Los Angeles Times

Her secret power

Veteran theater actor J. Smith-Cameron plays a beloved character on ‘Succession’ who’s not a Roy but is totally boss

- BY MEREDITH BLAKE from new york

At the Carlyle hotel, a pair of Upper East Side doyennes are discussing their country homes between mincing bites of their $30 salads. A few feet away, J. Smith-Cameron is talking about slime puppies. “I made up ‘slime puppy,’ ” says the actor, in a crisp white blouse and polished blond bob. ”I’m proud of slime puppy. It’s my contributi­on to American literature.”

In HBO’s caustic, Emmy-winning drama “Succession,” which returns for its long-delayed third season Sunday, Smith-Cameron stars as Gerri Kellman, general counsel to Waystar Royco, the media and entertainm­ent conglomera­te run by the rapacious Roy family.

Her character has grown into something of a fan favorite, thanks in part to her sordid entangleme­nt with her much younger colleague, Roman Roy (Kieran Culkin), who is also the youngest son of Waystar’s fearsome founder, Logan Roy (Brian Cox).

When a late-night call unexpected­ly turned into a kinky phone-sex session last season, Gerri purred degrading insults at Roman. These included “slime puppy,” a strangely evocative epithet that has been embraced by the internet’s many Gerri-Roman shippers — and one that suddenly came to SmithCamer­on during a round of improv.

“I don’t even know what it means,” she says with a wry laugh. “But it suits him.”

Though she has worked steadily for more than four decades, Smith-Cameron is now best known for playing Gerri, a role that has brought her a level of fame — and type of fandom — rarely achieved by 64-year-old character actors with names reminiscen­t of tweedy classics professors. (A 35-minute YouTube compilatio­n of

Gerri and Roman’s greatest moments has racked up more than 200,000 views and hundreds of comments, most of which boil down to some version of “I can’t believe I find this so hot, but I do.”)

“The majority of my career has been in theater. That just naturally has a smaller audience, and I was quite content with that. I played all these great roles,” says Smith-Cameron. The actor, who seems to share Gerri’s refined fashion sense — she arrives at the Carlyle in a crisp white blouse, dark trousers and chic librarian glasses — is also just as sharply witty, someone you could easily imagine confiding in over a stiff cocktail.

At lunch, Smith-Cameron jokes about being an empty-nester now that her daughter, 19, is off at college in Scotland. Her husband, playwright and filmmaker Kenneth Lonergan, “is really miserable” about the change, she says. “I was like, ‘Kenny, she hasn’t been talking to us for years. What’s the difference?’ ”

Everything about “Succession” has been “completely unexpected,” she says, “right down to Gerri not really being this character at all to begin with.”

Originally written as a man and only meant to appear in a handful of episodes, Gerri has evolved into a pivotal player in “Succession,” created by former “Veep” writer Jesse Armstrong.

A fixer, consiglier­e and billionair­e whisperer all in one, she is not only an indispensa­ble ally to Logan but also the closest thing his four adult children have to a maternal figure. Fiercely loyal to the Roys, she also quietly registers her disapprova­l of their loathsome behavior through the occasional wince, which amounts to an act of moral bravery in the show’s depraved world.

Season 2 concluded with a stunning news conference in which Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong) described his father as “a malignant presence, a bully and liar” who was aware of widespread abuse within Waystar Royco’s cruise division.

In the season ahead, which resumes in the immediate wake of this very public betrayal, Gerri’s role at the company is even more prominent.

“It’s happened a little bit

with the show that when someone joins us and the storylines open up, there’s room for us to expand a role,” says Armstrong in an email. “And obviously J. is so talented we know she will be able to go wherever the story leads.”

Smith-Cameron suspects that as an outsider who can roll her eyes at the Roys, she provides a release for the audience. And as “a middleaged woman character who is canny and clever,” Gerri is particular­ly appealing at a moment when the culture is more receptive to stories about older women (see also: Jennifer Coolidge in “The White Lotus,” Jean Smart in everything). “She’s sexual without being a sexpot, without being glamorous,” Smith-Cameron says. “I think people have come around to really wanting that.

“It’s so much more interestin­g than in the ’80s. If there was a character over 40 who was a businesswo­man or a lawyer, she was a barracuda,” she continues. “Gerri is very capable, but she bites her nails. She’s not someone who’s invulnerab­le. She’s ordering that martini for a reason.”

Executive producer Frank Rich says SmithCamer­on has a range expansive enough to capture all 50 shades of Gerri.

“J. can do a kind of playful, witty, comic turn, but you also believe that she has nerves of steel that have allowed her to be successful in business. She keeps finding new things in the character and the writers keep finding new things and know that she is an instrument that can hit any note.”

Growing up in Greenville,

S.C., Smith-Cameron — then known as Jeanie Smith — played the violin but shied away from acting; it had been her older sister’s thing. Then a friend convinced her to try out for the school play, “The Diary of Anne Frank.” She got the part. She also got contact lenses. “My whole personalit­y changed,” she says.

She eventually started going by J. — Jeanie was too girly, she decided — and added Cameron, a family name, when she got her Actors’ Equity card.

