USA TODAY US Edition

Back story in ‘O.J.’ miniseries stirs up surprise, intrigue

‘American Crime’ ends after exploring some inside details

- Bill Keveney

FX airs 90-minute finale Tuesday at 10 ET.

Courtney B. Vance hears a common refrain from American Crime Story

viewers who didn’t follow the 1990s double-murder trial of O.J. Simpson.

“It’s like: ‘This can’t be happening. They had to write this for television, right?’ ” says Vance, who plays charismati­c defense attorney Johnnie Cochran in FX’s The People v. O.J. Simpson:

American Crime Story. The series airs its 90-minute finale Tuesday (10 p.m. ET/PT).

Even viewers who are familiar with the addictive real-life soap opera have been surprised by the back story.

“People are intrigued by the shenanigan­s between both sides, the drama going on with the Dream Team and with (prosecutor­s) Gil Garcetti, Marcia Clark and Chris Darden,” Vance says. “The real drama was backstage in the offices.”

Jeffrey Toobin’s detailed book The Run of His Life: The People v.

O.J. Simpson provided gems for writers Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewsk­i, who expanded the story with their own research. “We were trying to startle the audience with stuff that nobody knows. That was our personal mandate,” Alexander says.

Some iconic moments, and more obscure details: THE BRONCO Everyone knows the exterior visual, a slow-speed L.A. freeway pursuit, but events inside the white Bronco weren’t revealed until later.

“There were all these phone calls. O.J. was in the backseat with a gun to his head, apologizin­g to the LAPD for making them work on a Friday night,” Karaszewsk­i says. “It made you understand a little why they weren’t shooting out the tires. They didn’t want him to kill himself, and they had the sense he was going to passively surrender at some point.” THE BLOODY GLOVE Cochran’s command to the jury — “If it doesn’t fit, you must

O.J. Simpson (Cuba Gooding Jr.) tries on The Glove, top. Above, Simpson and attorney Johnnie Cochran (Courtney B. Vance) hear the verdict.

acquit” — may be the trial’s most memorable line, but it was fellow defense attorney Robert Shapiro (John Travolta) who pushed Simpson (Cuba Gooding Jr.) to put on the gloves after trying them on himself during a bizarre evidence examinatio­n, according to the miniseries.

“There are multiple sources, including (Lawrence Schiller’s)

American Tragedy, that say Shapiro tried it on,” Karaszewsk­i says, adding that the multitude of post-trial books offer differing accounts of incidents. “It is backed up.”

LAWYERS CLARK (SARAH PAULSON), DARDEN (STERLING K. BROWN), COCHRAN AND SHAPIRO

On the courtroom TV feed, “you really saw just one dimension, to a state of parody. … Marcia was the woman who changed her haircut, Chris was the race traitor, Johnnie was the guy in the flashy suit you make fun of on

Seinfeld,” Karaszewsk­i says. “We tried to give them back their humanity.”

Simpson explores other elements of their lives: Clark juggled divorce and child custody proceeding­s with her trial duties; Cochran tried to tamp down controvers­y about his personal relationsh­ips; and, as Vance puts it, “bitter hatred” festered between colleagues Cochran and Shapiro.

The miniseries details an Oakland getaway by Clark and Darden, and it hints at a never-consummate­d mutual attraction.

“In both of their books, they’re very coy about what happened,” Karaszewsk­i says. “We took it as far as we could. They went to the line and didn’t cross it.” DETECTIVE MARK FUHRMAN’S RACIST COMMENTS Many consider the detective’s comments key to Simpson’s acquittal. Simpson shows defense lawyers traveling to North Carolina to get transcript­s of damning comments he made to a screenwrit­er.

“One of our themes was this trial was the beginning of reality television and 24-hour celebrity infotainme­nt,” Karaszewsk­i says. “One of the major pieces that comes forth is transcript­s from a detective who wants to have a movie made.”

For all the craziness, Alexander says, Simpson connects with contempora­ry audiences “with a lot of big ideas about race in America, gender politics and how celebritie­s get treated differentl­y. There are a lot of ideas in there besides the fact that it’s the story of an acquittal after two innocent people were killed.”

 ??  ?? CUBA GOODING JR. AND COURTNEY B.
VANCE BY PRASHANT GUPTA, FX
CUBA GOODING JR. AND COURTNEY B. VANCE BY PRASHANT GUPTA, FX
 ??  ?? PRASHANT GUPTA, FX
PRASHANT GUPTA, FX
 ??  ?? RAY MICKSHAW, FX
RAY MICKSHAW, FX

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