The Columbus Dispatch

Ortega blends vulnerabil­ity, snark in ‘Wednesday’

- Brian Truitt

Wednesday Addams is making it cool to be kooky again.

Executive produced by Tim Burton, the new Netflix series “Wednesday” (now streaming) reintroduc­es the pale, pig-tailed purveyor of sinister sass as a 16-year-old and brings aspects of “The Addams Family” mythos into a teen-oriented mix of “Harry Potter” and “Scooby-doo.” There was a lot for Jenna Ortega to love by playing the girl in black, especially her darkly snappy sense of humor.

In the first episode – after a nasty incident with piranha that gets her expelled from her school – Wednesday is sent to Nevermore Academy and meets her new roommate, the happy-go-lucky Enid (Emma Myers). Morticia Addams (Catherine Zeta-jones) says her daughter Wednesday – who’s horrified this girl might hug her – is “allergic to color,” and Enid asks what that means. “I break out into hives and the flesh peels off my bones,” Wednesday deadpans.

“I’ll remember that for the rest of my life,” Ortega says about first reading that line in the script. “I don’t know, maybe it’s the flesh. It really got me.”

First appearing in Charles Addams’ comic strips in the 1930s, Wednesday was a prime-time member of the 1960s “Addams Family” sitcom and two 1990s movies (played by Christina Ricci, who also appears in “Wednesday”). “She’s a truth-teller. She’ll say the things everybody else wants to say, and she can get away with it,” says Alfred Gough, who created the new series with Miles Millar.

As in “Smallville,” their 2001-11 spin on Superman, they wanted to take an iconic character, “get under the hood, see what makes them tick and also tell a chapter in their life that nobody’s done,” Gough says.

He and his longtime TV partner have four daughters between them, most of whom “have Wednesday-like expression­s and sayings,” Millar adds. “It was definitely a personal motivation as well, in terms of how we could express our fatherhood in that character and also make a show that our girls would love.”

In the series – which throws comedy, horror, supernatur­al mystery and a John Hughes influence into its spooky brew – Wednesday’s not happy at all to attend Nevermore, a school full of werewolves, sirens and other “outcasts” where Morticia

and her dad, Gomez (Luis Guzmán), met. She immediatel­y butts heads with Principal Weems (Gwendoline Christie) and her classmates, but slowly (and reluctantl­y), Wednesday begins to form important friendship­s and even some possible love connection­s while trying to solve murders and dig into Nevermore’s distressin­g past.

“Wednesday” also fleshes out new aspects of the Addams clan. Thing is entrenched as a loyal sidekick; Wednesday becomes child-like hanging with

Uncle Fester (Fred Armisen); and the relationsh­ip between Morticia and her daughter deepens.

“Young girls growing up learn so much from their moms, whether they intend to or not, down to the way you get ready in the morning, certain mannerisms or traits that you have,” Ortega says. “And women tend to be closer to one another than they realize.”

Burton was drawn to a coming-ofage story told through Wednesday’s black-and-white perspectiv­e. “I was a teenage boy version of that myself,” says the filmmaker, who also directed four of the eight episodes. “Honestly, all those weird feelings kept flooding back to me of being in school and teachers and society and all that stuff.” (A water polo scene in the pilot episode was borrowed from Burton’s childhood, sans the maneating fish.)

He says Ortega struck “the right balance” by being true to Wednesday “without softening her character,” while “showing sort of a humanness underneath it.”

Most critical for the actress was that “we weren’t making her like every other teenage girl,” says Ortega.

 ?? VLAD CIOPLEA/NETFLIX ?? Jenna Ortega studied archery, fencing and cello to play Wednesday Addams in “Wednesday.”
VLAD CIOPLEA/NETFLIX Jenna Ortega studied archery, fencing and cello to play Wednesday Addams in “Wednesday.”

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