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Stephen King brings his ‘Lisey’s Story’ to Apple TV+

The horror master is a team player as executive producer and writer of the series.

- Brian Truitt

For Stephen King, writing a novel is a lonely activity, like playing solitaire or hitting a tennis ball against the wall. Writing TV scripts is more of a team sport, however, and a stressful one, even for a master. h “You have to respect the talents of everybody on the team,” says King, who adapted his 2006 book for Apple TV+’s eight-part limited series “Lisey’s Story” (first two episodes streaming Friday, weekly thereafter). “They’re not there because they’re schlubs, they’re there because they’re really good at what they do. So you have to listen to everybody, but at the same time, there’s a little voice inside you that’s screaming, ‘Don’t hurt my babies!’ ”

Directed by Pablo Larraín (“Jackie”), the fantasy-tinged horror romance stars Julianne Moore as Lisey, the widow of best-selling novelist Scott Landon (Clive Owen). Two years after his death, Lisey is still heartbroke­n and procrastin­ates cleaning out his office while also caring for her catatonic sister Amanda (Joan Allen).

Lisey’s husband left her a supernatur­al scavenger hunt that unlocks repressed memories and truths and provides a doorway to the fantasy landscape they shared, called Boo’ya Moon. Meanwhile, a college professor (Ron Cephas Jones), desperate to secure the late author’s unpublishe­d works, unleashes one of Scott’s rabid fans (Dane DeHaan) to pressure Lisey into giving them up.

For decades, ever since Brian DePalma directed “Carrie” in 1976, King has allowed filmmakers to adapt his many works. The novelist fielded offers for “Lisey,” which he calls his favorite book, but always turned them down. That was the one King wanted to do himself.

“It said a lot about marriage and everything that I knew about marriage,” says King, who celebrated his

50th wedding anniversar­y with wife Tabitha in January. The inspiratio­n for “Lisey’s Story” came in 2000, when King almost died of pneumonia: He came home from the hospital to find his spouse had cleaned out the study, and King felt like a ghost in his own home:

“I wanted to write a love story. At that time, I was reading a lot of D.H. Lawrence, and I was pretty much under his influence and I really wanted to delve deep. I didn’t get everything that I wanted from (my) novel, but I got a lot, and I didn’t get probably everything I wanted from the TV show, but I got more.”

Moore, who was King’s choice for Lisey from the very beginning, connected with the idea that every married couple has a secret world.

“They have their own language, they have their history, they have what they’ve built together,” she says. “And no one will ever know it, and you probably won’t reveal that part of yourself to anybody else.”

And while “Lisey’s” isn’t an autobiogra­phy, Moore adds, “there are plenty of things in there that feel deeply personal” to King. “So it was exciting not only to get to work with him, but to also work with him on something that he cared about this much.”

King definitely wanted to take “Lisey” to a streaming platform: “It’s wonderful to have a show where you could get that dramatic build and it isn’t interrupte­d at some vital point by an ad for Liberty Mutual Insurance. That’s a real buzzkill.”

Adapting it himself also afforded King a chance to revisit the novel “like an outsider or an editor,” removing dead weight and making improvemen­ts.

King can’t talk about the biggest change from the novel because it’s a spoiler. But the number of Lisey’s siblings was cut in half – “Two of those sisters weren’t working, so they went out,” he quips – and Larraín had “some very wonderful ideas” about transition­s between our world and the gorgeous and haunting landscape of Boo’ya Moon, a place in Landon’s childhood imaginatio­n.

King, 73, returned to his day job – the author’s next novel, “Billy Summers,” arrives Aug. 3 – and while he’ll never say never to adapting another of his works, working on “Lisey’s” was “exhausting for a fellow who is an older guy,” he says. And like Landon, King says there’s a place, a somewhere else, where he goes to tap into what makes him Stephen King.

King explains: “One of the things that Scott says is, ‘I have hallucinat­ions and I have fantasies, but people pay me to read them.’ The fact is, that when I look back on some of these books, I can’t remember writing them any more than I can remember a vivid dream a few hours after you wake up.

“The talent to do that is built in – the quality (and) the strength of the imaginatio­n – but the more you train it, the better it gets, the clearer it becomes. And it becomes addictive. It’s a great thing, but it’s also a dangerous thing. You have to kind of balance it out.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY APPLE TV+ ?? Lisey (Julianne Moore) goes on a supernatur­al scavenger hunt of sorts for repressed memories of her late husband (Clive Owen) in Stephen King’s “Lisey’s Story.”
PROVIDED BY APPLE TV+ Lisey (Julianne Moore) goes on a supernatur­al scavenger hunt of sorts for repressed memories of her late husband (Clive Owen) in Stephen King’s “Lisey’s Story.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY PETER KRAMER/APPLE TV+ ?? As an executive producer and writer, Stephen King was a regular presence on the set of “Lisey’s Story.”
PROVIDED BY PETER KRAMER/APPLE TV+ As an executive producer and writer, Stephen King was a regular presence on the set of “Lisey’s Story.”

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