Throughout most of the ’80s and ’90s, she worked on the stage, often in comedic roles, such as the fast-talking con artist she played in Douglas Carter Beane’s “As Bees in Honey Drown.” She took occasional roles in film and TV, including a supporting part in the groundbrea­king dramedy “The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd.”

But she resisted the push to fly out to L.A. for pilot season. “Agents and casting directors thought I was a shooin for sitcoms, like the Shelley Long-type parts,” she says. “Performing live is very heady and exciting. So I was just always working.”

Rich, who recalls seeing Smith-Cameron in a longforgot­ten play called “Second Prize: Two Months in Leningrad,” notes there are several character actors he first encountere­d as a New York Times drama critic who’ve had standout performanc­es in “Succession.” The show has a “subtle and very specific tone” that requires a level of sophistica­tion, particular­ly with its language, he says. (In his pan of “Second Prize,” Rich wrote that Smith-Cameron “brings

warmth, sly humor and a throaty voice to the nondescrip­t role of a student torn between marriage and career. One looks forward to seeing Miss Smith-Cameron in a more challengin­g acting assignment.”)

Smith-Cameron began to focus more on TV and film once she started a family and wanted to be at home — not onstage — for bedtime. Luckily for her, this change of heart happened to coincide with “TV becoming more interestin­g,” she says.

For four seasons, she starred as the world-weary mother of a recently freed death row inmate in the contemplat­ive Sundance drama “Rectify.” The languidly paced series was a critic’s darling but never reached the deafening levels of cultural conversati­on that “Succession” has inspired. ( Its budget would probably barely pay for one of Logan’s helicopter rides.)

“I loved ‘Rectify,’ ” says Smith-Cameron, whose week has been consumed by fittings, interviews and photo shoots, “but this is a singular experience.”

Don’t expect her to play hard-nosed corporate executives in the near future, though. She has no interest in recycling Gerri into other characters. “Sometimes when you have a part that people like so much, it can be kind of crippling, in a way. Because people want you to be that part. ”

Three seasons in, though, Gerri remains a bit of a mystery — a career woman whose extracurri­cular life is mentioned fleetingly and never seen. A cursory backstory can be stitched together using scraps of dialogue: Her husband Baird died, possibly in an incident involving a tortoise; she’s godmother to Logan’s only daughter, Shiv (Sarah Snook); she has two grown daughters who apparently enjoy flying on the company dime. Beyond that, she’s an enigma in Stuart Weitzman boots.

Smith-Cameron has formulated her own ideas about Gerri’s past, ones that haven’t necessaril­y gotten Armstrong’s stamp of approval but are useful to her understand­ing of the character. She thinks Gerri’s late husband was much older than her and helped her land a job at Waystar Royco through his friend, Logan. She also wonders if Gerri and Logan ever had a thing.

“I imagine there was some kind of connection between Logan and Gerri, maybe something illicit, I don’t know,” she says. “Or maybe just admiration. And he helped her and that bond is still there, of people who’ve slept together or flirted or spent all-nighters figuring out their way out of something.”

Smith-Cameron also initially proposed the idea that Gerri has daughters — inspired, she says, by a number of “really remarkable, outspoken, brainy older women” she’d known whose grown daughters both adored and feared them, and “had to move across the globe in order to really figure out who they were.”

The relationsh­ip with Roman, baffling though it may be, has illuminate­d another side of Gerri.

Culkin and Smith-Cameron have a connection that dates back years before “Succession.” They’d both starred in projects by Lonergan, including the film “Margaret” and the play “The Starry Messenger,” and have a naturally spiky rapport.

“I feel like she’s told me on several occasions how much she hates me. And I know that that’s her telling me that she loves me,” says Culkin, who tells a story about going up to Smith-Cameron on set one morning and greeting her: “Hi, Mommy Girlfriend.” She started calling him “Baby Man” in response.

Culkin says he would often go home and tell his wife he hoped the writers would go there with their characters “because I’ve just been really flirty with her all season.”

Armstrong is reluctant to speculate about what, exactly, Roman sees in Gerri, and vice versa, but he concedes that “it’s an interestin­g knot to examine with the audience.”

No doubt the audience is happy to keep speculatin­g about what’s next for Roman and Gerri — and writing slime-puppy fan fiction in their spare time. But they should probably adjust their expectatio­ns; this is “Succession” after all. “There are fans who would like them to be married with children,” she says. “And I don’t think it goes that way.”

 ?? Michael Nagle For The Times ?? J. SMITH-CAMERON plays Gerri Kellman, general counsel to media conglomera­te Waystar Royco, on HBO’s “Succession.”
Michael Nagle For The Times J. SMITH-CAMERON plays Gerri Kellman, general counsel to media conglomera­te Waystar Royco, on HBO’s “Succession.”
 ?? Zach Dilgard HBO ?? “SUCCESSION’S” attorney Gerri Kellman appeals to audiences as “a middleaged woman character who is canny and clever,” says actor J. Smith-Cameron.
Zach Dilgard HBO “SUCCESSION’S” attorney Gerri Kellman appeals to audiences as “a middleaged woman character who is canny and clever,” says actor J. Smith-Cameron.

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