The Denver Post

“Atlanta” star Brian Tyree Henry is exhausted, and he’s thrilled about it

Brian Tyree Henry is having a great year

- By Greg Braxton

LOS ANGELES» All things considered, Brian Tyree Henry should be wiped out.

The breakout star of FX’s “Atlanta” flew in from New York just a few hours earlier to attend the premiere of the second season of the offbeat comedy, which returned last week. He was to catch the redeye back right after the event so he can resume rehearsing for the upcoming Broadway production “Lob-by Hero,” by acclaimed writer Kenneth Lonergan (“Manchester by the Sea”).

But battling jet lag and a lack of sleep hasn’t dampened Henry’s mood on this frosty afternoon. Joking and animated, he describes in rapid-fire words what it’s like to be caught in a whirlwind.

“I’m exhausted beyond belief,” he says, his hands gesturing in front of his Janet Jackson T-shirt. “It’s like I’m one of the Looney Tunes characters who has been shot out of a catapult. But it’s all good, and it’s all worth it.”

Being exhausted and excited makes sense given that Henry experience­d a year in which he was featured in one of TV’s hottest comedies, earned an Emmy nomination for his work on one of TV’s hottest dramas (“This Is Us”), worked on several films with top names including Oscar winners Viola Davis, Jodie Foster and director Steve McQueen (“12 Years a Slave”), and is again Broadway-bound.

“I’ve been doing this for 11 years, and to have this kind of breakout moment is fantastic,” says Henry, who first made a splash originatin­g the role of “The General” in the Broadway musical “The Book of Mormon.” “I don’t even want to call it a moment, because I want it to last.”

He is particular­ly pumped about “Atlanta,” the series created and produced by Donald Glover about two cousins maneuverin­g awkwardly through the city’s hip-hop music scene. Henry earned raves as rough-edged rapper Alfred “Paper Boi” Miles who is armed with both a withering glare and a pistol.

The first season drew widespread acclaim and scored two major Emmy wins — lead actor and director for a comedy for Glover — as well as a nomination for comedy.

A key story line in the first season revolved around Paper Boi’s grassroots success. His celebrity factor was bolstered by street cred due to his involvemen­t in a shooting. Seeing an opportunit­y to make money, Alfred’s hapless cousin Earn (Glover), a Princeton dropout bordering on homelessne­ss, becomes his manager.

In person, Henry is considerab­ly more approachab­le and good-humored than his often ill-tempered, weed-smoking alter ego.

“When I first read the script and saw who Albert was, I fell in love with him,” says Henry, who graduated from Morehouse College and received his MFA from the Yale School of Drama. “I immediatel­y knew who this guy is. He’s like every cousin I have, like every best friend I still have.”

“I also want to make sure I do him justice,” he adds. “He has a protection about him, which is why he has a distance. He was born and raised in Atlanta, and he saw everyone he knows leave, and he’s had to figure out a way to survive there. But he’s one of the most loving people I’ve ever seen. He will do anything for the people he cares about.”

In a nod to the increase in robberies around the Christmas holidays when people are purchasing gifts, Season 2 has been dubbed “Atlanta: Robbin’ Season,” which exposes Paper Boi to the doubleedge­d blade of celebrity.

“Now Alfred has to navigate this city in a totally different way,” says Henry. “That is terrifying to him, and it makes him vulnerable. He’s uncomforta­ble — he’s not a rapper, he was just trying to make some money real quick. Now all of a sudden his success has run away from him.”

“We wanted to explore the idea of what fame really means,” says Glover in a phone interview. “Popularity has value, and Alfred is an actual person who all of a sudden has this coming to him. There’s this crazy thing about rapping. It starts out as something very personal, but then it goes out in the world and people start to judge it and they have no idea what you’ve been through.”

Glover offers high praise for his co-star’s performanc­e. “I can’t think of anyone who could have done as good a job as Brian has,” the creator-writeracto­r says. “He really brings a lot of humanity to this character. He can balance being intimidati­ng and also being sweet and precious . ... He’s so different from Paper Boi and Alfred, you forget this is coming from an actor. This show would not be as successful without him.”

Though Henry is ecstatic about “Atlanta,” he’s equally jazzed about his stint onstage in “Lobby Hero,” which also stars Michael Cera (“Juno”) and Chris Evans (“Captain America”).

“I’m so happy to be home; the theater is where I started,” says Henry, who, in addition to “Book of Mormon,” appeared in several production­s at the Public Theatre. He plays William, the head of security in the drama, set in the lobby of a Manhattan highrise apartment building.

He’s set to appear in the upcoming film “Hotel Artemis,” which also stars Foster. Other work in the pipeline for the North Carolina native includes “Widows,” directed by McQueen and starring Davis.

“I’m working with all these artists I’ve admired,” Henry says. “I’ve always said, ‘Please just let me in the ring.’ I wouldn’t trade what’s happening now for the world,” says Henry.

But hopefully, he can get a little sleep.

 ?? Paras Griffin, Getty Images ?? Brian Tyree Henry.
Paras Griffin, Getty Images Brian Tyree Henry.

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