NEW YORK — Amanda Seyfried’s face contorts right into a grimace.
I had simply requested Liz Moore, the writer of “Long Bright River,” the novel on which Seyfried’s new present relies, about what it’s wish to have an actor deliver to life a personality whose first-person voice she had in her head for thus lengthy.
Seyfried makes an nearly cartoonish expression together with her large eyes and expressive mouth, which have been instruments for her in all the pieces from “Mean Girls” to “The Dropout.” What’s that about?
“I just don’t think we could ever make what was in your head exist,” she says to Moore, sitting subsequent to her in a New York resort room. “What exists in your imagination is what makes you such a great writer. So I’m like, I don’t know if anyone could do it justice.”
“That’s so funny,” Moore responds. “I’m so moved by what you brought to the role and it’s very different than what I wrote but that’s a good thing.”
For Seyfried, the Peacock restricted collection, premiering Thursday, provided a uncommon alternative to play a personality tailored from a ebook whereas working intently alongside its writer. Moore, who co-created the collection with showrunner Nikki Toscano, introduced together with her a wealth of information, not simply concerning the inside lifetime of Seyfried’s Mickey, a Philadelphia cop, but additionally the world she occupies. “Long Bright River” is ready in Kensington, a neighborhood of the town recognized for being a hub of the opioid epidemic, and a spot the place Moore has each researched and volunteered for years now.
“I just felt if you were happy, then we were doing it right,” says Seyfried, who’s additionally an govt producer. “To not have the barometer of you would have been a lot more challenging.”
Amanda Seyfried as Mickey in Peacock’s “Long Bright River.”
(Matt Infante / Peacock)
“Long Bright River” follows Mickey, who comes throughout a thriller that hits near residence. Her sister Kacey (Ashleigh Cummings), an addict who hung out as a intercourse employee, is lacking simply as a variety of different girls like her are discovered lifeless. As Mickey, an unlikely (and generally not very adept) officer, hunts down the killer she additionally seems for her sister, main her to grapple together with her personal position locally as somebody who additionally looks like an outsider.
The present follows the identical basic contours of the novel. The story sprang out of Moore’s attachment to Kensington, which she first visited in 2009 shortly after she moved to the area. She had been assigned to put in writing the accompanying textual content for a photograph essay concerning the neighborhood, and obtained “very nerdy” about its historical past.
“I also felt very moved just by being in conversation with a lot of the people who were there experiencing addiction and in some cases doing sex work to support their substance use disorder,” she says. “And I have a very long family history of addiction so I also felt personally tied to the community in a kind of intangible way and I ended up returning to the neighborhood over and over to do volunteer work.” That work included main neighborhood writing workshops at a girls’s day shelter.
Moore by no means thought-about that “Long Bright River,” which ended up on Barack Obama’s favourite books of 2020 checklist, would develop into a collection when writing — that concept, she says, could be the “death of my fiction.” For the tv adaptation, she was paired with Toscano, whose earlier credit embody the Prime Video collection “Hunters.”
Amanda Seyfried, entrance, and Liz Moore, writer of “Long Bright River” and co-creator of the collection.
(Victoria Will / For The Instances)
After the 2 of them had written the primary three episodes, they provided the lead position to Seyfried.
“I think there’s just something really sort of raw about her and vulnerable in a unique way that we thought would service the character of Mickey,” Toscano explains in a separate interview.
Seyfried listened to the ebook — “I can’t read and crochet at the same time,” she says — and located that it fulfilled a particular long-held need of hers: She actually needed to play a cop.
“It’s a literal uniform and I didn’t know what it felt like,” she says. “As a kid I was always in awe of cops and firefighters and service people and I always saw them as heroes even though 1741881410 it’s very, very murky.” Additionally, she notes that her buddy Jennifer Carpenter, star of “Dexter,” at all times performs cops; Seyfried needed a go.
Seyfried, sporting a pink blazer and wrapping her fight boot-clad toes round one another underneath her chair, explains she sometimes seems for the variations between herself and the characters she would play. Mickey, she says, was confrontational in a approach she wouldn’t be. However there was additionally a private pull towards the story. Seyfried grew up in Allentown, Pa., and, like Mickey and Moore, comes from a household during which she was surrounded by dependancy.
