Times Colonist

Art of Deception depends on Cutmore-Scott

- RICK BENTLEY

LOS ANGELES — Members of the team behind the new ABC police procedural, Deception are calling the show “Magician: Impossible.” That’s because at the heart of the show will be superstar magician Cameron Black (Jack CutmoreSco­tt) whose career has been ruined by scandal. That’s when he decides the only place suitable for a guy to practise his art of deception, influence and illusion is with the FBI.

He uses his magical skills to help the government catch the world’s most elusive criminals while staging the biggest illusions of his career. Executive producer Chris Fedak rejects the idea this is a show about magic crimes.

“You have how you capture bad guys. Sometimes, you get them doing a mistake. You catch them doing something. But, in this show, the fun of it is using illusion, using deception,” Fedak said. “What if we take the whole thing and flip it on its head? Because the fun of this show, too, is it’s not a straight-up action show. We are not always going to capture the bad guy by using guns and chasing them down. We are going to have to deceive them.

“We are going to have to be smart, and that’s where illusion comes into it. So there’s no specific magic crime. It’s like every crime in this show, we can deal with any type of crime, and that’s also great because it’s the FBI. They go after everybody. They go after killers, they go after mobsters, they go after drug dealers, and they go after spies, and that really opens up the opportunit­ies for so many genres for us to have fun with.”

The guy who is going to have to make all the illusions look as real as possible is Cutmore-Scott. The British actor, who was most recently was seen in the Christophe­r Nolan feature Dunkirk, and in the independen­t feature film Bad Match, made his motion picture debut in Matthew Vaughn’s Kingsman: The Secret Service. His television credits include the Cooper Barrett’s Guide to Surviving Life.

He’s got a lot of stage credits but nothing where he would have sawed a woman in half or made the Empire State Building disappear. In high school, a good friend was a talented magician and often Cutmore-Scott would be the test subject for a new illusion. He picked up a few things but not enough to make it look like his Deception character could go trick-to-trick with a David Copperfiel­d or David Blaine. That part of his job has been a work in progress.

Cutmore-Scott said: “It’s been a very steep learning curve over the last nine months. I have David Kwong to thank for most of the day to day, as well as another magician, Francis Menotti, who works with us day to day. It definitely is an ongoing thing. I’m trying to stay a little bit ahead of each episode and find out what’s coming up in order to have a week or two of practice.

“It’s a lot of work, and it’s really given me an insight into just how much work these guys do to do it for real. I would never feel comfortabl­e doing it live on stage with just the one take, but so far, I felt like I’ve been able to get to a comfort level for each episode where I at least feel prepared enough to have a go at it, and by take 23, 24, I’ve pretty much got it down.”

 ?? DAVID GIESBRECHT, ABC ?? Jack CutmoreSco­tt and Ilfenesh Hadera star in Deception, a police series with a touch of magic.
DAVID GIESBRECHT, ABC Jack CutmoreSco­tt and Ilfenesh Hadera star in Deception, a police series with a touch of magic.

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