The Cairns Post

On Patrol with flawed heroes

PLAYING A MULTI-PERSONALIT­Y CHARACTER IN THE LATEST DOOM PATROL SEASON TOOK A TOLL, EXPLAINS ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’S DIANE GUERRERO

- JAMES WIGNEY necessary,” she says. “I know some production­s are going to be back so I am looking forward to getting back to work and doing it safely.” But for now, she’s taking the enforced downtime chance to reset, reflect and re-evaluate her prioritie

US actor Diane Guerrero went to some pretty dark places while filming the latest season of Doom Patrol — so dark, in fact, she felt compelled to go into therapy.

The 34-year-old actor, best known for her roles in

Orange Is the New Black and Jane the Virgin, plays

“Crazy” Jane on the actiondram­a series, based on the cult DC Comics of the same name about a group of misfits who gain superpower­s as a result of horrific accidents. Her character suffers from dissociati­ve identity disorder stemming from a childhood trauma and is host to 64 different personalit­ies, each with their own superpower.

Guerrero, who has a history of anxiety, depression and self-harm, noticed that as Jane’s mental health was tested through the course of the second season, she found it more and more difficult to separate her own life from her character’s and sought profession­al help.

“I am very open about my mental health struggles,” she says via Zoom from her Los Angeles home. “I am someone who has suffered from trauma and trauma has affected my life in a very deep level and at different times in my life I have had to reach out for help.

“(This time) it was about me thinking about my life and what was important and certainly being in such a dark place with Jane, it certainly encouraged me to seek help in a different way this time. My purpose was to obtain a deeper understand­ing of where my happiness lies and Jane really helped me with that.”

With help from her therapist, she developed breathing techniques that helped her shake off the character at the end of the day’s filing — “you just have to leave it, you have to hang up the phone” — but she says she’s glad that conversati­ons about mental health are becoming more common both on screen and in real life. The dark, sweary and sometimes violent Doom Patrol, with its dysfunctio­nal family of outcasts and misfits including cyborgs, a shapeshift­ing former Hollywood starlet and radioactiv­e ex-pilot, is geared very much towards the older end of the superhero spectrum.

In addition to the obligatory wisecracki­ng and ass-kicking required of the well-worn genre, the two seasons so far have been lauded for not shying away from relatable and complex themes including post-traumatic stress disorder, body image, trauma, disability, acceptance and LGBTI issues. Guerrero says that seeing mental health issues play out on screen helps to normalise them and “stories like these encourage people to reach out or to connect”.

“We only have misunderst­anding or fear of things when we don’t talk about them,” she says. “So that’s why I am so grateful for shows like Doom Patrol that can discuss this openly. I am a person who can discuss mental health openly — I don’t think there is anything to be ashamed of and I think much of our success as humans can be put down to having a well-balanced emotional life and part of that is sharing with others so you are not feeling alone.

“I get a lot of nice personal messages, especially from people who are either dealing with DID or have DID — dissociati­ve identity disorder — or suffer from mental illness. Their feedback seems to be that they are glad this show is telling these kinds of stories.”

Guerrero says she also relates to the outsider status of her Doom Patrol character, thanks to her upbringing in Boston as the daughter of undocument­ed immigrants. She was the only member of her immediate family with US citizenshi­p and when she was 14, her parents were detained and deported back to their native Colombia, while she stayed behind. It led to her becoming an advocate for immigrant rights as well as her 2016 autobiogra­phy In The Country We Love: My Family Divided.

“I think having your parents kidnapped by ICE (Immigratio­n Customs and Enforcemen­t) and being told by the entire country that your family are criminals and you don’t belong, would certainly make you feel some kind of way and will have you feeling ‘otherness’,” she says. “I did experience that in my younger years and I think that as I evolved and sought help I realised that there is no need to feel that because as human beings we are one and we are equal and I think that our plight is that not everyone feels that way.”

Guerrero says the trauma she suffered as a result of being separated from her family fuelled her passion for social justice, human rights and betterment of the immigrant community. She’s

hoping the coming US presidenti­al election will be a chance to reinvigora­te the conversati­on on what has become an increasing­ly divisive issue in her homeland.

“We all should go out and vote because the situation is quite dire for a lot of people,” she says. “COVID has exacerbate­d that and we have seen how many families are suffering because of the inaction of our government so we obviously need somebody that cares for our people.”

Like many of this year’s TV shows, the second season of Doom Patrol was curtailed by the coronaviru­s-induced shutdowns, with the intended 10 episodes cut short by one. The cliffhange­r finale, which recently aired in the US, set up the possibilit­y of an even crazier third season and Guerrero has high hopes she can get back to her onscreen family as film and television production­s slowly come out of hibernatio­n. “It would be lovely to go back and take all the measures

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