Los Angeles Times

‘MELROSE’

Cumberbatc­h plays an addict.

- calendar@latimes.com By Daron James

For Benedict Cumberbatc­h, landing the role of Patrick Melrose in the Showtime limited series of the same name started out by simply answering a question on Reddit’s popular “ask me anything” forum: If you could choose to be any literary character in an upcoming role who would it be?

“I rarely know the answer,” says the sixtime Emmy nominee. “Whenever anyone asks me, I resort to the truth that I’ve been lucky enough to be in this space, but [this time] I just so happened to have two projects in front of me. One was about Prince Hamlet and the other was a series of books that I think are some of the finest prose of the 21st century.”

Based on the autobiogra­phical novels of Edward St. Aubyn published between 1992 and 2012, the tale of family trauma — adapted by writer David Nicholls — follows a damaged man addicted to drugs and alcohol who’s been sexually abused by his father before finding recovery, love and starting a family of his own.

“You’re inherently lucky when you start with source material like that,” says Cumberbatc­h. “There’s subtext and a guide to what you need to be thinking when you’re not saying or doing it. It was probably a daunting task for David to dramatize what were essentiall­y at times very much internaliz­ed moments. It was about translatin­g the novels’ internal life and interior life and subtext and putting them into dramatic moments of action and dialogue.”

Cumberbatc­h met with St. Aubyn to further explore that emotional journey. “He was incredibly generous sharing private stories without thought or ego. I’ve never suffered from abuse or been an addict and this skewers a world that I have a peripheral understand­ing of in a really interestin­g and dynamic way. It’s human. It’s extraordin­ary. It journeys through some of the darkest things imaginable with some flame of innocence and hope.”

Bringing accurate psychologi­cal and physical attributes of each drug to screen, whether it was heroin, cocaine, opioids or alcohol, was central to defining the character.

‘It journeys through some of the darkest things imaginable with some f lame of innocence and hope.’ — BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H, of his “Patrick Melrose” character who’s addicted to drugs and alcohol after surviving childhood abuse

On shooting days, two addiction consultant­s steered him toward truth and detail. “They were incredibly helpful and described how each drug can affect you with painful honesty,” says Cumberbatc­h. “It was very important to delineate each drug and define the state the character was in. If you’ve been a witness to that kind of behavior or never experience­d it before, you have to watch something that’s believable and not shy away from the 180-degree turns of pain and mood.”

For the character’s sobriety, Cumberbatc­h changed the tempo. “Patrick implodes internally, turning into a paranoid schizophre­nic, but he’s able to push his troubles at arm’s length and save himself. While sober, his thought process is slower, more warped in an un-energized way. He works in different rhythms.”

Beyond his contributi­ons as an actor, Cumberbatc­h served as executive producer, interviewi­ng directors and sharing thoughts during casting. He hit it off with Edward Berger when the potential director said he saw these episodes as “five different films about a man struggling to become a survivor as he tries to free himself from his past.” Cumberbatc­h mentions, “It was delightful to be creatively involved in the entire production process. Edward kept an incredibly collaborat­ive conversati­on going and was open to suggestion­s and notes in the editing room even though he had final cut. It really was a conversati­on and that’s rare.”

When asked about the response he’s received, Cumberbatc­h says, “As a storytelle­r, when people embrace what you’ve done that’s all you can ever want. To tell challengin­g stories and for people to take something from it, you know you’ve done your job. To get nominated on top of that is an embarrassm­ent of riches, to be frank. It’s a further validation of the work, which we are thrilled about.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ??
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times

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