“I think there’s a certain mode that Mickey and I can tap into, not to completely ignore the reality but to separate from the reality,” Amanda Seyfried says.
(Victoria Will / For The Instances)
“I think there’s a certain mode that Mickey and I can tap into, not to completely ignore the reality but to separate from the reality,” she says. “When you can perfectly relate to something, it makes that whole aspect of the character done.” Mickey, she provides, was nearly like a buddy.
Seyfried and Moore shared with one another the specifics of how they skilled dependancy secondhand. However Moore can be delicate in how she positions herself when telling these narratives.
“I think both of us are careful to understand because we are the loved one of people with addiction; I’ll speak for myself, I shouldn’t be the one telling their story, but I can speak to what it’s like to grow up knowing what addiction is from birth,” she says.
Equally, each she and Seyfried are outsiders to Kensington. Regardless of rising up close by, Seyfried had by no means heard of it earlier than “Long Bright River.”
Slightly over a 12 months in the past, Seyfried, Moore and Toscano took a analysis journey to Philadelphia and visited Kensington, the place they met with neighborhood leaders together with Father Michael Duffy of St. Francis Inn, a meals service group the place Moore taught a writing workshop, and Johanna Berrigan and Mary Beth Appel of the free clinic the Catholic Employee. (The present was largely shot in New York, although they introduced in Kensington-based graffiti artists to tag the set.)
Moore explains that in the course of the go to she acknowledged that whereas she has affection for the vibrancy of the Kensington neighborhood, she additionally is aware of that to see the unhappiness that exists on its streets for the primary time could be surprising.
“I needed to leave room for everybody to have their own natural reaction for a place that I love very much but that can be jarring to see for the first time,” she says.
Seyfried discovered the expertise “surreal” to see folks underneath the affect on Kensington Avenue.
“I needed to leave room for everybody to have their own natural reaction for a place that I love very much, but that can be jarring to see for the first time,” Liz Moore says about Kensington.
(Victoria Will / For The Instances)
“I had read the scripts and had listened to the book and I had all this information, but it wasn’t until then that I was finally there and it grounded me in a way that obviously needed to be grounded,” she says. “It’s tricky to tell a story like this. You don’t want to hurt anybody but you also want people to know so they can have compassion and so they can support and respect as opposed to try to fix.”
Seyfried was battling a abdomen bug that she thinks she picked up from being round cows whereas filming a teaser to influence financiers to fund “Ann Lee,” the newest mission from “The Brutalist” creators Mona Fastvold and Brady Corbet. (Seyfried, who lives on a farm, notes these cows weren’t hers; she stars within the musical drama, directed by Fastvold, which wrapped manufacturing on the finish of final 12 months.) Nonetheless, after her Prilosec kicked in, she went on a ride-along with an area feminine officer. “I was thinking, oh, this is kind of boring and then the day turned pretty quickly,” she says.
As a petite girl, Seyfried had conversations together with her hosts on tips on how to leverage her measurement within the job. It resulted in taking part in Mickey with a stance that operates like an invisible defend. That was new for Moore.
“One thing that Amanda brought to the role that I didn’t foresee, but immediately it struck me that the minute you put a camera on somebody, you play the role with a certain kind of toughness that I don’t think existed on the page,” Moore says, specializing in Seyfried midsentence. “It is absolutely necessary after having seen the physical stuff that she’s asked to do as Mickey, there’s more of an external shell.”
Mickey was robust for Seyfried to shake, and the tip of the generally exhausting shoot the place she was away from her youngsters and battling extra abdomen points was surprisingly emotional. She realized she wanted to let off steam in a approach she hardly ever does.
“I cried at the wrap party,” she says. “I never go to wrap parties but I went to the wrap party. We closed down the wrap party and went to another party. We were so drunk.” Seyfried’s voice will get conspiratorially high-pitched. Moore interjects: “Nope, cut.”