Darren Criss Will No Longer Play LGBT Characters
He doesn’t want to be “another straight boy taking a gay man’s role.”
He doesn’t want to be “another straight boy taking a gay man’s role.”
Ryan Murphy’s “American Crime Story” wins its second trophy for outstanding limited series.
The two-time Emmy nominee also reveals how he handled “Crime Story’s” backwards approach to the narrative.
Penelope Cruz is in her prime, collaborating with auteurs Asghar Farhadi, Pedro Almodovar and Ryan Murphy, and landing her first Emmy nomination for playing Donatella Versace.
The production and costume design spotlighted the high and low worlds of the celebrated fashion designer and his hero-worshiping killer.
Exclusive: Murphy on how his new Netflix deal is going, plus the mega-producer previews his new FX series “Pose” and discusses the future of “9-1-1” and “American Crime Story.”
Even the stars of “Versace” aren’t quite sure whether the last big scene of the series is meant to be real or fantasy.
The piano-driven cue is featured on the “Versace” soundtrack, available on Friday.
The co-stars also reveal how they felt fated to play lovers in the latest installment of “American Crime Story.”
The fact that Criss shared an ethnic background with Cunanan was serendipitous for the “American Crime Story” producers when casting the role.
“American Crime Story” executive producer Tom Rob Smith also explains the real meaning behind that “Showgirls” Versace joke.
“The Assassination of Gianni Versace” proves its subject worthy of a season-long analysis, but this “American Crime Story” isn’t what you think.