The Columbus Dispatch

For Mcavoy and Horgan ‘Together’ is an actor’s dream

- Lindsey Bahr

James Mcavoy and Sharon Horgan didn’t know one another before this year. But the two actors got very familiar very quickly thanks to the new film “Together” (in theaters now), a cutting examinatio­n of a failing relationsh­ip held together by their 10-year-old son.

Armed with acerbic dialogue and honest monologues written by Tony Award-winner Dennis Kelly, an Oscarnomin­ated director in Stephen Daldry and a freedom to break the fourth wall and address the audience directly, Mcavoy and Horgan got to flex their skills as actors while diving into the collective trauma of the past 18 months.

Mcavoy and Horgan spoke to The Associated Press about the process and not holding anything back. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.

AP: This was an insanely quick 10day shoot. Were you at least able to rehearse beforehand?

Horgan: Oh yes. There was an awful lot to work out because we were going to be in this one house and mainly utilizing two rooms and so in order for them to be in any way interestin­g visually to look at, we needed to sort of get it up on its feet and get moving with it. Stephen just kept us moving constantly. Then this funny thing happened, well it wasn’t funny at the time, but it kept happening… we would rehearse something and work it all out in movement and choreograp­h it and then no one could remember what we did… but in actual fact, you would usually end up in a place that worked better.

AP: This isn’t quite as mean as say, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” but these characters are pretty cruel to one another. Was that exciting to perform?

Horgan: It was really exciting. Every day you just didn’t know where you’d get to and it felt really unusual to get to do that… I’m quite shy as a person. I’m a bit like, “Don’t look at me” and James is so immediatel­y in it and doing it. It was like, “Oh we’re doing this?” You had to lose your inhibition­s. You had to be willing to try anything.

Mcavoy: There’s a little bit of film acting where it’s like, “Save it for the camera, save it for the take”… People don’t even care sometimes if you’re saying the lines in the script as long as something truthful got captured on camera, something vital and alive and full of energy… But this is so detailed and so dense… you couldn’t just save it for the camera. You couldn’t just save it for the day and hope a better truth would come out because maybe a truth comes out in the first five seconds and then you realize you have 20 minutes of this and you need to make every minute work. If one minute doesn’t work… the audience will check out. It felt like we were getting to use our craft rather than just being little vehicles for honesty and truth.

AP: James, is doing a project like this about the emotional toll of the pandemic coming from the same place as your impulse to raise money for PPE?

Mcavoy: No, absolutely not. It’s just completely selfish and personal… Sometimes it’s just as simple as, “My God, the writing is compelling enough that all I need to do is look into the camera and talk to you for 10 minutes and it’s enough.” There’s something so pure about that. It’s like when you’re in the pub or your pal’s telling you a story or you’re having a conversati­on with a mate or your missus or your son or whoever. When the conversati­on is that compelling and that exciting, hours go by, days go by, weeks go by. If we can do that in writing and filming and acting, then that is really, really special because that’s real connection. This felt like it had the potential to be that.

 ?? STREET PETER MOUNTAIN/BLEECKER ?? James Mcavoy, left, and Sharon Horgan in a scene from the film, “Together.”
STREET PETER MOUNTAIN/BLEECKER James Mcavoy, left, and Sharon Horgan in a scene from the film, “Together.”

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