Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Emmy nominee found a way to understand brutal character

- By Michael Ordoña

Montrose Freeman is not easy to like for the first few episodes of “Lovecraft Country.”

“At face value, Montrose is just a miserable drunk. Really just mean to his son,” says his portrayer, Emmy nominee Michael K. Williams. “I subscribe to the narrative that ‘hurt people hurt people.’ I try my best to look at the ‘whys’ and not take things personal. Why is he so brutal to his son? What’s up with all the harsh beatings Atticus had to endure in his childhood from his father? When I got to Episode 9, I fully understood it.”

In that penultimat­e installmen­t of the HBO sci-fi/horror series, characters travel through time, three decades back from 1950s Chicago, to the Tulsa Massacre of 1921. There, we see Montrose’s very personal experience of that nightmare: It wasn’t just the general violence against his community that traumatize­d the thenyoung man; it was the pattern of beatings at his own father’s hands and the racist murder of the first man with whom he was likely in love.

“It was, in a weird way, out of love,” Williams says of Montrose’s brutality toward Atticus. “He was trying to protect Atticus and toughen him up so that the evils of the world would not affect his son the way they did him.”

Williams received his fifth Emmy nomination for his supporting role alongside Jonathan Majors, nominated for his role as Atticus. It may surprise some to learn the veteran actor has yet to win, particular­ly considerin­g his iconic work in “The Wire” as Omar Little. When asked about the nomination, though, Williams talks instead about the other 17 nods the show received, especially for the writing staff.

“I was very, very happy to see the writers get their just due. The show was in the works for three years, being written and rewritten and rewritten. Of course, Jonathan and Jurnee (Smollett, nominated for lead actress) — but I was very happy Aunjanue (Ellis, nominated for supporting actress) got her flowers.”

Surprising­ly, the actor says he wasn’t simply offered the role of the troubled father; “I had to campaign for it,” he says. “My manager even wrote a letter to the producers and the writers, letting them know how much I wanted this role.”

Montrose is a complicate­d guy. For all his bullethead­ed machismo, he turns out to be in a downlow gay relationsh­ip. “I don’t label Montrose’s sexual identity,” Williams says. “I don’t believe he knows what he is because he was living by these standards that were put on him for so long. I believe he’s searching.

“Montrose was given a book of stereotype­s as to what it means to be a man, especially a Black man, in America. Vulnerabil­ity, softness; those are not celebrated in the community. Your experiment­al sexual experience­s; none of these things are celebrated in the ’hood, in the community Montrose came from, or that I come from, for that matter.”

Williams started as a background dancer, performing with the likes of George Michael and Madonna. What he has translated from that to acting is not a physical approach to character, but a musical one.

An acting coach once told him to keep journals but Williams says, “I am frightened of keeping journals because I feel that the minute I start putting all the juicy stuff on the page, I’m gonna mess around and lose it. So my playlists are my journals. That’s how I get to the emotion I need, to breathe life into the character.”

His playlist for Montrose might not be what you’d expect — he doesn’t mention much period music.

“There was one song by Prince called ‘Father’s Song’; I used that a lot for the scenes between Jonathan and I. I listened to a lot of Gil Scott-Heron to get through to Montrose. There was some Miles Davis.”

Williams wasn’t going for atmosphere, but for the meaning and feeling of the songs; they were more of a soundtrack to Montrose’s soul than to “Lovecraft Country.”

Williams expresses disappoint­ment over the acclaimed show’s cancellati­on, saying he would have wanted to see “a second season. I would like to see four more seasons of ‘Lovecraft Country.’ It did exactly what it came to do, it sparked the narrative.”

 ?? RODRIGO VARELA/GETTY ?? Michael K. Williams, who is seen on March 31 in Miami, portrays Montrose Freeman in HBO’s “Lovecraft Country.”
RODRIGO VARELA/GETTY Michael K. Williams, who is seen on March 31 in Miami, portrays Montrose Freeman in HBO’s “Lovecraft Country.”

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