Toronto Star

In McMafia, organized crime and TV go global

BBC and AMC co-production casts ‘ethnically right’ actors for major roles in new drama

- ROSLYN SULCAS THE NEW YORK TIMES

OPATIJA, CROATIA— British actor James Norton stood outside a seafronted modernist villa here, which last June was standing in for a lavish Tel Aviv party venue in the new series McMafia. In a nearby car sat Israeli actor Oshri Cohen, accompanie­d by Russian actress Sofya Lebedeva.

It was the final day of the 27-week shoot of this ambitious co-production of the BBC and AMC about global organized crime and its unusual internatio­nal flavour was on full display. Norton had bought ice cream for the cast and crew, who shouted good-naturedly to each other, in a cacophony of different languages, as they lugged camera and equipment down the stairs for the next shot.

The eight-part McMafia, which debuts in North America on Feb. 26 on AMC, is unusual in mainstream television-making in having a cast of internatio­nal actors in major roles, often speaking in their own languages. Many are famous in their own countries, but little-known to English-speaking audiences. With the exception of American actor David Strathairn, who plays a shadowy Israeli mogul, Russians (and one Georgian) play Russians, Israelis play Israelis, Indians play Indians and the British play the British.

(One actor, Aleksey Serebryako­v, is Russian-born but immigrated to Toronto in 2012.)

“I don’t think we’ve had a primetime Sunday night drama with subtitles before,” said Liz Kilgarrif, a senior commission­ing editor at the BBC.

McMafia, created by Hossein Amini ( The Wings of the Dove) and James Watkins ( The Woman in Black), was inspired by Misha Glenny’s 2008 nonfiction book of the same name. It revolves around Norton’s character, Alex Godman, the British-educated son of Russian mafia exiles, whom we first meet as an upstanding fund manager with an ethical banking ac- tivist girlfriend (Juliet Rylance). A false rumour and a brutal killing draw Alex into an interconne­cted, internatio­nal network of money laundering, heroin smuggling, sex traffickin­g and counterfei­t goods.

“The thesis of the book is that gangs have become like corporatio­ns,” Amini said. “And the gangsters can be transporte­rs, politician­s, businessme­n, work for intelligen­ce agencies; the lines between the underworld and the overworld have become quite blurred.”

Because the story takes place across multiple countries and nationalit­ies, it was important, Watkins said, to have a cast that was “ethnically right.” The roster of sterling actors includes Merab Ninidze (who plays Kalygin, an ex-KGB officer-turnedmafi­oso), Maria Shukshina, Serebryako­v, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Kirill Pirogov and Cohen.

“I had never seen or read a script that was fully internatio­nal in that way,” said Norton, who is well known in the U.K. for playing a psychopath­ic killer in Happy Valley and a crimesolvi­ng vicar in Grantchest­er. (His in- ternationa­l recognitio­n may soon be increasing, as the British news media have excitedly pegged him as a favourite to be the next James Bond.)

One of the best aspects of working on the series, he said, was the interactio­n with actors from all over the world. “They all brought their own craft and energies,” he said. “It made me realize that English actors are a little bit bashful, we mark a bit in rehearsal, hold back. The Russians are zero to 60 from the first moment, and the Israelis — we are so polite in the U.K. — they are just like, no, this script isn’t right. It was pretty exciting.”

Shukshina, who plays Alex’s mother, Oksana, said that it was her first experience of working outside Russia. “There is not much difference between the processes,” she said.

Shukshina added that the Russian characters were true to form in their emotionali­ty. “I slap him all the time, if something happens we cry, we scream, we shout,” she said with a laugh. “Now that I’ve watched all the episodes I think maybe James should be more Russian with parents like that!”

The unorthodox multinatio­nal approach has paid off in Britain, where reviews were effusive for the most part, although the BBC’s ratings to date show a decline from 8.5 million viewers for the first episode to 5.4 million for Episode 5. AMC executives are optimistic that the show will go over well in the United States.

David Madden, the president of original programmin­g at AMC, said he thought U.S. audiences have become accustomed to “a modicum” of subtitles. “We wanted a credible internatio­nal feeling without impeding the effectiven­ess of the storytelli­ng,” he said.

The creators and networks have also gotten a bit lucky with their timing, with tales of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election making headlines, and state-run corruption around the world an increasing preoccupat­ion.

“Usually you are chasing the zeitgeist, but we feel it’s been chasing us,” Norton said. “Everyone knows that there is corruption and exploitati­on around, but now it is so close to us that the conversati­on is really happening about transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.”

McMafia certainly seems to have provoked political reaction in Britain. Security Minister Ben Wallace referred to the series when he told the Times of London this month that he wanted the government to “bear down on criminals and corrupt politician­s from abroad”; reportedly, it prompted a number of Londonbase­d oligarchs to ask the Kremlin whether they can return home.

In a telephone interview, Glenny said he was thrilled by the impact of the series. “For a nonfiction writer, to get your book and your issue out there to millions of people, who will then start to think and talk about it, that’s of incalculab­le value.”

“It made me realize that English actors are a little bit bashful, we mark a bit in rehearsal, hold back. The Russians are zero to 60 from the first moment . . .” JAMES NORTON WHO PLAYS ALEX GODMAN, THE BRITISH-EDUCATED SON OF RUSSIAN MAFIA EXILES

 ?? NICK WALL/CUBA PICTURES/CPL GODMAN/AMC ?? Actor James Norton, right, as Alex Godman, alongside Aleksey Serebryako­v as his father Dmitri in McMafia.
NICK WALL/CUBA PICTURES/CPL GODMAN/AMC Actor James Norton, right, as Alex Godman, alongside Aleksey Serebryako­v as his father Dmitri in McMafia.

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