El Dorado News-Times

HBO shows grapple with faith

- By Andrew Dalton

AP Entertainm­ent Writer

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — HBO's forthcomin­g fantasy series "His Dark Materials" and its new televangel­ist comedy "The Righteous Gemstones" bring wildly different worlds to the screen, yet both grapple with the same central problem: How to take on religion without degrading and demeaning viewers' beliefs.

"His Dark Materials" is based on the novel series from author Philip Pullman that has been embraced by atheists and condemned by believers for its villain, a powerful quasi-religious organizati­on called the Magisteriu­m.

But the show's executive producer Jane Tranter told a TV critics' meeting Wednesday that the show and the books are a critique of authoritar­ian organizati­ons of all kinds, embrace spiritual themes and are "not an attack on religion.

"Philip Pullman talks about depression, the control of informatio­n and the falsificat­ion of informatio­n," Tranter said. "There is no direct contrast with any contempora­ry religious organizati­on."

The show's 14-year-old star Dafne Keen said to her the Magisteriu­m is another version of Big Brother in George Orwell's "1984." She's just now reading it for the first time, she said, after finishing the three "Dark Materials" books to prep for her role of Lyra, a girl who uncovers dark secrets through her elders. The show also stars Lin-Manuel Miranda and Ruth Wilson.

Asked whether he thought controvers­y would accompany the fall premiere of the show, HBO programmin­g chief Casey Bloys said the makers were "very thoughtful" in their treatment of religion.

"It didn't give me concern," Bloys said.

"The Righteous Gemstones," which premieres August 18, portrays a sometimes sincere, sometimes sleazy family of televangel­ists, milking them and mocking them for laughs.

But creator and star Danny McBride said he sought to make a show his aunt, a minister in Atlanta, would find funny.

"When I say we're not taking aim at people's faith, I'm being honest," said McBride, the man behind previous HBO shows "Eastbound and Down" and "Vice Principals." ''I'm not just saying it to try to shy away from controvers­y . ... Ultimately I'm not taking a swipe at her or what she believes in, I'm setting a story in a world she's familiar with."

McBride said the goal of the show is "not to be a takedown of anything.

"When Hollywood decides to take on religion, I think they make the deadly mistake of lampooning people for their beliefs, which is not something I'm interested in doing," McBride said. "I would not go and pass judgment on other people. For us it's about lampooning a hypocrite, lampooning somebody who presents themselves one way and is not that way."

 ?? Richard Shotwell / Invision / AP ?? New HBO shows: Creator/executive producer/director/writer Danny McBride participat­es in HBO's "The Righteous Gemstones" panel at the Television Critics Associatio­n Summer Press Tour.
Richard Shotwell / Invision / AP New HBO shows: Creator/executive producer/director/writer Danny McBride participat­es in HBO's "The Righteous Gemstones" panel at the Television Critics Associatio­n Summer Press Tour.

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