Variety

Winter Rolls Into ‘Tulsa’

- By Emily Longeretta

With nine shows, Taylor Sheridan can’t be as hands-on as he once was. So, after writing the “Tulsa King” pilot in three days, and getting Sylvester Stallone to quickly sign on to the project, Sheridan handed over the reins to “Boardwalk Empire” and “Sopranos” vet, Terence Winter.

Now it’s Winter’s show. After reading the “brilliant” first script, he called Sheridan to talk over some changes — moving the premise from Kansas City to Tulsa, for starters — and went from there.

“Taylor was like, ‘This is your baby. I have visitation rights.’ He stayed true to his word,” Winter says. “I went off to the show and I met him one time after that, in person right before we started shooting.”

On paper, the Paramount+ show is about former Mafia capo Dwight Manfredi, who’s sent to live in Tulsa, Okla., after serving 25 years in prison. But it’s more than that. In Stallone’s first-ever TV series, he plays a character very close to himself, who feels disconnect­ed from the modern world.

“I think this is a version of Sly that very few people have ever gotten to see before,” says Winter. “This is closer to the real person than anything he’s ever done — aside from the Mafia stuff, of course. He’s very funny, very smart and incredibly well read. He’s sarcastic, self-deprecatin­g and soulful. So much of Dwight is actually taken from the real guy. I haven’t seen him flex those muscles on-screen before.”

Stallone agrees about the similariti­es — “the only difference is the name,” he says. “If I were a gangster, I probably wouldn’t be a very successful one, because that’s the way I would be — humorous and irregular, you might say.”

He’s also ready to show the world he’s not what everyone expects: “People think after ‘Rocky’ that I’m a little impaired. Or after ‘Rambo,’ they think you’re monosyllab­ic, dangerous and antisocial. What you see as Dwight is what you see right now. This is who I am.”

As for whether there will be more ‘Tulsa,’ Stallone admits filming TV was much tougher than he thought: “I can’t believe some people have done this for four, five or six seasons. It’s brutal. I’ll never say, ‘This is a hard shoot’ again on a feature. It’s a vacation compared to this.”

 ?? ?? Sylvester Stallone plays a former Mafia capo in “Tulsa King,” his first TV serries.
Sylvester Stallone plays a former Mafia capo in “Tulsa King,” his first TV serries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States