Daily Press (Sunday)

Scene-stealing Esposito steps up as master thief

In ‘Kaleidosco­pe,’ character actor main attraction after years in supporting roles

- By Chris Vognar The New York Times

Giancarlo Esposito is thinking about robbery.

“Have you ever walked into a bank and thought, ‘There’s all this money here’?” he asked. “And there’s the door, and you see a sweet young teller. You know she’s green.

What if I just went and said, ‘Just empty the money in this bag.’ Would I get away with it?”

It’s a brief reverie from the star of the new Netflix heist series “Kaleidosco­pe,” about a master thief seeking revenge, assembling a team and facing his mortality. But it’s also standard for an actor always immersed in thoughts of his work, whether he’s playing a neighborho­od agitator who wants some Black faces on the local pizzeria photo wall (Buggin’ Out in “Do the Right Thing”), a ruthless drug lord hiding in plain sight (Gus Fring in “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul”) or the leader of a remnant of the Galactic Empire (Moff Gideon in “The Mandaloria­n”). Prolific, palpably thoughtful, he seems ubiquitous. But he’s constituti­onally incapable of mailing it in. His work is intensely personal.

“I’m a really committed actor,” he said during a recent interview. “I believe that my work will heal my personalit­y, that it will allow me to know more of who I am and experience more emotions. So then I can understand more of what my motives are in life. I look at my work as a meditation, as a spiritual journey. It’s an investigat­ion for me.”

For most of his career, he has done his investigat­ing in supporting roles, quietly stealing scenes from betterknow­n stars. In “Kaleidosco­pe,” an experiment­al thriller now streaming, he is the main attraction, the leader of a criminal enterprise and a cast that includes Paz Vega, Rufus Sewell, Rosaline Elbay and Jai Courtney. It’s a rare chance to see a popular character actor make a splash in a lead role.

Not that those supporting parts haven’t given him room to shine. In this chapter of his career — which began when he arrived on “Breaking Bad” in 2009 and brought five Emmy nomination­s — Esposito has fostered a riveting but careful considerat­ion of good and evil.

Fring went down as one of television’s indelible villains, a soft-spoken killer who never broke character as a pillar of the business community. Gideon, the character that made Esposito a part of the “Star Wars” universe, is a war criminal who believes in law and order. In “Godfather of Harlem,” which kicks off its third season Jan. 15, he plays Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. as a man not immune to moral compromise.

In “Kaleidosco­pe,” which has a nonlinear structure in which episodes can theoretica­lly be watched in any order, Esposito’s character actually has two identities and two names. One is Ray Vernon, a devoted family man who also happens to be a jewelry thief until he ends up in prison.

When he escapes years later, battling Parkinson’s disease and closer to the end of life than the beginning, he becomes Leo Pap. Consumed with desire for revenge against his former partner in crime (Sewell) — whom he blames for both his incarcerat­ion and the death of his wife — Leo puts together a colorful and deeply flawed team to pull off one last job, in classic heist film fashion.

The character is a classic Esposito creation: a good bad guy, or a bad good guy, or perhaps just a reflection of the fact that even the best of us have demons to tame. The actor’s facility with such roles helps explain his popularity in an era of television that, though a ways past the heyday of Tony Soprano and Walter White, still loves its antiheroes.

“We struggle with our own nature,” he said. “For me to keep it real, I feel like people have all of these sides inside them. If I’m not representi­ng that, then I’m playacting. For me, acting has been a way to share who I am: the good, the bad, the ugly.”

Esposito’s performanc­e in “Kaleidosco­pe” derives much of its power from its humility, especially once Ray breaks out of prison and becomes Leo. We see him become increasing­ly frail, confrontin­g his disease and a life full of regret.

“He has the brain skill, but the body’s going,” Esposito said. “In a way, that’s the tragedy of our lives. As we get older, we get more delicate, and we get more fragile. I still have the brain and the sense of a younger man, but to think, ‘I have to be careful stepping off that curb,’ it’s (difficult). … By the time Leo realizes how sick he is, it’s just too late, and he knows it’s going to go downhill. So this job becomes really important to him.”

Esposito, 64, caught the acting bug early. Born in Copenhagen to an Italian stagehand and carpenter and an African American opera and nightclub singer, he made his Broadway debut as a child in the musical “Maggie Flynn,” about the New York City draft riots of 1863. He was immediatel­y hooked. “I had a feeling that the world I could live in was something

other than the world that most people lived in,” he said.

His early film roles for Spike Lee — in “School Daze,” “Mo’ Better Blues” and especially “Do the Right Thing” — carry a sense of youthful exuberance. But his many TV roles are marked by a sense of implacable stillness that bespeaks the maturity that comes from a long career. Think of Fring, straighten­ing his tie with half his face missing as he checks out of

“Breaking Bad.”

“He is very calm, and he’s always trying to give the best energy to create a good atmosphere around him,” said Vega, who plays Ava, Leo’s lawyer. “When you have to work and always rush and do so many things with so many elements, it’s good to have someone like him there.”

As for the starring role? It’s nice, but you don’t get the feeling it carries special weight or pressure for Esposito. It’s not as if he has

trouble finding meaningful work or getting recognitio­n for it. His dance card is full for the foreseeabl­e future, including a Netflix movie for the Russo Brothers, “The Electric State.”

He’s one of those guys you tend to believe when he says it’s all about the work.

“I love what I do,” he said. “To be versatile is important, and I’ve had the ability and the opportunit­y to be diverse in my career. And man, I feel so lucky.”

 ?? JINGYU LIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Giancarlo Esposito, seen Dec. 19 in New York, stars as a master thief who has two identities and two names in Netflix’s heist series “Kaleidosco­pe.”
JINGYU LIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Giancarlo Esposito, seen Dec. 19 in New York, stars as a master thief who has two identities and two names in Netflix’s heist series “Kaleidosco­pe.”

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