Gulf News

Amir talks ‘Jack Ryan’ journey

The British-Egyptian actor said showrunner­s wanted to tackle the war on terror in a more humane way

- By Marwa Hamad, Senior Reporter

British-Egyptian actor Amir Al Masry had already pushed Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan to the back of his mind by the time he got a call confirming he had landed the role of Ebrahim. But as soon as he heard the team behind it — Michael Bay, John Krasinski, Wendell Pierce — he responded with an immediate yes. “They aimed to tackle the war on terror in a deeper, more humane way,” said Al Masry.

The geopolitic­al series, which premiered on Amazon Prime on August 31, follows CIA analyst Jack Ryan (Krasinski) after he’s plucked from his everyday desk job to go head-to-head with militia leader Mousa bin Sulaiman (Ali Sulaiman).

Ebrahim (Al Masry) is a young tech genius, who becomes Sulaiman’s right hand man. The two develop an older-younger brother dynamic as Sulaiman discovers Ebrahim is the only person he can trust.

After landing on location, Al Masry sat down with showrunner­s Carlton Cuse and Graham Roland to make clear he wanted to portray a human character.

“Nobody thinks they are the ‘bad guy’. Everyone is the hero in their narrative. It was important to me to make sure we see a journey happen from start to finish. I don’t have a problem with playing seemingly immoral characters as long as we, the viewer, can understand their plight,” said Al Masry.

A REAL SURPRISE

Al Masry had worked with Palestinia­n actor Sulaiman previously on the British TV series The State (2017), but it was the first time he had acted across Krasinski

(The Office, A Quiet Place). He said the affable actor is “really is what you see”.

“A true gentleman and very down to earth. When we first met, he already knew about me and my work on The Night Manager, which shows that he made a lot of effort to get to know the people he will be working with,” said Al Masry.

The cast spent time with each other between shoots, exploring Canada, Morocco and France. The real surprise for Al Masry was Wendell Pierce, who portrays CIA officer James Greer.

“[He’s a] consummate profession­al [and] legend to watch on set and learn from and then absolutely crazy, in a good way, off set. Very funny guy, unless you’re the butt of his jokes,” added Al Masry.

“It is important to give credit to all the amazing casting directors who make it a point to be as authentic as possible when casting a role.” AMIR AL MASRY | Actor

HOLLYWOOD STATE OF MIND

Al Masry got his first break in Egyptian cinema with Ramadan Mabrouk AbulAlamei­n Hamouda 10 years ago, before beginning to go up for roles in American and British production­s.

He saw a need for accurate casting in Hollywood, and for casting directors to stop casting non-Arabs as Arabs. “Not only for authentici­ty, but we have a plethora of talented Arab actors in the US, Europe and Middle East that could do that part… We possess a certain energy that is very hard to emulate if you don’t come from that culture,” said Al Masry.

“It is important to give credit to all the amazing casting directors who make it a point to be as authentic as possible when casting a role. Things have definitely changed in the last few years, but we still have some way to go.”

BREAKING STEREOTYPE­S

Back in the Jack Ryan universe, Al Masry switched out his natural British accent for mostly Arabic dialogue. He donned the occasional American accent whenever his character was sent on missions.

But Al Masry has more recently gone up for British and American characters, rather than solely Arab roles. “It still feels sometimes like you are the ‘wild card’. People still have a predisposi­tion for what ethnicity a character should be,” said Al Masry.

He featured in the BBC One series

Age Before Beauty as Dante, a character whose race and ethnicity “doesn’t come into question once in the whole series.”

NEXT UP

Al Masry, who last year played a Saudi college student following his passion of playing associatio­n football in America, has several projects coming up. He begins shooting with director Niels Arden Oplev (Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) in a few weeks in Sweden, before tackling the refugee crisis with filmmaker Ben Sharrock.

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 ?? Photos by Gulf News Archive and courtesy of Instagram.com/amirelmasr­y ?? Masry and Ali Sulaiman on the set of ‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan’.
Photos by Gulf News Archive and courtesy of Instagram.com/amirelmasr­y Masry and Ali Sulaiman on the set of ‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan’.
 ??  ?? Amir Al Masry (front) on the set of ‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan’.
Amir Al Masry (front) on the set of ‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan’.

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