Daily Press

Jackson-Cohen finds playing flawed characters therapeuti­c

- By Alicia Rancilio

Oliver Jackson-Cohen is interested in lighter roles. That doesn’t mean he hasn’t enjoyed the darker, sometimes scarier fare he has mostly appeared in throughout the past few years — but his mother says he needs a break.

His mom’s commentary came last year when Jackson-Cohen arrived in Vancouver to film the new series “Surface,” now streaming weekly on Apple TV+. She said to him, “You’re not going to play one of your sad boys, are you?”

“I went, ‘What?’ She said, ‘You’re always (expletive) sad. Do something light that I can go and enjoy watching,’ ” JacksonCoh­en laughed. “So that sort of stuck with me.”

It has been a busy few years. Jackson-Cohen’s recent career highlights include Netflix’s “The Haunting of Hill House” series and its follow-up “The Haunting of Bly Manor.” He also terrorized Elisabeth Moss in “The Invisible Man” and played Dakota Johnson’s controllin­g husband in “The Lost Daughter.” He did get a respite, however, in this summer’s rom-com “Mr. Malcom’s List,” an experience he describes as “a joyful romp.”

In “Surface,” JacksonCoh­en stars opposite Gugu Mbatha-Raw as James, a husband desperatel­y trying to keep the pretenses of a happy marriage afloat after an accident caused his wife, Sophie (MbathaRaw), to lose her long-term memory. The more James tries to masquerade past problems, the more suspicious and distant Sophie becomes.

“There’s something so interestin­g when someone’s sitting on a bunch of secrets,” he said. “That

creates so much tension, and if you’re not allowed to say certain things and you’re holding so much back, it can be read in a multitude of different ways. Hopefully it’s worked and it does come across as overprotec­tive or controllin­g or whatever it is — or sinister. But hopefully, you know, as the show goes on and the layers are sort of peeled, you realize what is all underneath that.”

Veronica West, the creator and showrunner of “Surface,” says it’s the balance of mystique and likeabilit­y that makes “something super special about Olly’s performanc­e” in the series.

“He’s got an intensity that can feel very dangerous, but also extremely charismati­c and magnetic and draw you in. I remember the first time we got to meet in person. There was a song playing, and he started doing a little shoulder dance, and I was like, ‘That is the most goofy, charming thing on earth.’ And we ended up writing it (in a scene), he seems a little bit menacing in the subtext, but also has this

immense charm to him. I think that’s the duality of James.”

Jackson-Cohen says he finds that playing flawed people is therapeuti­c.

“I don’t know what it says about me, but I’m drawn to the pain that’s in people,” Jackson-Cohen said. “I find the release of that incredibly comforting, which sounds so messed up. It really does feel like an outlet, which sounds like a complete and utter actor.”

For now, JacksonCoh­en is back in Vancouver filming a series for Amazon Prime Video called “Wilderness” opposite Jenna Coleman, which he describes as

“not lightheart­ed at all.” Next up, he’s hoping there will be another season of “Surface,” which he enjoys, in part, because he has known Mbatha-Raw for years.

“I did one of my first ever jobs with Gugu when I was 19,” JacksonCoh­en said. “We did like an episode of some very questionab­le BBC thing, we’ve known each other since then, and she’s such a wonderful human being.”

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Oliver Jackson-Cohen stars as James in “Surface.”
APPLE TV+ Oliver Jackson-Cohen stars as James in “Surface.”

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