I think that she really loved Penelope and knows that Penelope would never do anything to represent her in a negative light. Hopefully she’ll read what I’m saying to you.”

Executive producer Brad Simpson said he feels that the Versaces are certainly allowed to have their own opinion of the series and fully expected a reaction from the “real victims and real families.”

“This isn’t authorized, and we don’t make any pretense at it being authorized,” Simpson said. “This is based on Maureen Orth’s book. She’s an incredibly respected journalist. It’s a non-fiction bestseller. And also, we’re not just telling the story of Versace. We’re telling the story of all the lives that were affected by the murders of Andrew Cunanan. They’re entitled to feel how they want to feel, but we stand by the veracity of the show.”

Orth, who also attended the premiere, had been working on the Cunanan case in advance of Versace’s shocking murder in July 1997. The spree killer had already left behind a string of at least four other victims.

“I had done two months of investigation for Vanity Fair because I just thought he was a very interesting, killer suspect – because here’s a guy who went to Bishop in La Jolla. He had a 147 IQ and he had tons of friends, he was extremely witty and well-read. What the heck is he doing being a suspect? Then, when he killed Versace, I was the only one who really knew that they had met before, and so then the whole media circus took off,” Orth said.

Executive producer Nina Simpson feels the way the show portrays all of the victims – including but not limited to Versace – will emphasize “the value and meaning of the lives lost.”

“There’s nothing casual about our portrayal of these folks, and I think that people will feel their loss even more,” Jacobson said.

And screenwriter Tom Rob Smith said that while the Versace family’s statement referenced their objections to Orth’s book, he wasn’t sure “if they were referencing the show directly.”

“I think there’s always this question of when you’re making and writing this kind of material – you feel like you want to support the fundamental truths,” said Smith. “And you are going to get some of the details wrong, or you’re going to have to fill in a gap at some point, where you don’t have access to the reality. I think the only way you are allowed to do that is if you’re supporting the bigger truth.”

For Smith, and therefore the show he set out to make, that bigger truth is that Versace was an amazing man. “The show is full of love for him,” Smith said. “I’m sure there are points where they could correct some of the smaller details, but I think the bigger picture is that this is a figure that we’re celebrating and a figure that we all fell in love with.”

Ryan Murphy Responds to Versace Family Calling ‘American Crime Story’ Fiction

Why ‘American Crime Story’ took on murder and manhunt in ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’

The latest iteration of FX and Ryan Murphy’s anthology drama “American Crime Story” differs in a dramatic way from its predecessor, “The People v. O.J. Simpson.”

This time, we see the murder.

Murphy calls “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” a “manhunt thriller.”

The iconic fashion designer was gunned down in front of his mansion in Miami’s South Beach neighborhood in 1997 by 27-year-old Andrew Cunanan. Described at the time as a “gigolo” by Martha Orth, whose book the series is based on, Cunanan had already been on a killing spree that landed him on the FBI’s most-wanted list.

Since Cunanan would take his own life before authorities were able to arrest him, “ACS” tries to examine why Versace became a target. Murphy insists the term “assassination” is accurate, although some would label Cunanan a psychopath and serial killer.

“’Assassination’ has a political overtone, and I think it denotes somebody who is taking the life of somebody else to make a point,” Murphy says. “And I think that’s exactly what Andrew Cunanan did.”

The series begins with the crime. To the strains of Albinoni’s Adagio in G minor, we see Cunanan – played by Darren Criss – as he makes his way up the beach toward the designer’s compound. Almost by happenstance, Cunahan encounters Versace (Edgar Ramirez) returning from a local trip to buy magazines, and he shoots him.

The story then goes back in time, following their lives before their fateful encounter, subsequent manhunt and the fallout for the designer’s empire. Most immediately affected are Antonio D’Amico, Versace’s longtime partner played Ricky Martin, and the designer’s sister Donatella Versace (Penelope Cruz).

As Orth wrote, Versace’s “flamboyant clothes virtually defined ‘hot,’” that he “tarted up the likes of Princess Diana and Elizabeth Hurley” and whose gowns also made “Madonna and Courtney Love more elegant.”

Ramirez observes that Versace’s influence is still evident today. “He could see the sexiness of the ’70s, and then all the opulence of the ’80s,” said the actor, adding that the designer combined those elements “and everybody went crazy.”

Seven years before the killing, Cunanan met or imposed himself upon Versace at a party when the Italian-born designer was creating costumes for the San Francisco Opera.

“Versace looms over the series as a symbol of success. He is not just a person. This is the reason for the assassination,” says Tom Rob Smith, who wrote the script for the nine-episode series, “He is, in a weird way, in every moment of Andrew’s life.”

As producer Nina Jacobson points out, the series contrasts the two. “One character is an authentic, honest creator drawing on his heritage, his background, his family,” she says, “and the other goes on a path of destruction because he wants the fame without the work or the talent.”

No one really knows what went on between Cunanan and Versace or the killer and his other victims. So the series tries to fill in the details.

“You have these tiny points of truth, and you then try to connect the tissue between it,” says Smith, novelist of books including “Child 44” and screenwriter of “London Spy.” “But I would never use the word ‘embellishing’ or ‘making up.’ It’s trying to join those pinpoints.”

Orth says a lot of people knew Cunanan “was an inveterate liar, but they didn’t care because he was very witty about it, or he was able to charm people.”

“We’re not just following what we would assume to be a murderous, horrible person all the time,” adds Criss. “We see him at his best; we see him at his worst; we see him at his most charming; we see him at his most hurt. And it’s all over the place. We really do get to know him as a person.”

Cunanan spent two months in Miami before killing Versace. Before that, he killed both his closest friend and his lover.

“Once he crossed a line and became a killer, he then started to kill to pursue ideas,” says Smith. “Once he realizes he lost everything, either you build something that impresses someone, which takes a lot of work, or if you don’t want anonymity, you can try to rip something down.”

The FBI was already pursuing Cunanan in Miami, but thinking he preyed upon older men they didn’t look in the youthful South Beach area.

Orth’s 1999 book is called “Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in US History,” and Murphy feels that Cunanan was able to make his way across the country and pick off his victims because many of them were gay.

There was “homophobia, particularly within the various police organizations that refused in Miami to put up wanted posters,” he says.

Not surprisingly, the Versace family is not behind the project and issued a statement this week: “Since Versace did not authorize the book on which it is partly based nor has it taken part in the writing of the screenplay, this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction,” it said.

Criss says that the most difficult part of playing a killer was thinking “about the people who are still alive and are affected. And wanting to do right by them is my hope.”

Brad Simpson, one of the other producers of “Versace,” says that is the basic quandary for anybody who is making true crime story.

“By recreating these murders, are you giving the murderer what they want? Are you hurting the victims again?” he asks. “In ‘O.J.,’ we didn’t show O.J. committing the murder. We never come out and say that O.J. killed Nicole and Ron even though you can really take that inference from the show. In this case, we are showing the real devastation of what Andrew did.”

Why ‘American Crime Story’ took on murder and manhunt in ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’

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Actors Darren Criss, Edgar Ramirez, Penelope Cruz, Ricky Martin, Cody Fern, executive producers Ryan Murphy, Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, writer Tom Rob Smith and John Landgraf, CEO, FX Network pose at the after party for the premiere of FX’s ‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ at the Hollywood Palladium on January 8, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.