New York Daily News

A BIG-SCREEN PORTRAIT OF A PANDEMIC SUPERSTAR

Documentar­y ‘Fauci’ about public servant unfolded in secrecy

- BY JAKE COYLE

John Hoffman and Janet Tobias’ “Fauci” is the first big-screen documentar­y of the nation’s top infectious disease expert and ubiquitous face of the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s an intimate portrait of a longtime public servant whose notoriety has risen dramatical­ly — and with that, brought heaps of far-right scorn on the veteran of seven White House administra­tions.

The film opens in a split screen, with Fauci walking to his office at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases 40 years ago on one side, and him making the same trip recently on the other. Audio and video clips, meanwhile, play of Fauci’s contempora­ry detractors. One television news pundit calls for his head on a pike.

“I often use the analog of the Roman forum. There were people throwing roses at him and then throwing garbage,” says Tobias. “We really wanted people to get a sense of what that was like nationally but also what it was like for a human being. It’s very sobering as his wife and daughters deal with the level of threats to him and to themselves.”

To head off possible, maybe inevitable, criticism, “Fauci” is being released with a pointed proviso. A release on the film reads: “Dr. Fauci had no creative control over the film. He was not paid for his participat­ion, nor does he have any financial interest in the film’s release.”

“That was an usual decision for press notes but these are unusual times,” Hoffman says. “Nothing could be left to question or ambiguous.”

National Geographic recently opened “Fauci” in theaters, with a debut on Disney+ planned in October. A once wider theatrical release was previously in the cards, but the surge in cases driven by the delta variant forced the filmmakers and studio to reconsider. Taking cues from its subject, “Fauci” is playing only in theaters where proof of vaccinatio­n and masks are required for entry.

“When we are doing a film about one of the leading public health officials in the world, we cannot but live up to the standards of that person and group safety,” says Tobias.

That “Fauci” happened at all over the course of the last 18 months is a feat of foresight by the veteran filmmakers. Both had previously made films related to health crises and had a relationsh­ip with Fauci. Tobias made the 2017 documentar­y “Unseen Enemy,” about the viruses and bacteria that could cause a global pandemic. Hoffman, who has documented issues around body weight (“The Weight of the Nation”) and sleep (“Sleepless in America”), embedded for a year with the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center for the three-part Discovery documentar­y “First in Human.”

In February 2020, before much of the U.S. had understood the threat of COVID-19, the two filmmakers had already embarked on the film with Fauci’s participat­ion. (Tobias had initially sought a film about him as early as December 2018.) The project unfolded in relative secrecy.

“We tried to be quiet,” says Tobias. “It was also something he said from the very beginning around the more intense period in March (2020). He said: ‘I do not want to draw attention to myself. What I care about is the health of Americans and the rest of the world.’ ”

Hoffman and Tobias ultimately filmed with the 80-year-old Fauci and his family for about a year, though — because of COVID concerns — they didn’t begin interviewi­ng him until the fall of last year. They ultimately conducted six sit-down interviews with Fauci. The filmmakers’ initial plans to profile a pivotal, lesser-known figure had long before changed.

“By then, of course, it was an incredible story and everyone knew Tony’s name,” says Tobias, whose film lingers on the array of trinkets — bobblehead­s, candles, T-shirts — adorned with Fauci’s face, along with an unlikely campaign to make him People magazine’s “Sexiest Man Alive.”

What didn’t alter was their aim to contextual­ize the Brooklyn-born Fauci’s decades of public service and to specifical­ly focus on how the AIDS crisis formed him as a public health official. The film details both Fauci’s empathetic response to HIV victims and his eventual acceptance of anger and frustratio­n from AIDS activists over the slow pace of research.

“We’ve been saying all along: We made a film about a man whose character was forged in HIV and then tested in COVID,” says Hoffman.

“Fauci” includes interviews with some of those who have worked with the doctor through different health crises, including former national security adviser Susan Rice, Bill Gates, Bono and President George W. Bush. Critics of Fauci may only see the documentar­y as fueling Fauci’s already high profile during a pandemic that’s been characteri­zed by partisan rancor. But few in “Fauci” have anything but admiration for his dedication to science and dogged work ethic.

“Tony Fauci doesn’t come into the Oval Office to say: I’m going to make you look good politicall­y. He’s not a politician,” Bush says in the film. “Tony Fauci says: I think we can solve this problem. Here are the facts, and here is my recommenda­tion for a way forward.”

 ?? VISKO HATFIELD/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Dr. Anthony Fauci at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, during the filming of “Fauci.”
VISKO HATFIELD/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Dr. Anthony Fauci at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, during the filming of “Fauci.”

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