The Columbus Dispatch

Lawless’ love of true crime leads to new show

- By Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK — The next time you find yourself in a courtroom, look around. There is a chance you might spot Lucy Lawless there, too.

The actress is fascinated by trials, and on days when she isn’t working she will often go to court as a member of the public. There you will find the onetime “Xena: Warrior Princess” trying to look inconspicu­ous, soaking it all in.

“It just teaches you so much about life and your own society and justice and about yourself,” Lawless said. “It’s really important that we participat­e in the democracy. That’s a really good way to hold the justice system to the standards of the people.”

Lawless, 51, has attended a murder trial in her native New Zealand, jury selection for a grisly case in Louisiana and was at Jeffrey Epstein’s bail hearing in New York last month when the financier faced sex traffickin­g charges.

On that rainy day, she showed up bedraggled in flip-flops and watched Epstein “shamble in,” acting shaky. It was over quickly.

“Sedate is not the right word. It was somber. And methodical. And meticulous. And all over in 20 minutes,” she said.

Lawless’ fascinatio­n with crime — she even will go so far as calling herself a “court ghoul” — has filtered into her latest project, the new crime series “My Life Is Murder,” which premiered on Acorn TV last week.

Lawless plays Alexa Crowe, an ex-homicide detective who bakes bread, loves Crowded House, speaks German and corrects others’ grammar when she isn’t chasing baddies. She is a fully realized modern woman — unfiltered, sexy, funny and prone to giving unsolicite­d advice.

In a typical scene, a villain holding a knife orders Alexa to stand up. “Get up slow,” he snarls. She responds calmly: “I think you’ll find ‘slowly’ is the adverb.”

There are difference­s between Alexa and Lawless, of course. One is the character’s love of bread, which on the show is a symbol of new life and nurturing. In real life, Lawless is gluten intolerant.

“It’s kind of a joke that I’m always up to my elbows in flour. But I sure earned my intoleranc­e. For 40 years, I ate bread like a mad thing, and I know what it tastes like all right.”

The show, set in Melbourne, Australia, explores closed worlds — undertaker­s, models, escorts and even bicyclist enthusiast­s nicknamed MAMILS (middle-aged man in Lycra). The show also tweaks convention­s, casting a woman as a mob boss and making Alexa’s annoying neighbor a millennial rather than a crusty older woman.

“I just want to give people At a glance

• New episodes of “My Life Is Murder” are released Mondays on Acorn TV.

a little psychic holiday from all the grim stuff so they can recharge the batteries and go back out there and fight the good fight,” Lawless said.

Creator Claire Tonkin wrote Alexa with Lawless in mind.

“There’s a lot of me in the character, and that’s the advantage of having writers build something around you,” Lawless said. “I’m a very lucky woman.”

Matthew Graham, the general manager of Acorn TV, which offers British and Australian TV shows, said that Lawless’ show continues the streaming service’s push for strong female leads.

“We love Lucy Lawless. We love what she brings to the screen — her strength, her vivaciousn­ess, her intelligen­ce and her sense of humor,” he said.

Lawless’ strength and humor were present when she burst into the public consciousn­ess as Xena in a show that mixed dark mythology, action, campy humor and sly sexuality. It aired from 1995 to 2001.

Xena was a she-hunky leather queen in a breastplat­e who battled bad guys with sword, shiv, crossbow, frying pan or the ultimate weapon, a murderous missile called the chakram. She and her sidekick, Gabrielle, were part of one of television’s more intriguing gal-pal duos, with many viewers celebratin­g what they saw as lesbian affection.

“It was fun. It was about universal themes, of the triumph of the human spirit: love, courage and, of course, hate and fear underneath that,” Lawless said. “The legacy is that it inspired, by some kind of alchemy, positive change in the lives of individual­s.”

Lawless constantly hears from fans about how the show empowered them, especially from people who feel marginaliz­ed — minorities, invalids, and gay men and women. She once asked an African American woman why it resonated with black women. That woman’s response: “African American women feel that they need to be warrior women every day of their lives.”

Lawless is something of a warrior off-screen, too. She takes activism seriously and calls the environmen­t “my No. 1 commitment.” She was arrested in 2012 for protesting Arctic oil drilling with Greenpeace and said the movement needs to keep going despite setbacks.

“You get compassion fatigue,” she said. “You go, ‘I’ve only got so much bandwidth, and this is making my heart hurt’ and the world’s really heart-hurty right now.”

“So in order to keep us buoyant, we’ve got to start hearing about the great innovation­s and people who are doing good work, and there is tons of it out there.”

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[ANDY KROPA/INVISION]

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