USA TODAY US Edition

Bomer runs the show in ‘Versace’ episode

- Bill Keveney

Actor Matt Bomer is central to Wednesday’s penultimat­e episode of FX’s The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Ver

sace: American Crime Story ( 10 ET/PT), but viewers won’t see him. He has a new role: director.

Bomer ( White Collar, The Normal

Heart), 40, spoke to USA TODAY about his first-time gig directing the episode, “Creator/Destroyer,” which looks at designer Versace and his killer, Andrew Cunanan, as pre-teens; working with his mega-producer friend Ryan Murphy; and the chances for a revival of his USA hit, White Collar.

Question: How did this first-time directing assignment come about?

Bomer: I’d worked with Ryan several times. He knew I always would come into the set with reams of text work and research and he said, ‘ You should direct.’ I thought it might be on American Horror Story, but he said Versace. I promptly passed out. When I came to, I said yes. This was a four-month labor of love for me. I read over 3,000 pages of books. I met with director friends to get insight. I did an intensive with the DGA (Directors Guild of America). I shadowed two other directors of the show. So by the time I got on set, I was at least able to fake it till I made it.

Q: How did you approach Cunanan in this episode, which portrays a future killer and a future fashion icon as youths?

Bomer: “We’re all responsibl­e for the choices we make, but it was a big question of this episode: Can we empathize with a monster when we see the circumstan­ces of his life and the hand he was dealt? What makes one person a creator and one a killer?

Q: In April, you’ll be on Broadway for a 50th-anniversar­y presentati­on of The Boys in the Band, a 1968 play about a group of gay men produced by Murphy.

Bomer: This is an important piece of our history. A lot of my LGBT history started with the AIDS movement. ( Boys) isn’t about all gay people in the 1960s but a specific group on this night. You have to understand there was an incredible amount of turmoil, frustratio­n, anger and self-loathing built up because they were told by society they were not equals. … It’s important to remember how far we’ve come, the fact that it’s an entirely openly gay cast of actors telling the story now, which would have been unimaginab­le 50 years ago.

Q: You squeezed in two film roles in recent months, too?

Bomer: Vulture Club is about a woman (Susan Sarandon) whose (journalist) son is taken hostage by the Taliban. She discovers a group called the Vulture Club that is there to help her find different avenues to bring him home. I play a foreign correspond­ent who is close to her son and spearheads the campaign. ... Papi Chulo is about loneliness. I play a Los Angeles weatherman who has a nervous breakdown on camera and then ends up forming an unlikely friendship with a migrant worker.

Q: Do you ever think about White

Collar, in which you played a brilliant con artist who helped the feds catch criminals?

Bomer: I miss it. I’m still friends with the whole cast. Our kids go to the same school as Tim (DeKay’s) kids, so we’ll bump into them from time to time. I still interact with fans. ... It was one of those things that came in the wake of Bernie Madoff. People wanted to see white-collar criminals get served, and (creator) Jeff Eastin was able to do it in a fun, engaging way.

Q: Would you ever do a reunion? Bomer: We talk about it, but it’s kind of tricky. We were Fox Studios for USA Network (NBCUnivers­al), so it’s two different entities to appease. But if they ever say, ‘Matt, let’s do a White Collar movie,’ I would do it in a heartbeat.

 ?? RAY MICKSHAW/FX ?? Matt Bomer directs Wednesday’s episode of “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace.”
RAY MICKSHAW/FX Matt Bomer directs Wednesday’s episode of “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace.”

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