Toronto Star

Ewan McGregor plays two brothers on Fargo

Actor calls his double role on Coen Brothers-inspired series an ‘amazing challenge’

- LAUREN KRUGEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY— Ewan McGregor lifts up a faded polo shirt to reveal a slab of white padding strapped to his midsection.

The Scottish actor’s prosthetic paunch is key to his transforma­tion into Ray Stussy, one of two brothers he plays on the third season of the Alberta-shot, Coen Brothers-inspired FX series Fargo.

Ray, a parole officer, has a longrunnin­g grudge against his more handsome and successful older brother Emmit, the “Parking Lot King of Minnesota.”

Their father died when they were teenagers, leaving Emmit a sports car and Ray a stamp collection that turned out to be valuable.

Emmit later hoodwinks his brother into a swap and Ray blames his life’s disappoint­ments on losing a fortune he’s convinced is rightfully his.

“He’s got a hard life. He’s got a job where he watches men pissing in cups all day long,” McGregor says of Ray, while taking a break from filming at a sound stage in a Calgary industrial area.

McGregor is barely recognizab­le while in costume as Ray, with phoney tufts of scraggly hair attached to Fargo. a bald cap.

McGregor worked hard to adopt the distinctiv­e Minnesota accent that’s a hallmark of the show, and also had to learn how to calibrate his voice while switching between Ray and Emmit.

“Why I took (the role) was because it was an amazing challenge,” he says.

There is a bathtub scene early in the season that required McGregor to show a real pot-belly while in his role as Ray, which complicate­d playing Emmit.

“I ate from October till January when we started, like anything I wanted,” McGregor says. While Ray is “more lazy and slouchy and unhealthy,” Emmit is more trim and upright.

So when McGregor was on the heftier side, he says he had to squeeze into Spanx to play Ray.

The show’s third season is set in 2010, but touches on themes that fit with the 2017 zeitgeist.

“It’s quite interestin­g with the whole Trump thing because I feel sometimes there’s moments that I’m channellin­g,” McGregor says.

That mostly comes through when he’s playing money-hungry Emmit, “like, his thin skin and the way he can react when (something bad) goes down.”

Executive producer Warren Littlefiel­d says the show’s theme of “the truth is what you say it is” will resonate at a time when phrases like “alternativ­e facts” and “fake news” have entered the popular lexicon.

“It became, in the last number of months, far more interestin­g and relevant,” Littlefiel­d says.

Anxiety over the encroachme­nt of technology also plays heavily into the upcoming season, says actress Carrie Coon, who plays Gloria Burgle, a newly divorced small-town police chief who feels untethered in her life.

Gloria is made uneasy by the bright cellphone screens she sees everywhere she goes.

“There are many moments in the series where she looks around and she notices everyone else is looking down and no one’s communicat­ing with her anymore,” Coon says, admitting she was a holdout when it came to getting a cellphone.

“I completely understand Gloria’s point of view about how alienating this technology can actually be when it’s unfamiliar to you.

“She feels, I think, the erosion of community as a result.”

The first episode of Fargo’s third season airs Wednesday on FX Canada.

 ?? CHRIS LARGE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ewan McGregor plays both Emmit Stussy and Ray Stussy in
CHRIS LARGE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Ewan McGregor plays both Emmit Stussy and Ray Stussy in
 ?? SYSTEM/FX/ROGERS MEDIA ??
SYSTEM/FX/ROGERS MEDIA

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