Newsweek

Southern Discomfort

Atlanta star Brian Tyree Henry on the show’s Season 2: ‘It gets a little dark’

- BY JANICE WILLIAMS @Manhattanj­an

The fx series atlanta is labeled a comedy, but that’s a simplifica­tion. The show is actually undefinabl­e—an indelible and engagingly weird universe that seemed to emerge fully formed from the minds of co-creators (and brothers) Donald and Stephen Glover. Its tone— laid-back and dry-witted, with occasional helpings of Lynchian eccentrici­ty (like, for example, an invisible car)—manages to evoke both a physical place and a state of mind. Mostly, though, Atlanta is about black writers and actors telling their story their way.

Season 2 began March 1, and the main characters—aspiring rap manager Earn Marks (Donald Glover); his cousin, rising rapper and drug dealer Alfred “Paper Boi” Miles (Brian Tyree Henry); and Paper Boi’s odd roommate, Darius (Lakeith Stanfield)—continue to navigate Atlanta, a city where violence erupts quickly, the gap between rich and poor seems to widen daily and “lemon pepper wet” wings are the balm.

The cast took a yearlong break between seasons (the first ended in November 2016), but, says Henry, returning to Atlanta and Paper Boi “was just like getting back on a bike, except that the bike was kinda souped up, had some rims and the training wheels were off.”

Paper Boi and Henry had best get used to rims. In addition to Atlanta, the actor landed a guest spot on This Is Us, which earned him a 2017 Emmy nomination, and a semi-regular role on HBO’S

Vice Principals. In addition to seven films due in 2018 (one directed by Moonlight’s Barry Jenkins, another by 12 Years a Slave’s Steve Mcqueen), he’s preparing for a new Kenneth Lonergan play, Lobby

Hero, co-starring Chris Evans and Michael Cera (opening March 26). It’s a return to New York theater after years way; the Yale Drama School grad made his Broadway debut as part of the original cast of The Book of Mormon. Newsweek spoke to Henry about his big year and Atlanta’s unsettling first episode, “Robbin’ Season,” named for Atlanta’s annual pre-christmas spike in crime. Prepare yourself, says the actor. “Season 2 gets a little dark.”

The Season 2 opener begins with two random guys playing video games before they commit a robbery at a fast-food place. It’s pretty grim. It’s also winter; it’s colder outside. Everyone is being monitored [because of the crime wave]. I think Paper Boi gets a gun pulled on him every other episode this season.

The humor is still there, but the show’s plotlines have become more linear, especially for Alfred. Paper Boi’s become this major entity in Atlanta, and he gotta take the reins and go along with it, and he’s got to reconfigur­e some things. He can’t navigate the same corners that he used to. Can he trap [deal weed] and be a rapper? Can he get rich and introduce new people to his life at this point? Who’s got him? And I think the same situation is going on with him and Earn. The personal relationsh­ips, those familial relationsh­ips and business relationsh­ips, can they maintain at this time? Who can he trust and count on?

cousin a little credit for managing his career. “We need to start stunting [showing struggling hard with fame. Alfred has this desire to stunt on everybody—he’s trying to, but he feels like he’s being stunted on. Stunt or be stunted on—that’s kinda like a lifestyle which happens, especially [when you’re new in the game]. It’s like, “Oh yeah, you got new gifts, you got new money, you got new clothes. Who you gone stunt on next?” It’s not just survival anymore; it’s eat or be eaten. Like, [in Episode 2 of Season 2] there’s a scene in a car with Alfred’s plug [supplier]. He congratula­tes Alfred on his success, being like, “You gone be good. You gone be great. That single is fire, man,” and then he pulls a gun and robs him!

Episode 2 has a hilarious scene at a Spotify

like he wants to kill them all. Restraint is the biggest thing for Alfred this season. He’s already been on house arrest. He’s already slapped somebody with cash. Now, he’s at a different level of his career, so he has to focus on restraint. And that is not the easiest thing for him.

the most intriguing friendship­s on mellow and surreal. What’s it like What’s so great about our TV friendship is that is exactly how we are in real life. He is my little brother, and there’s nothing that I wouldn’t do for him. It was an instant connection when we first met, a long time ago. He’s a great teammate to play with.

Darius and Alfred have something that’s kinda impenetrab­le, that we don’t think Earn can recognize, and Earn gets a little pissed off about. And I know it’s not gonna make Earn any happier now that [ex-con] Tracy is living in the house too.

One of the most unsettling things The script said we were beefing, but we didn’t know why. So Lakeith and I didn’t talk to each other the day [we were filming]. It was ridiculous; we would look at each other and nod or whatever, but there were no verbal acknowledg­ments of any kind. When the scenes were done, we just ran to each other and hugged, like, ‘I’m sorry, man!” [ Laughs.]

and how much is what you bring to The set is a really familial environmen­t, very collaborat­ive—we improv together, and we bounce things off of each other. Our writers are so dynamic that we can just go into [a scene] with what’s on the page, but when it comes to how we feel about our characters or a situation they’re facing, we throw things in and improv and play around.

What’s your favorite thing about Atlanta I love how extremely absurd, abstract, black, kamikaze we can be in this show without caring about anybody’s judgment, without caring about how we’re interprete­d. But what I love most about the show is that it’s ours. It’s through-and-through ours. Our DNA is running through this project, and no one can duplicate or replicate it.

What are you hoping people take That these characters are human and still going through the same things that you’re going through. They’re young, black upstarts in Atlanta trying to find their way, and sometimes you don’t find your way, and that’s OK, too. Also, stunting is not always the best thing to do. That’s definitely a message I had to learn. What’s really important is to look to your left and to your right, to see your brothers and sisters next to you— ya’ll coming up together—and to ask, How do we hold each other up?

Speaking of holding each other up: have exploded simultaneo­usly— his with The People v. OJ Simpson

then This Is Us. He suggested you for the part that got you an Emmy We were in theater class together with another one of my friends, Tarell Alvin Mccraney [the actor and playwright author of Moon

light], who I went to Yale with. Sterling and I ended up doing a show together, and we’ve been inseparabl­e ever since. I was just telling him last night, “You know how your movie

Black Panther is coming out this weekend? Do you remember how you were filming that at the same time that I was recording my song for This Is Us? And he was still filming when I went back to start work on Season 2 of Atlanta. It’s like, “Bro,

what’s going on?” It’s really good to have a brother that’s rooting for you, that is a fan of your work, but at the same time you’re rooting for, too, to know you’ve got someone walking along with you and pushing you at the same time.

black male characters leading doing now. It’s so good to see. I love that I can hear you smiling as you say that. The greatest part is that we are nowhere near done. There’s so many things going on in this world that can make us feel like there’s nothing ahead for us. But I’m shredding all that [type of thinking], and that’s exactly what we’re doing with this season of

Atlanta and projects like Black Panther. It’s going to continue to be this way—we’re going to continue to rise up and listen to each other and cultivate our own shit.

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