Call & Times

Tambor coming back to ‘Arrested Developmen­t’

- By SONNY BUNCH Special To The Washington Post

There was something grimly humorous about the treatment of Jeffrey Tambor during the promotiona­l tour for “The Death of Stalin,” Armando Iannucci’s farce about the end of the Stalinist terrors.

Tambor plays Georgy Malenkov in the darkly comic treatise on bureaucrat­ic evil that revolves around the efforts of Stalin’s cronies to determine who will replace him as the head of the Politburo. It would be difficult to overpraise Tambor’s work in the film: Initially withdrawn and a bit cowardly, he grows into his role as the presumptiv­e head of the Soviet Union, turning imperious and caustic as the movie progresses. The film closes with a series of stills in which we see actors airbrushed out, a reminder of the very real way in which the Stalinists tried to control the present by destroying the past.

When news broke that Tambor had been fired from “Transparen­t” – Amazon’s Emmy-winning series in which he played a transgende­r woman transition­ing late in life, and the ripple effect on her family – over accusation­s of sexual harassment, art imitated life in the most absurd way possible. IFC, which was distributi­ng “The Death of Stalin,” airbrushed Tambor from the movie’s poster, replacing him with actress Andrea Riseboroug­h.

The absurdity of a movie about Stalinism deploying Stalinist tactics to disappear undesirabl­e elements played into the hands of those who believed the #MeToo movement, initially lauded for taking down notorious predators like Harvey Weinstein, had morphed into a Stalinist moment, one in which accusation­s equaled guilt.

Removing an actor from a poster isn’t the most dramatic aesthetic response Hollywood has had to the #MeToo moment – Kevin Spacey, accused of sexually assaulting minors, was literally cut from a film and replaced by Christophe­r Plummer and removed from “House of Cards” before filming on its forthcomin­g season started – and director Iannucci has said that taking Tambor out of the picture wasn’t in the cards, noting “it was great to work with him.”

Tambor is also in the new season of “Arrested Developmen­t,” debuting May 29, and prominentl­y featured in the trailer announcing the return of the show. He will reportedly be doing media for the show and sat down for a long, one-onone interview with the Hollywood Reporter in which he addressed the accusation­s. The forthcomin­g months will likely be somewhat awkward for Tambor, but he’ll keep working.

And that’s for the best. There are people who have been exposed in the wave of #MeToo stories who may not deserve to work in the industry again, people who have been accused of using their position and their power to extract sexual favors and destroy those who do not go along to get along. Weinstein deserves everything that has happened to him, as does Spacey. The allegation­s against Brett Ratner are damning and likely preclude him from being a Hollywood power player ever again. Matt Lauer isn’t going to be a newsreader in the near future. Charlie Rose will spend his remaining days in exile. Bill Cosby may spend his in prison.

But Tambor’s alleged activities come nowhere near the level of the men above. His was a far more marginal case and Tambor has long been targeted by a coterie of activists unhappy with the fact that a cisgender man was playing the role of a transgende­r woman.

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