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| Matt LeBlanc tries to give Sean (Stephen Mangan) a car on Episodes |
Episodes does for
sitcoms—especially shows transplanted from Britain
to America —what
The Larry Sanders Show did for late
night talk shows. It takes the ugly truth of Hollywood
and magnifies it, allowing audiences in on all the lying, hypocritical bullshit
that goes into making network television.
The extra joke for Canadian audiences is that LeBlanc's fictional sitcom within this sitcom is a hockey comedy called Pucks.
The extra joke for Canadian audiences is that LeBlanc's fictional sitcom within this sitcom is a hockey comedy called Pucks.
A few months ago, I spoke with Jimmy Mulville, the British
comedian and one of the executive producers of Episodes. The interview was for a story on the series I wrote for the
July issue of Movie Entertainment magazine.
Mulville quickly brought me up to date on where the series
picks up. The British couple who created the original U.K.
comedy, Sean and Beverly (Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig), remain split after their
American star, Matt LeBlanc, crossed the line and slept with Beverly .
“Sean is still very sore about what happened,” Mulville says on the phone from London .
“Matt desperately wants his friendship back with Sean, and Beverly
desperately wants her marriage back, but Sean is having none of it. So they’re
in kind of a Mexican standoff.”
In a true Hollywood power move, LeBlanc
tries to get back into both of their good books by buying each of them a car. Says
Sean, “So you think you can actually make it all right—you screwed my wife—just
by buying me a Nissan?” To which LeBlanc replies, “You want a f--ing Bentley? It’s
not like I killed your wife.”
I’ve watched the first three episodes of the new season and
they live up to the promise of the first as well as to Mulville’s descriptions
of what comes next. Episodes is
knowing and funny, all the more so because creators/executive producers David
Crane and Jeffrey Klarik base everything on their actual experiences dealing
with network weasels.
The cherry on top is LeBlanc’s delicious send up of himself,
or rather the Hollywood phoney he easily could have
become. “Matt’s characterization is a fantastically detailed examination of
celebrity,” says Mulville. What is being explored is this: “When you’re that
rich and that famous, do the regular rules really apply?”
Mulville, himself an actor/comedian as well as a writer and
producer (he used to perform on the British version of Whose Line Is It
Anyway?), thinks LeBlanc brave to play a darker, more sophisticated yet
dysfunctional version of himself. “We take this character Matt LeBlanc to
really, really brave places,” says Mulville. LeBlanc was rewarded with a Golden
Globe Best Actor win for his performance last season.
In Season Two, things start to unravel for his cocky
character. People question whether he should have the leading role in Puck,
the fictional series the British showrunners have been forced to re-imagine
from their original U.K.
hit. We see LeBlanc descend into bouts of drinking and other erratic behaviour.
“It’s very black and funny and painful and truthful,” says Mulville. “The
writers paint with such brutally honest colours.”
Script writers will either laugh or cry at a scene in an
early episode this season where an incredibly dim network underling is giving
the Brit creators notes after a table read. The woman dryly asks if a reference
to “bats” can be removed from the script. Sean explains the word is “beats.” The
woman is uncomprehending. Beverly
explains that they mean pauses. Adds Sean: “We like the pauses, so why don’t we
shoot the pauses, and if you still don’t like them we can always have them cut
in post.
A really long beat. The woman finally says, “Okay.”
Brilliant.
Joining the series this season is James Purefoy (Rome )
who plays a house painter who becomes very attracted to Beverly .
“We take all these characters and put them in funny, more dangerous places,”
says Mulville.
Mulville does confirm that one of LeBlanc’s famous friends
from Friends makes an appearance in Season Two, but he won’t say who it
is. “We do it in our own, inimitable, very screwed up way. It’s not what you’d
expect.”
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