The Sentinel-Record

McBride and Goggins return as ‘Vice Principals’ class act

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK — At the end of last season’s fiercely absorbing “Vice Principals,” administra­tor Neal Gamby was left sprawled on the pavement of the North Jackson High parking lot in a pool of blood, gunned down by an unknown assailant.

Could this be payback from Dr. Belinda Brown, the former North Jackson principal who was overthrown by Gamby in cahoots with his sometime-ally Lee Russell (even as they stayed bitter rivals, both vying for Brown’s job)?

Nothing is so simple on

“Vice Principals.”

“It’s not like there’s just one person Gamby can point to who could have done it,” says Danny McBride, who plays him, and can’t help but chuckle. What’s so funny about attempted murder? For starters, Gamby is such an indiscrimi­nate jerk! “It’s like he’s rubbed EVERYBODY he’s ever encountere­d so wrong that ANYONE could have done it.” Even his co-conspirato­r Lee!

Upon his recovery, Neal will spend this second and concluding nine-episode season, which premieres today (10:30 p.m. Eastern) on HBO, trying to flush out, and wreak vengeance on, whomever it was who tried to off him.

He will also resume his dogged campaign (in partnershi­p with Lee when they’re not in cutthroat competitio­n) to land the grand prize: his name on the North Jackson principal’s office door.

Among the many things that make “Vice Principals” so funny, yet so poignant: No one could be less fit for the job than this misanthrop­ic lout — unless it is Lee, a Machiavell­ian dandy.

“Considerin­g those guys’ mental state, some of the students are probably more advanced than either of them,” says McBride.

“I’d say MOST,” says Walton Goggins, who plays Lee, and busts out laughing.

“Almost ALL of them,” McBride hastily agrees.

A creator and writer of “Vice Principals,” McBride (“Eastbound & Down,” “This is the End”) has joined co-star Goggins (“The Shield,” “Justified,” “Six”) to report on getting back to school for this series, and to account for how the show is in a class by itself.

For instance: The half-hour format and its reigning pair of knucklehea­ds suggest that “Vice Principals” is a comedy. Which it is. But isn’t.

For all its outrageous­ness, the series is solidly grounded, and populated with deceptivel­y well-rounded characters played by a solid cast including Busy Phillips, Shea Whigham, Kimberly Hebert Gregory, Georgia King, Sheaun McKinney and Dale Dickey, along with the superb McBride and Goggins.

“This is a complex character study of two morally obtuse human beings,” Goggins sums up.

“We use the broad comedy just to trick the audience,” says McBride, “to make the viewers think they’re going to get the usual run-of-the-mill comedy — and then we sucker punch them with some real drama. Suddenly they have no idea what the show’s going to take seriously and what it’s NOT going to take seriously. And ultimately they don’t really know what they WANT to have happen.

“Once we get the audience there, they’re just putty in our hands, and we can take them anywhere.”

Goggins says “anywhere” also applies to him as an actor inhabiting a character he doesn’t need to pigeonhole.

“You turn yourself over to an imaginary set of circumstan­ces,” he says. “You can go anywhere with the role and not judge the outcome. It’s no more complicate­d than that.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? KNUCKLEHEA­DS: Danny McBride, foreground left, and Walton Goggins in a scene from, "Vice Principals," returning for a second season today.
The Associated Press KNUCKLEHEA­DS: Danny McBride, foreground left, and Walton Goggins in a scene from, "Vice Principals," returning for a second season today.

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