Waterloo Region Record

‘By far the most challengin­g role I’ve ever played’

Tough to make Ted Kennedy sympatheti­c: Perry

- Neal Justin

LOS ANGELES — Matthew Perry doesn’t bear much of a physical resemblanc­e to Ted Kennedy, but at least he had nailed the late senator’s distinctiv­e way of speaking. Or so he thought.

Before showing up for filming “The Kennedys — After Camelot,” a miniseries debuting on Bravo in Canada April 16, the former “Friends” star said he had spent a dozen sessions with a voice coach. But after just a few minutes of shooting, director Jon Cassar pulled him aside and gave him the bad news: The accent was off. Way off.

“I sounded like Foghorn Leghorn.”

Perry adjusted on the fly. And while the final result may be a less-than-believable impersonat­ion — you never stop wondering why Chandler Bing would abandon that sweet girl at the bottom of a Chappaquid­dick channel — he adds enough dramatic gravitas to keep viewers swept up in the Kennedy saga long after the assassinat­ions of JFK and RFK. At least, that’s the hope of the Hubbards, the prominent Minnesota family that launched Reelz in 2006.

“The term ‘American royalty’ gets tossed around so much that I hate to use it, but there’s some truth to that,” said Stan E. Hubbard, who runs the cable network out of Albuquerqu­e, N.M. “Very few people don’t have strong feelings about them, whether it’s love or hate. Nobody is blah about the Kennedys.”

Hubbard’s ties to the Kennedy franchise date back to 2011, when the History Channel abruptly decided not to air what was envisioned as its first miniseries, “The Kennedys.” Reelz scooped it up and slapped it on the air eight weeks later. The film, starring Greg Kinnear and Katie Holmes, would earn the network its highest ratings to date and four Emmy wins.

Almost immediatel­y, Hubbard announced he was backing a sequel based on J. Randy Taraborrel­li’s bestseller “After Camelot,” chroniclin­g the Kennedys’ triumphs and tragedies (mostly tragedies) from 1968 through 1997. It wasn’t cheap. At four hours, “After Camelot” is only half as long as the original, but the price tag is estimated to be more than $10 million, with a significan­t chunk dedicated to luring Perry to the cast and securing Holmes to reprise her role as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Both stars serve as executive producers, and Holmes directed the third of the four hours.

The actress’ return coincides with Natalie Portman’s Oscarnomin­ated work in “Jackie,” a feature film that focuses on the first lady as she see-saws between shell-shock and sly manipulati­on in the weeks following her husband’s assassinat­ion.

In “After Camelot,” Jackie is more or less a rock, somehow floating above the troubled waters that always seem to rise around the family she married into.

“I think Natalie did an incredible job and I’m glad we both had the opportunit­y to interpret this character,” said Holmes, who actually looks more like Jackie as she braves jealous glares from Bobby Kennedy’s widow, accusation­s from second husband Aristotle Onassis that she has cursed his family, and a losing battle with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. “Although these projects are coming out at the same time, ours covers a different period. So you can see both and get something different from each.”

Holmes could have become overwhelme­d, juggling a daunting role and duties behind the camera, but a certain accessory helped her maintain grace under pressure.

“Jackie had this very distinct black leather Cartier watch, and we got a vintage one,” she said. “There is something so classic about it that so embodied her style, understate­d but elegant.”

Perry has the more difficult challenge in trying to engender sympathy for the entitled youngest son whose negligent driving resulted in the 1969 drowning of Mary Jo Kopechne, a former campaign worker for his brother Robert.

Ted Kennedy cheated on his wife, Joan, who maintained a deeper relationsh­ip with her bartender than her husband. The two-part film, which concludes Sunday, eventually paints him as a crusading, well-intentione­d senator, but you’re never quite able to shake the scene from Chappaquid­dick — perhaps the first time the incident has ever been re-created for the screen — as Kennedy stumbled away from the accident, leaving his passenger to die.

“I took this job because it scared me,” Perry said. “There was a lot of emotion and tragedy, and just the age range” as he depicts Kennedy over the course of three decades. “I told Jon (Cassar) so many times, ‘It’s making me crazy.’”

 ?? KEN WORONER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Katie Holmes as Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Matthew Perry as Ted Kennedy, in "The Kennedys-After Camelot."
KEN WORONER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Katie Holmes as Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Matthew Perry as Ted Kennedy, in "The Kennedys-After Camelot."
 ?? REELZCHANN­EL, TNS ??
REELZCHANN­EL, TNS

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