The Hamilton Spectator

Thornton still an industry titan in Goliath

Second season of Amazon show more ‘Hitchcocki­an,’ star says, but his acting is unchanged

- JEFFREY FLEISHMAN

SANTA MONICA, CALIF. — The bar half-lit, his beer quarter-full, Billy Bob Thornton smiled like a guy fencing stolen watches. He wore a long, dark coat, hat pulled low, and one sensed he could slip away with no one, not even the two ladies tucked in the corner, being the wiser. He sipped and narrowed his eyes at a passing face.

Thornton can come across as a menacing whisper, a man who would guard your lunch money but steal your wife. You have to watch him, like you have for many years, to see what he might do next, this one-time boy from a shack in the woods who loves Faulkner, wears rings on his thumbs, frets about the world and has figured out that television, with its intricate characters an deep story lines, suits him.

His series “Goliath,” for which he won a Golden Globe, is now in its second season on Amazon Prime. The existentia­l tale, created by David E. Kelley and Jonathan Shapiro, dives into the righteous, flawed, intense if reticent soul of Billy McBride, a boozedup, motel-living lawyer whose integrity is commensura­te with his understand­ing of evil. Rumpled and undeterred, he believes in justice but is not sure about the law. McBride gets mixed up with a dirty cop, a woman who might be conning him, a psychopath­ic developer and a drug lord with an amputation fetish.

“I don’t play the part any different from what I am. I’m a guy who doesn’t think life is fair,” said Thornton, gazing from the back booth at Chez Jay, a Santa Monica bar.

Thornton is like a skip in a record, a crack between a lyric. His characters, including the mentally slow handyman in “Sling Blade,” the tormented

prison guard in “Monster’s Ball,” the self-loathing thief in “Bad Santa,” are men askew, off-key notes in need of soothing. Some, such as Billy McBride and Coach Gary Gaines in “Friday Night Lights,” are wells of decency and resolve. They know the line between honour and shame. But Thornton, as he did with sedate hit man Lorne Malvo in the FX series “Fargo,” does sinister like he was born to it.

“They always want you to scream. Casting directors, producers, directors, audiences all want you to scream, especially when you’re playing a bad guy,” he said. “But the fact of the matter is they must not have known that many bad guys, because real bad guys don’t scream. You never hear them coming.”

Thornton is the “most subtle actor I’ve ever worked with,” said “Goliath” showrunner Lawrence Trilling. “He seems to be doing nothing while at the same time giving you everything emotionall­y. The joke that Billy always says when directors come in try and

tell him to be more emotional, he says, ‘Hey, I have the same look in my face whether I’m eating a ham sandwich or killing my mother.’ He understand­s it’s all about context.”

Thornton was raised “in the middle of the woods” in Arkansas, in a house that had no electricit­y or plumbing: “The kind of place where people who don’t have money live.” The son of a psychic and Korean War vet who became a teacher, Thornton, whose younger brother died in 1988, said, “I’m severely dyslexic and have obsessive-compulsive disorders and a lot of other things. Real bad anxiety and I have a paranoia, a fear of death, a fear of sickness, the same things for all the people I love. I’ve had it since I was 11 or 12. I always had intensity. It just lived in there.”

He gravitated toward movies and books. “My wonder about the rest of the world drove me,” he said. “All we had was imaginatio­n.”

He was a standout baseball player and later became a singersong­writer. His country-rock/ rockabilly band, the Boxmasters, will play in July at the Mint in Los Angeles. He’s been married six times, including to Angelina Jolie, whose blood he wore in a locket around his neck in a relationsh­ip that now seems a curious artifact from a twilight zone, and his current wife, Connie Angland, is a puppeteer and special effects technician. At 62, he carries a sharp notion of what was and what’s been lost.

The venom and meanness on social media bother him. It’s become a world, he said, where “people want to take someone down” and the audience, plugged-in and insatiable on Instagram and Twitter, demands to be the star.

The art of subtractio­n is essential to his skill as a writer and actor. In the first season of “Goliath,” Trilling asked Thornton to show a more battered look while McBride winced into the sun with a hangover. “I said, ‘I’d love to see that you’re a little more hung over,’” said Trilling. “And Billy’s like, ‘I am hungover. This is what it looks like.’ He looks at scripts and rather than want to add lines for himself, he’ll want to cut lines. He’ll say, ‘I don’t need to say this. Let me just show it.’”

After moving to Los Angeles to act, write and join a band, Thornton took a job as a waiter at a Christmas party, where he met director Billy Wilder. They talked and Wilder urged him to get into screenwrit­ing. He took the advice and won an Academy Award for adapted screenplay for “Sling Blade” in 1997. He has a novelist’s eye, saying of Tom Waits, whose songs are littered with Thorntonli­ke characters: “If Oliver Twist was a real story and Tom Waits was Fagan, I would have been swiping people’s wallets for him.”

He can be just as perceptive when decipherin­g himself. He hasn’t had a screenplay turned into a movie for years, and his forays into directing, including “All the Pretty Horses” (2000), adapted from the Cormac McCarthy novel and subject to drastic cutting by Sony and Harvey Weinstein (he did not want to talk about the disgraced producer), have been uneven. His “Jayne Mansfield’s Car” (2012) dropped quickly out of sight. Perhaps it’s earned wisdom or a shade of bitterness, but Thornton, who has twice read the Bible from cover to cover, has figured out his place — at least for now — in the constellat­ion.

He’s reminiscen­t of a soul out of Faulkner or Flannery O’Connor, tormented, wise, funny, a slanted way of seeing things. It was pushing 4 p.m. He stayed a little longer, pondering the Kennedy assassinat­ion and how an actor must make language fit him. The sky over the ocean was grey; it felt like rain, but he only lived up the road a bit. He stood, a wisp of a man in a big coat, and left his beer on the table.

 ?? AMAZON PRIME VIDEO PHOTO ?? Nina Arianda and Billy Bob Thornton in season two of “Goliath.”
AMAZON PRIME VIDEO PHOTO Nina Arianda and Billy Bob Thornton in season two of “Goliath.”

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