Weekend Herald

Rich pickings

There’s more to Billions than money, its stars tell Dominic Corry

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Pity the 1 per cent. The world is a tough place for the richest of the rich right now. With economic inequality and corporate malfeasanc­e on the rise — not to mention a certain self-proclaimed rich guy currently nudging the Western world off a cliff — there is more public emnity for billionair­es than ever before. Yet we cannot look away.

Which is part of why Billions is such a fascinatin­g watch. t charts the high-stakes game of brinksmans­hip between hotshot billionair­e hedge fund manager Bobby Axelrod (Damien Lewis) and US Attorney Chuck Rhoades (Paul Giamatti), whose allconsumi­ng passion is to put Axelrod in jail. There are extreme contradict­ions in both men: Rhoades is driven by a crusading sense of justice, but is more than willing to bend the rules if it means seeing Axelrod behind bars — and at the end of last season showed he was prepared to suffer great personal loss in his pursuit of that goal.

Axelrod, on the other hand, is a ruthless businessma­n who came from humble beginnings. He will happily destroy multiple lives with a single trade, yet often displays flashes of considerab­le humanity.

So why do we as a culture remain so entranced by the super-rich? “We have long been fascinated by his question,” Billions co-creator Brian Koppelman tells Weekend. “Why characteri­stics like great intelligen­ce, wealth, charisma, ambition stand in for true character in our society so often. And we wanted to display that in the show, and ask that question in dramatic context.

“I think the dramatic device that is being used here is that if you give people enough need, desire, want, viewers enjoy that,” adds Lewis. “Viewers enjoy watching the desperatio­n, the compromise, and the ambiguity that it throws up in their lives. And what are they going to do to go get it? That’s where the dramatic stakes are. The fact that shysters do shystery things doesn’t make you like them less, weirdly, in a dramatic context.” end of season two saw Axelrod after illegally sabotaging a business that Rhoades and his family were investing in. The whole affair was a trap engineered by Rhoades, who lost almost 30 million dollars in the gambit, but considered it a small price to pay to see Axelrod in handcuffs.

“I like many things about the character,” Giamatti tells Weekend. “But it was interestin­g to me that last season, when I tanked everybody — I tanked my best friend, my father — everybody lost their money, and I felt it was very interestin­g that Chuck didn’t really care about money.”

Axelrod was bailed soon after his arrest, but is facing major indictment­s as season three begins. Smack dab in the middle of these two alpha males is Chuck’s wife Wendy (Maggie Siff), who happens to work as Axelrod’s most trusted in-house confidante and motivator.

“The whole conflict within the character has been not wanting to be stuck between a rock and a hard place between these two guys,” Siff says. “Yet the season starts out, and she’s back between these two men but, in her mind, in a very different way and on very different terms.”

Also introduced in season two was a brilliant young financial analyst at Axelrod’s firm named Taylor, a gender-fluid, non-binary character played by gender fluid, nonbinary actor Asia Kate Dillon. A breakout recurring character last year, Taylor has been upped to series regular for season three.

Dillon — who like Taylor, identifies by the pronouns “they” and “them” — says they were thrilled by the character’s positive reception.

“I didn’t know what the response to Taylor was going to be,” says Dillon. “I hoped people would love them, and it turns out people did. And the range of responses that I got from people of all ages all over the world, saying, ‘Just by having you as a representa­tive, I feel less alone,’ to parents with kids, who say: ‘My kid is a non-binary, gender fluid trans, and I was having trouble figuring out how to relate to them, and Taylor helped me do that’.

“On Twitter, someone tweeted at me recently: ‘I’m 65 years old. I’m a Republican. I’m a white man. I’m cis-gendered. I’m straight, and I was transphobi­c until I learned to love Taylor on the show Billions.”

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