Otago Daily Times

INSIDE TODAY

Bill Hader breaks character with Barry, the story of a hitman with a dream,

- writes Chris Barton. Barry premieres on Friday at 10pm on SoHo.

INSIDE a dark soundstage in

Culver City, Bill Hader stands at the corner of a stage. Dressed to the nondescrip­t nines in a chambray shirt and khakis, he looks nervous, glancing at pages held tightly in his hands as his fellow actors debate a character’s morality in a rehearsal

for Macbeth.

He’s reticent but finally interjects in the familiar, Midwestern halfdrawl he deployed for eight seasons on

Saturday Night Live.

‘‘I don’t know, I think Shakespear­e whiffed it.’’

With increased aggravatio­n, he builds a case from his own background that there’s a possibilit­y for redemption.

It’s a strange conclusion, but in the context of Barry — a halfhour series featuring Hader as cocreator, star and, for the first time, director — it follows its own sort of logic.

Barry is the story of a depressed, disconnect­ed exmarine turned hitman (Hader) who, while on assignment in Los Angeles, winds up in an acting class, one of those blackened incubators of dreams and delusions aimed at those seeking to break into the business. To his surprise, Barry catches the acting bug and must reconcile the undercover life of an assassin with a job that needs a spotlight.

Hader confers around a monitor with series cocreator Alec Berg

(Silicon Valley) to check whether his semiconfes­sion at the rehearsal is working. Back in the theatre, his onscreen classmates and acting teacher (Henry Winkler) continue riffing some responses.

‘‘My tummy enters the room before I do,’’ Winkler jokes with one of them between takes.

Although the various struggles surroundin­g the acting classes held in various small theatres around LA were a new experience for Hader, who was briefly part of LA’s Groundling­s before SNL, he was also on familiar ground.

‘‘It’s this funny thing where everyone is very bonded together, but they’re also competitiv­e,’’ Hader later says, slumped in a folding chair between takes. ‘‘That was Saturday

Night Live, you know? So it was very much my experience­s of some of the dynamics — not specific people or anything, but that feeling.

‘‘I remember when we were writing this season of Barry thinking, ‘Oh, well, it’s kind of like when I joined SNL and being a little bit of an outsider: How do I get in? How do I figure this thing out?’ ’’

As anyone who saw him during that run knows, Hader indeed figured the show out. But behind the scenes, he was no more comfortabl­e than Barry.

‘‘The live thing was hard for me,’’ Hader said. ‘‘That red light would go on the camera, and all of a sudden all of my friends in Oklahoma were watching me.’’

‘‘He basically spent eight years terrified,’’ says Berg in a later phone call. ‘‘But he was so good at it, he kind of just kept at it. I thought the idea of somebody who was a prisoner of their own gift was a very interestin­g area. How much do you owe to that gift, and how much do you have to service that gift in spite of your desire to run away?’’

As the idea coalesced, Berg says he was a little reluctant to add to pop culture’s long line of hit men: ‘‘It’s like the dog catcher in the old Dennis

the Menace cartoons — there is no dog catcher, it’s not a thing.’’

But the conflictin­g nature of Barry’s day job and passion became more appealing.

‘‘It started to become an interestin­g dynamic of a guy who hates what he does, and falls in love

with something that he’s terrible at,’’ Berg says. ‘‘And it started to become interestin­g when it was like, oh, if he tries to become an actor, that can get him killed.’’

Given the show’s particular­s, absurd comedy was practicall­y inevitable, and Barry is a funny show. But it balances those moments with a story that’s often far more dark and human than expected.

‘‘Watching certain hitman movies, we really wanted to make sure it didn’t feel like that, and that the violence in it was never really funny,’’ Hader says. ‘‘It’s a world [Barry] wants to get out of, so you kind of want to play it for what it is, which is pretty ugly.’’

The same can be said for the world of acting. Midway through the season, one of Barry’s classmates (Sarah Goldberg) is confronted with a ‘‘casting couch’’ moment, and her raw, shellshock­ed response is harrowing to watch, especially given the many reports that spurred the recent ‘‘Time’s Up’’ movement.

‘‘We had heard a story about somebody who had got a line like that,’’ Berg says of the scene, which inevitably carries more weight now than when it was written.

‘‘It just happens that things have swung around where [sexual harassment] seems a little more in the news,’’ he adds. ‘‘I don’t think there’s been any shortage of that for the last decade.’’

Though superficia­lly a breakout series for Hader, Barry is the kind of show that luxuriates in details along its periphery. Anthony Carrigan, of

Gotham, is an unexpected standout as a weirdly upbeat Chechen mobster, and character actor

Stephen Root — whom Hader calls

‘‘a treasure’’ — plays Barry’s boss with the same distinctiv­e, unhinged drive that has marked his appearance­s in Get Out and the films of the Coen brothers.

And then there’s Winkler, who is lord of his realm when teaching but is just as much of a humbled Hollywood bit player as his students in going out on assemblyli­ne auditions between classes.

For his part, Hader says one of his biggest challenges was keeping up with his cast as an actor, and part of that process in playing Barry was becoming adept with looking awful at it.

‘‘It’s really hard,’’ he says with a grin. ‘‘Julianne Moore does it really well in Boogie Nights, but it’s really difficult to not come off like you’re trying too hard. I love true crime shows, so in a lot of those recreation­s, some of those actors are really helpful to watch . . . Not knowing what to do with your hands is a big one.’’

A veteran actor and producer who has also shown a deft hand with twisted comedy on Arrested

Developmen­t, Winkler also puts his own stamp on Cousineau, Barry’s acting teacher, who Berg says was initially written as an abusive instructor.

‘‘Henry is such a warm guy and there’s an innate humanity to him that he’s not a sadist, he’s not a bully. And [the character] started to become much more threedimen­sional.’’

‘‘I had the most wonderful time [at his audition] because I made Bill Hader laugh,’’ Winkler marvels, standing outside the soundstage while peeling a tangerine. ‘‘Holy mackerel. Not an easy thing.’’

In preparing for the role, Winkler admits to getting caught up in the script’s many twists, so much so that he felt he had to write Hader a simple yet hopeful question: ‘‘Bill, do I live?’’

‘‘He emailed a reply,’’ Winkler remembers. ‘‘It was ‘Hahahahaha’.’’ — TCA

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 ?? PHOTO: TCA ?? Bill Hader stars in
Barry.
PHOTO: TCA Bill Hader stars in Barry.

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