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sábado, dezembro 11, 2021
On “Succession,” Jeremy Strong Doesn’t Get the Joke
"Actors
try to find the real in the make-believe, but anyone who has worked
with Strong will tell you that he goes to unusual lengths. Last year, he
played the Yippie activist Jerry Rubin in Aaron Sorkin’s film “The
Trial of the Chicago 7.” While shooting the 1968 protest scenes, Strong
asked a stunt coördinator to rough him up; he also requested to be
sprayed with real tear gas. “I don’t like saying no to Jeremy,” Sorkin
told me. “But there were two hundred people in that scene and another
seventy on the crew, so I declined to spray them with poison gas.”
Between takes of the trial scenes, in which the Yippies mock Judge
Julius Hoffman, played by Frank Langella, Strong would read aloud from
Langella’s memoir in silly voices, and he put a remote-controlled fart
machine below the judge’s chair. “Every once in a while, I’d say,
‘Great. Let’s do it again, and this time, Jeremy, maybe don’t play the
kazoo in the middle of Frank Langella’s monologue,’ ” Sorkin said." “It’s hard for me to actually describe his process,
because I don’t really see it,” Kieran Culkin said. “He puts himself in a
bubble.” Before I interviewed his castmates, Strong warned me, “I don’t
know how popular the way I work is amongst our troupe.” Since Kendall
is the black sheep of a warring family, Strong’s self-alienation may be a
way of creating tension onscreen. Though the cast is generally loose
and collegial, Strong, during Season 2, began going to the makeup
trailer only when no other actors were there—“which I remember making
everyone else roll their eyes,” a cast member told me."
"Strong’s dedication strikes
some collaborators as impressive, others as self-indulgent. “All I know
is, he crosses the Rubicon,” Robert Downey, Jr., told me. In 2014,
Strong played Downey’s mentally disabled brother in “The Judge.” (To
prepare, he spent time with an autistic person, as Hoffman had for “Rain
Man.”) When Downey shot a funeral scene, Strong paced around the set
weeping loudly, even though he wasn’t called that day. He asked for
personalized props that weren’t in the script, including a family photo
album. “It was almost swatting him away like he was an annoying gnat—I
had bigger things to deal with,” a member of the design team recalled."