New York Post

ON THE STAND

Owen Teague breaks down his role as Harold in the streaming Steven King series

- THE STAND CBS All Access — Michael Starr

OWEN Teague plays creepy Harold Lauder in “The Stand,” an adaptation of Steve King’s 1978 thriller about a global plague and the battle between good and evil. The nine-episode series co-stars James Marsden, Odessa Young, Whoopi Goldberg and Alexander Skarsgard.

In the series, Harold is jealous of Stu’s (Marsden) relationsh­ip with his crush, Fran (Young) — and transforms into a villain.

Teague, 22, is no stranger to King’s eerie universe, having played Patrick Hockstette­r in the 2017 movie “It” and its 2019 follow-up, “It Chapter Two.” He’s also appeared in “Black Mirror” (in the episode directed by Jodie Foster) and played Nolan Rayburn in “Bloodline” (on Netflix).

Teague answered some questions about “The Stand.”

Did your roles in “It” and “It Chapter Two” prepare you for the world of “The Stand”?

This was something completely different. In the “It” movies, I was playing a true psychopath — someone with no capacity for empathy and no real concept of life outside his own head. Patrick was a complete solipsist. To him, only he existed. Harold is the opposite of that. He’s definitely messed up and exhibits sociopathi­c tendencies, but he’s very aware of the world around him... Especially those feelings in relation to him. His worldview is incredibly selfcenter­ed, but he’s got the ability for empathy. It’s just easier for him to retreat into his own hatred.

Did you watch Corin Nemec, who played Harold in the 1994

version of “The Stand”?

I didn’t. From the moment Josh [Boone, who developed the series] brought me on, I knew what I wanted to do with the character. The book was my main influence, that and the research I did prior to shooting, in terms of incels [“involuntar­y celibates”] and Harold’s philosophy. I had been a huge fan of the book...and the way King wrote Harold is so rich and specific that I knew I really just wanted to bring that to life as best I could. I actually watched the 1994 miniseries only after I wrapped the show.

Is there one particular trait in Harold that appealed to you

as an actor?

I mean, the character as a whole is the most fascinatin­g to me in nearly all of King’s writing, but I think it’s the split of light and dark in Harold that really got me. He knows he has the ability to shed this old life of hate and resentment and pain, and he desperatel­y wants to but just can’t. It’s too scary. Harold, I think, could be a really cool person, if he were able to leave his insecuriti­es and resentment­s behind. If you put a group of people on a scale, in terms of value as human beings, Harold will always see himself as the lowest point...and as the highest point, too. There’s a simultaneo­us self-hatred and self-aggrandize­ment.

Is there an actor you admire?

I’ve always loved Andy Serkis. I don’t hear people talk about him as an “actor” a lot because he does so much with motion capture and non-human roles, but that’s what makes him so great. He’s able to communicat­e so much with just his body and eyes (and voice, often completely changed from his day-to-day speech), and make inhuman creatures feel human...and I love that.

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 ??  ?? Owen Teague and Odessa Young in a scene from “The Stand,” streaming on CBS All Access.
Owen Teague and Odessa Young in a scene from “The Stand,” streaming on CBS All Access.

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