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segunda-feira, julho 08, 2024
‘Baby Reindeer’: What to Know About the True-ish Netflix Hit
The mini-series, based on the star’s experiences, has viewers wondering how much of it is real. Here’s the back story.
“Baby Reindeer,” Netflix’s absorbing, claustrophobic seven-episode thriller, has been an unexpected global hit — a success made even more surprising given its intense themes. It is far and away the most-watched show on Netflix, according to the streamer’s publicly released numbers, dwarfing every other show on the platform.
The
mini-series follows the character of Donny Dunn, a bartender and
floundering comedian trying to navigate the fog of trauma and cobble
together a sense of self while being mercilessly stalked and tormented
by a woman named Martha, with whom he maintains a codependent
connection, despite the harassment. The title refers to one of Martha’s
many nicknames for Donny.
Here’s what’s real about “Baby Reindeer,” and what viewers seem most curious about.
Yes, That Is the Real Guy
“Baby
Reindeer” is the work of Richard Gadd, 34, who plays Donny, a slightly
fictionalized version of himself. And if you were wondering how a
regular guy could be such a confident, complex actor, it’s because he is
a seasoned, award-winning performer who parlayed his autobiographical
one-man show, titled “Baby Reindeer,” into the series, for which he
wrote every episode.
But once upon a time, he was the self-loathing performer we see depicted. “Baby Reindeer” takes meta storytelling to new levels.
Yes, It Is Based on His Real Experiences
Early in the first episode, a message across the screen reads, “This is a true story.” And it is.
“It’s all emotionally 100 percent true,” Gadd, who was the real-life victim of the stalking, said in a recent interview with Variety.
“It’s all borrowed from instances that happened to me and real people
that I met.” True with the caveat that “for both legal and artistic
reasons,” as he put it, details had to be changed. “You can’t just copy
somebody else’s life and name and put it onto television,” he said. “We
were very aware that some characters in it are vulnerable people,” he
added, “so you don’t want to make their lives more difficult.”
The
series is largely punctuated by language from real messages sent by his
stalker (played by Jessica Gunning), which we see typed out onscreen.
In his one-man show,
a 70-minute monologue that premiered at Edinburgh Festival Fringe and
would go on to win an Olivier Award (Britain’s equivalent of the Tonys),
Gadd played her voice mail messages to the audience, and projections of
her emails scrolled across the venue’s ceiling.
According
to Gadd, she sent him over 41,000 emails, tweeted at him hundreds of
times and left him 350 hours of voice mail over the course of a few
years.
For the series, certain
timelines were moved around “to make them pay off a little better,” he
said. Nonetheless, “it’s a very true story.”
Gadd Has Asked Viewers Not to Dig …
While
the saga, at first glance, is one of stalking and obsession, it is
equally about the life-shattering effects of sexual assault. In the
fourth episode, Gadd’s character is repeatedly drugged, assaulted and
raped by a powerful television writer named Darrien O’Connor (played by
Tom Goodman-Hill) who’d made false promises to help catapult the
comedian’s career. (The sexual assaults were explored in Gadd’s earlier
solo show “Monkey See Monkey Do.”)
“Abuse leaves an imprint,” Gadd recently told GQ magazine. “Especially abuse like this where it’s repeated with promises.”
The
depiction of the abuse is graphic and disturbing, and knowing that the
characters were based on real people prompted great interest in the
identities behind them. But Gadd was quick to urge viewers to stop
investigating. “Please don’t speculate on who any of the real-life
people could be,” he wrote on Instagram. “That’s not the point of our show.”
… Yet Viewers Keep Digging
As
more and more people binge the show, social media platforms have become
amateur detective rings, with viewers trying to suss out the identities
of the characters. The British writer and director Sean Foley was the
subject of online threats when some thought that he was the real-life
Darrien character.
“Police have been informed and are investigating all defamatory abusive and threatening posts against me,” Foley said in a post on X (formerly Twitter) in late April.
On
Instagram, Gadd defended Foley specifically, writing, “People I love,
have worked with, and admire (including Sean Foley) are unfairly getting
caught up in speculation.”
In
the first episode, Gadd’s character searches Martha’s name online and
uncovers a trove of articles about her past stalking — “Serial Stalker
Sentenced to Four and Half Years,” reads one headline — which led some
online sleuths to try to find the actual versions of those same
articles.
The show has become such a phenomenon that The Daily Mail published an interview with a woman purporting to be the “real” Martha, lodging her complaints about the show, though her name was not disclosed.
When
GQ asked Gadd what the stalker might make of the show, he said, “I
honestly couldn’t speak as to whether she would watch it,” calling her
“an idiosyncratic person.”
“We’ve gone
to such great lengths to disguise her to the point that I don’t think
she would recognize herself,” he said. “What’s been borrowed is an
emotional truth, not a fact-by-fact profile of someone.”