The Province

Royals eyed for next ‘Feud’

‘King of camp’ producer Murphy eyes Charles and Diana next

- JAMIE PORTMAN

Does Prince Harry really deserve this?

Must he and other members of the royal family now fall into the clutches of Hollywood’s king of camp — producer Ryan Murphy?

Harry earned a lot of sympathy a few days ago when he talked openly about his continuing anguish over the 1997 death of his mother, Princess Diana.

But even as Harry struggles to put this trauma behind him, Murphy and the FX cable network continue plotting a 10-part 2018 drama series dealing with the catastroph­ic marriage of his parents, Charles and Diana, and its lacerating aftermath.

Exploitive? Undoubtedl­y. But it also promises to be compelling­ly watchable.

Murphy has come a long way since his days as a celebrity journalist for the Miami Herald. He’s now a significan­t power player in the entertainm­ent industry — perhaps its most accomplish­ed purveyor of slickly executed trash.

But no — sometimes more than trash. Last year’s, The People v. O.J. Simpson was a superb re-enactment of an infamous murder trial and deserved its accolades. However, Murphy is more likely to be remembered for Nip/Tuck, his creepy series about plastic surgeons.

The Murphy brand has lately been on addictive display in his latest enterprise — a new serialized drama series called Feud. This initial eight-episode entry chronicles the scalding personal and profession­al warfare between two legendary stars — Bette Davis and Joan Crawford. Charles and Diana will be next year’s victims.

This year’s Feud may be junk food but in terms of production values, it has, in its own peculiar and sometimes historical­ly dubious way, been a class act. It stars Susan Sarandon as a feisty Davis and Jessica Lange as a paranoid, manipulati­ve Crawford, and focuses on the turbulent 1962 shoot of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, a horror film that accelerate­d their mutual loathing. Theirs was a world in which Davis could famously say of her co-star, “She’s slept with every male star at MGM except Lassie.”

Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? is now regarded as a camp classic — an image eagerly reinforced by Murphy and his team.

Entertainm­ent journalist­s with long memories will remember Murphy’s presence on the junket circuit and his fascinatio­n with divas. He now indulges that fascinatio­n from a position of power, but one can see a linkage in what he’s doing now with his high-camp journalist­ic celebratio­n of Bette Midler in 1991: “All curves and cashmere and billowy softness, she looks like a Botticelli subject on Slimfast,” he burbled.

It’s probably inevitable that something as juicy as the Charles and Diana train wreck would tempt Murphy, given his success in giving melodrama a renewed high-gloss lease on life. He is, in his own way, a creative genius who — in the words of an Esquire profile — has brought “campy queerness” to mainstream Hollywood.

And he has a thing for female victims, even when they bare their victimizat­ion like a medal. He knows what sells.

“Ryan Murphy has a weakness for women having breakdowns,” critic Logan Scherer commented in The Atlantic, recently. Indeed, Scherer suggested that virtually every Murphy show is guilty of diva worship: “taking pleasure in the bad behaviour of gorgeous women ... Like many other gay men — including myself, Murphy finds beauty and high style in scenes of disgraced femininity: tantrums, train-wrecks and freak-outs, and the runny mascara, wild eyes and frizzed-out hair that come along with them.”

Feud: Bette And Joan displayed these histrionic­s in abundance. But what of next year’s Feud: Charles And Diana? Murphy told the Hollywood Reporter last month that “we’re approachin­g these people with love and understand­ing and kindness.”

One wonders. There’s a moment in the first Feud when Susan Sarandon, excellent as Bette Davis, talks about the pleasures of taking one of her two Oscar statues to bed with her. It’s a moment ripe with sleazy sub-text, the kind of moment that Ryan Murphy and his colleagues have trouble resisting.

Will similar moments arise in next year’s Charles And Diana? Unlike the cat fight between Davis and Crawford, it will involve still-living, emotionall­y scarred human beings.

But perhaps Ryan Murphy’s entry into the world of British royalty was inevitable. After all, it’s more than 60 years since critic Malcolm Muggeridge was denounced for suggesting in a New Statesman article that the Royal Family was in danger of degenerati­ng into a royal soap opera. But at least, Ryan Murphy’s involvemen­t offers some assurance that the soap operatics will represent Hollywood at its slickest.

 ?? — INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Ryan Murphy will produce a series based on the disastrous relationsh­ip between Charles and Diana.
— INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Ryan Murphy will produce a series based on the disastrous relationsh­ip between Charles and Diana.

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