Toronto Star

NatGeo picks Picasso as its next TV Genius

- JAYME DEERWESTER USA TODAY

National Geographic just aired its season finale of Genius — with Geoffrey Rush as Albert Einstein — but executive producers Ron Howard and Ken Biller have already identified their Season 2 subject: painter Pablo Picasso, to be featured in a new season due next spring.

Picasso’s career spanned some 80 years and 50,000 works. Among his most famous: The Old Guitarist, from his Blue Period; Guernica, sparked by the Nazi bombing of the Spanish town; and Les Demoiselle­s D’Avignon, inspired by his lover, Fernande Olivier.

What sold them on the Spanish modern artist?

“His name stirred curiosity in people,” Howard said. “He was a household name and yet you don’t really know the story of his life or what inspired him, drove him or troubled him and how, through the turbulence, he achieved such artistic greatness in so many different ways and over so many years. It’s that combinatio­n that made him feel like a great choice for Season 2.”

Plus, Biller added, “It was important for us, in terms of proof of concept for the show, to make a declarativ­e statement that Genius is not only about scientists.”

They also confirmed that Season 2 will continue the non-linear storytelli­ng approach they took with Einstein’s story, but that may not be the case for future seasons.

“Because Pablo Picasso lived such a long life and we want to give the audience a sense of the entirety of his life, our intention at this point is to cast a younger and older Picasso, as we did with Johnny Flynn and Geof- frey Rush,” Biller said. “We don’t have any casting in mind yet.”

And as with Einstein, they’ll show all parts of Picasso’s life, even the unflatteri­ng parts.

“We’re not interested in playing it safe and National Geographic was great about encouragin­g that kind of creativity as long as it was reflecting the characters and the truth of the story in an honest way,” Howard said.

That entails depicting their sex lives, although Biller said that’s not for the purpose of titillatio­n.

“One of the truths of Einstein that I didn’t know about when I began on the project is that he had many sexual relationsh­ips. He was an intensely sexual person. He was not faithful to his wife. He had a very unorthodox view of sexuality and monogamy, and an unorthodox marriage with his second wife. If we’re going to spend10 hours exploring a character, I don’t think the audience would be interested in him standing at the blackboard for 10 hours.

“We thought it was really important to get the science right and to get the history right, but it was also really important to get the character right.”

Biller said the show put the women in Einstein’s life “front and centre,” and the show expects to do the same with the Picasso season.

They said they’re hoping to focus on a woman in a potential third season.

“Unfortunat­ely, the way that history works, if you Google ‘geniuses,’ there are many brilliant women and genius women who’ve lived throughout history,” Biller noted. “But history hasn’t remembered a lot of them. So the pool from which to choose is smaller, though we think we do have some really compelling ideas.”

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