Los Angeles Times

Finding Mr. Wrong is retold in Bravo series

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well, if you don’t know what happened next, Google at your own discretion.

Adapted by Alexandra Cunningham (“Chance,” “Aquarius”) for Universal Cable Production­s in associatio­n with Atlas Entertainm­ent and Los Angeles Times Studios (Goffard also served as a writer and producer), the series is an obvious attempt to put Bravo in the prestige drama game.

Mostly known as an addictive reality TV factory with offerings like “Vanderpump Rules” and the “Real Housewives” franchise, the NBCUnivers­al-owned network has been looking for a brandchang­er for several years. But how do you make a story that, though true, plays like a classic Lifetime movie and make it feel grounded in reality on a network well-known for outrageous reality TV?

Leaning into the original brand helps. The premiere episode will follow the first installmen­t of this season’s “Real Housewives of Orange County” reunion, a fitting lead-in for Bravo die-hards who had already recognized similariti­es in Newell’s story to a recent storyline involving one of the housewives of that county — a topic that is discussed in Sunday’s reunion. (Newell, for the record, is a fan of the show.)

And casting Connie Britton and Eric Bana doesn’t hurt.

On the Agoura Hills set one morning in early October, Britton masters an expression of shock during a scene in which Newell and Meehan arrive at their Newport home and find a transient woman inside.

First introduced to The Times project while browsing LongReads.com in an attempt to delay having to rewrite a TV script, Cunningham recalls being drawn in by the image of a selfie taken by a shirtless Meehan that was embedded in the first installmen­t.

“It’s so iconograph­ic for this show — middle-aged people taking selfies of their abs and butts,” Cunningham says, noting there is a postersize rendering of that selfie in her office, courtesy of the art department. “I clicked on the story immediatel­y because it was such clickbait for me, as a true-crime fan. Then I realized it was a series. So I just kept clicking and clicking. The whole day was gone.”

When Universal Cable Production­s secured the rights to produce the series, Cunningham was brought in to discuss how she might adapt it. She remembers that one of the first questions from a Times executive concerned Newell’s portrayal — wanting to ensure the show would not make her look obtuse.

“And I said, ‘I don’t think she’s stupid,’ ” Cunningham recalls. “That was honestly why I was there. I just feel like so many people had their judgmental knee-jerk reaction to the whole thing — trying to create this distance between themselves and Debra. That’s what I felt scripted could bring to this situation. I defy anyone — anyone — who has Eric Bana looking into their eyes and telling you that you’re the only one — what, you’re going to say, ‘Nah, I don’t believe you’?”

Coercive control

Exploring the psychologi­cal side of the story — especially the element of coercive control — and the ways in which women have been conditione­d to relate to men was something Britton too was eager to delve into. The outside perspectiv­e, particular­ly the tendency to blame women for abuse they face, also became a motivation to join the series.

“People had this very strident reaction toward [Debra], and I didn’t have that at all,” Britton says. “She was behaving this way toward this man based on all the ways she had been told to behave by the culture, by her religion, by her family, by some of the tragedies that happened in her family. She had all these ideas about herself as a woman and who she was supposed to be in a relationsh­ip with a man that impacted how she brought John into her life and how she made choices about that relationsh­ip. … I found that so relatable, and I think it’s such a relevant story right now and all the conversati­ons that are happening.”

Bana’s challenge was being the perpetrato­r: “I was trying to get my head around the dynamic of how those [psychologi­cally abusive] relationsh­ips work. It’s never like we think.”

“Dirty John” is just one of a number of podcasts being translated for the small screen — “Homecoming,” “Dr. Death,” “Alice Isn’t Dead” — as Hollywood turns over every rock, and earbud, to feed the beast of peak TV.

“There was something about the mood that [‘Dirty John’] set,” said Bill McGoldrick, president of scripted content at NBCUnivers­al Cable Entertainm­ent. “It was the haunting introducti­on, the facts of the case and the mood that it set that made me think it was something we had to get in some form.”

But a hit for the ears doesn’t necessaril­y translate to a visual story. For Cunningham, the main goal was to have viewers feel as if they were inside the whirlwind of love, not listening to someone tell them about it.

“When it’s investigat­ive journalism, it’s rolling out this amazing story with twists and turns, but you’re not in it,” Cunningham says. “The actors give you permission to put yourself in it with them in a way that I don’t necessaril­y think the podcast does.”

Character bonding is a crucial component in TV storytelli­ng — most viewers seek ways to connect or sympathize with characters they return to hour after hour. So presenting three-dimensiona­l characters was paramount.

Cunningham had access to Goffard’s reporting, including developmen­ts and anecdotes from people who came forward after the project had been released. She charted a timeline in the writers room, going back to before John and Debra met. It became a game of trying to figure out how much to mirror the podcast and how much to shape it into its own narrative: “The funny thing is, I don’t know if [the audience] wants it to be different, you know?” Cunningham says.

(Early reaction seems to indicate that critics, though appreciati­ng the efforts of Britton and, to a lesser extent, Bana, would have preferred more difference; the first three episodes have been dinged for sticking too close to the original narrative.)

Indeed most of the characters, and their quirks, made the jump to the series: Newell’s zombie-show-loving daughter Terra (Julia Garner) and forgiving mother Arlane Hart (Jean Smart). There are some exceptions — Newell’s daughter Jacquelyn is named Veronica (Juno Temple) in the series, and her eldest daughter, Nicole, has become a son named Trey (Jake Abel).

One-on-one time

Before she began shooting the series, Britton was determined to sit down with Newell. She wanted to take her to lunch at the Ivy. There the two, along with Terra, spent hours discussing everything about Newell’s experience. (Debra, Jacqueline and Terra also visited the set.)

“Connie picked my brain,” Newell says. “One of her questions was, ‘What do you see is the meaning of “love”?’ And she wanted to know about my other marriages and what happened with John. She wanted to know about me. I was was so appreciati­ve of that.”

Bana’s performanc­e, according to Newell, was a “little creepy for me. It brought back memories.” Bana didn’t have access to Meehan, so the actor leaned into the mystery surroundin­g him.

“There’s probably a few different versions of John in my head,” he says, on set and dressed in medical scrubs — a signature style choice for Meehan. “While he was very adept at manipulati­on, I also saw him as someone who actually wasn’t that good at what he did. I don’t think he was that polished. He was so desperate to be the bad guy; it was interestin­g to explore.”

One thing Bana won’t deny: “I literally felt dirty playing him,” he said. “I’ve felt uncomforta­ble with how comfortabl­e it’s felt. I’m looking forward to shaking it.”

“Dating sites are going to hate us,” he added. “Sell your stocks now.”

yvonne.villarreal @latimes.com Twitter: @villarreal­y

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 ??  ?? BRAVO’S “Dirty John” is led by Connie Britton and Eric Bana, top, who portray Debra Newell and John Meehan, above, at their 2014 marriage in Las Vegas.
BRAVO’S “Dirty John” is led by Connie Britton and Eric Bana, top, who portray Debra Newell and John Meehan, above, at their 2014 marriage in Las Vegas.

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