Variety

Essence and Sensibilit­y

Molly Ringwald is still the ‘It’ girl in Ryan Murphy’s latest ‘Feud’

- By Daniel D’addario

In the mid-1980s, Molly Ringwald fielded an intriguing proposal from the estate of Truman Capote.

“I had been offered to do a remake of ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s,’” she recalls over tea on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. “The movie was not at all what he had written.” Capote had envisioned protagonis­t Holly Golightly as a vivacious motormouth; he’d wanted Marilyn Monroe. And Ringwald was coming off a run of films that included “Sixteen Candles” and “The Breakfast Club,” which had made her a star and a standard-bearer for youth culture. While Ringwald had a different appeal from Monroe, her quicksilve­r ability to shift her moods got closer to Capote’s character than did Audrey Hepburn’s reinventio­n in the 1961 film.

“I just thought that I would have been completely savaged if I did it,” Ringwald says. “But now that I look back on it, I’m like — why not?”

Ringwald is getting another shot at the literary master. In the new season of FX’S Ryan Murphy-produced “Feud,” subtitled “Capote vs. the Swans” and launching Jan. 31, Ringwald plays Joanne Carson, ex-wife of talkshow host Johnny and one of

Capote’s most loyal friends. After the depressive, alcoholic novelist (played by Tom Hollander) alienates his New York circle of socialites by disclosing their secrets in a short story, Joanne, living a hippie life in Los Angeles, offers a safe landing place.

“I was a little sad that I didn’t get to wear the New York swan clothes,” Ringwald says with a laugh. (Boho-fab Joanne presents an intentiona­l contrast to the chic severity of Capote’s former circle, played by Naomi Watts, Demi Moore and Chloë Sevigny, among others.) Ringwald did, at least, get to know her contempora­ry Moore, with whom she had only glancingly crossed paths when they were “part of the Brat Pack or whatever,” she says.

Joanne’s entrance into the story provides some mercy for Capote, who has done wrong, but has a case too. “They knew what he did — he’s a writer,” Ringwald says. “I see both of their points of view.”

Joanne spins off Ringwald’s image doubly. Cast again by Murphy after portraying the murderer’s sympatheti­c mother in “Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story,” Ringwald says the producer “hires people based on their essence. So he obviously thinks that my essence is good.” And, as an author and translator, Ringwald has an acute understand­ing of the writer’s sensibilit­y.

Part of Ringwald’s literary project has been excavating wrongdoing: Her 2018 New Yorker essay about her work with filmmaker John Hughes, for whom she expresses affection, recontextu­alizes the ways movies like “Sixteen Candles” treated young women through a then-nascent #Metoo lens. And her 2023 translatio­n of Vanessa Schneider’s French-language memoir “My Cousin Maria Schneider” documents the experience of the “Last Tango in Paris” actor, who accused director Bernardo Bertolucci and co-star Marlon Brando of conspirato­rially violating her during the movie’s most notorious sex scene.

All of which lends Ringwald a sense of life’s, and the industry’s, complicati­ons — and its progress. She’s also watched with excitement and pride as her 20-year-old daughter, Mathilda Gianopoulo­s, takes on her first movie roles, and has been happily astounded that she has intimacy coordinato­rs on set. (Recalling the 1985 TV movie “Surviving: A Family in Crisis,” Ringwald is astonished: “I had to do a kissing scene on the first day of filming, in a wet bathing suit, in front of an entire crew that I didn’t know. And that wasn’t even something that they thought about!”)

What’s next, perhaps, is to find a character as open to complexity as she is. Ringwald found the rich depth of sympathy within Joanne, who understand­s Capote when no one else does. And she’s seeking something more. “I’m sort of waiting for Ryan to offer me a psycho bitch!” she says. “That’s what I would love to do. I’m putting it out there.”

 ?? ?? Molly Ringwald stars as Joanne Carson in “Feud: Capote vs. the Swans.”
Molly Ringwald stars as Joanne Carson in “Feud: Capote vs. the Swans.”

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