The Columbus Dispatch

Ventimigli­a is in on the long con in ‘Company’

- Erin Jensen

Spoiler alert: This story contains details from the premiere of “The Company You Keep.”

From The Big Three to the big con. Milo Ventimigli­a returned to TV Sunday as a swindler, after a brief break following the conclusion of NBC’S “This Is Us” in May after six-season run. Sans Jack Pearson’s mustache, he leads ABC’S “The Company You Keep” (10 EST/PST), created by Julia Cohen and Phil Klemmer and adapted from a Korean drama.

Ventimigli­a, 45, portrays Charlie Nicoletti, a man devoted to his family business of conning. But the premiere episode reveals the suave Charlie is the one being hustled. His fiancée, who robs the Nicolettis of $10 million from a highstakes heist, putting his family, which owns a Baltimore bar, in debt to a major criminal organizati­on.

The role of Charlie appealed to Ventimigli­a, who appreciate­d how different the character was compared to Jack, an adoring father of three and doting husband.

“He’s got a lot of layers,” Ventimigli­a says of Charlie. With “the complexiti­es of these cons the family pulls off, he’s got to be a chameleon, and he’s got to be charming, and he’s got to be engaging. He’s also got to be dangerous.”

In addition to “This Is Us,” Ventimigli­a also acted in hit series “Heroes,” on NBC, and WB’S “Gilmore Girls.”

When contemplat­ing a role, he looks for the opportunit­y to have fun. “You’ve got to know that it has legs,” he says. “So when ... I was looking at this as an actor, it was, ‘Hey, is this a character that is going to be challengin­g and satisfying? Is it someone that is going to go the distance? Do we have enough story within who all of these characters in the show are?’ And I think we do.”

Charlie nurses his heartbreak at a hotel bar, where he meets Emma Hill (Catherine Haena Kim), a CIA agent who has discovered earlier that day her boyfriend was having an affair. While knocking back drinks, the two playfully lie to each other about their jobs and upbringing­s.

“OK, now tell me something true,” Emma demands.

“I’m a criminal,” Charlie says, in a brief moment of honesty, to which Emma responds, “I’m CIA.” They both laugh off the truth and end up spending 36 hours in a hotel suite getting to know each other and having passionate sex.

“What we’re looking at in the beginning, (is) two trains on a collision course,” says Ventimigli­a. “How do lives and heart and emotions unravel beyond that?”

Charlie is torn between pursuing his new love interest and focusing on his family’s hustles.

“Charlie’s going through a bit of a transition where he’s existing in a way that he has for so long with his family,” says Ventimigli­a. “They’ve been pulling grifts and whatnot since he and (Charlie’s sister) Birdie (Sarah Wayne Callies) were kids. It’s all very second nature to him. So identifyin­g that maybe you want something different and you want something more and the inspiratio­n behind that is a new romantic partner, I can definitely identify with that.”

Ventimigli­a and Kim’s chemistry is off the charts. While the scenes appear steamy onscreen, Kim describes them as funny, silly and a tinge awkward.

“It’s like we’re in this bathtub and being all sexy and in between, I’m like, ‘If I see one extra bubble, I’m going to kill you,’ ” she says laughing.

Though Charlie and Emma have an intense connection, their jobs naturally put them at odds.

But Ventimigli­a says it won’t be too long before the characters discover who their love interest really is. He promises, “It happens pretty quick.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R WILLARD/ABC ?? Milo Ventimigli­a as Charlie Nicoletti adopts many characters to pull off his schemes in “The Company You Keep.”
CHRISTOPHE­R WILLARD/ABC Milo Ventimigli­a as Charlie Nicoletti adopts many characters to pull off his schemes in “The Company You Keep.”

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