In ‘Vladimir,’ Rachel Weisz navigates fantasy and reality
Londonย โย Itโs been almost six months since Rachel Weisz wrapped filming on โVladimir,โ and sheโs still unsure how to discuss her character on the series. The unnamed protagonist, known in the scripts as โM,โ was so complexly drawn that Weisz is now struggling to externalize the experience of playing her.
โThis is the first time Iโve spoken about it to anybody,โ she says, sitting at a table in Goodfare, a restaurant in Londonโs Camden, on a frigid morning in early January. โI may be a little creaky.โ
Itโs a few days after the holiday break and Weisz, 55, is preparing to start production on a new film, โSรฉance on a Wet Afternoon.โ Despite that, she hasnโt fully left M behind. As an executive producer on the series, she was involved in the edit, still ongoing at the time of our interview. Today, after a meandering back and forth about the character, she admits, โI suppose I still need to gather my own point of view on her.โ
โVladimir,โ an eight-episode limited series premiering March 5, is based on playwright Julia May Jonasโ 2022 novel of the same name. Both the novel and the series center on a literature professor (Weisz) who teaches at a liberal arts college. Her husband (John Slattery) is under investigation for misconduct at the school as she becomes infatuated with a new colleague named Vladimir (Leo Woodall). Jonas wrote the pilot several years ago without a particular actor in mind for the lead character, who narrates the novel as if she were delivering an ongoing monologue. Weisz had read the book โ it was recommended to her by a friend โ before she was sent the script.
Rachel Weisz as M, a literature professor who becomes infatuated with the titular character, played by Leo Woodall.
(Netflix)
โIt was a damn good piece of writing, the novel and the pilot,โ she says. It led to a meeting with Jonas. โUltimately, I think I was really intrigued about getting into the skin of this character,โ Weisz adds. โI thought it would be challenging and hopefully fun.โ
As Mโs life goes farther off the rails, she becomes more obsessed with Vladimir, often indulging in torrid romantic fantasies about him, which the audience sees in juxtaposition to the more mundane reality. She eventually crosses lines at work and at home, all while narrating her unraveling directly to the viewer.
โThe novel is very internal,โ Jonas says, speaking later over Zoom from New York. โSo it was about: How do we take that internal voice and translate it to the screen? One of the ways was her direct address, but we wanted to twist what that device usually does for an audience. In most direct addresses, the actor tells you the truth about whatโs really going on.โ
But thatโs not what always happens here.
โI wanted to flip that to where sheโs talking to someone and sheโs always trying to massage the truth or sometimes outright lie,โโ Jonas says. โSheโs a completely unreliable narrator.โ
Throughout the series, M confides in the camera, an unusual technique that draws its inspiration from Jonasโ theater background. Weisz remembers doing a Neil LaBute play in the โ90s in which she broke the fourth wall but had never done so onscreen. The actor says she did have an audience in mind when speaking to the camera, but it would be โreductiveโ to overexplain it.
โThere was somebody I was imagining,โ she says. โOn set, we called it my special friend. The other actors had to pretend it didnโt happen. It wasnโt so much choreographed as it was breaking out of the scene and chatting to my special friend and then going back into the scene.โ
It eventually became second nature for her and the cast, she says.
โIt was really interesting watching Rachel and all the creators involved navigate that,โ Woodall adds, speaking separately on Zoom from London. โShe did a really remarkable job at staying within a scene while also having to pivot and deliver a monologue and then come straight back into the scene. It was a new challenge for me, but I thought it was going to be more difficult than it actually was.โ
โThere was somebody I was imagining,โ says Rachel Weisz about breaking the fourth wall with her character on โVladimir.โ โOn set, we called it my special friend.โ
(Sophia Spring / For The Times)
The episodes are snappy, at around 30 minutes each, and the tone of โVladimirโ often leans more funny than serious. Weisz tends to gravitate toward drama โ her last series was a remake of David Cronenbergโs โDead Ringersโ โ but she has flexed her comedic muscles in the past, notably in Yorgos Lanthimosโ satirical film โThe Favourite.โ She doesnโt see herself as a particular funny actor despite the many laugh-inducing moments in โVladimir.โ
โFor me, everything was intensely serious,โ she says. โIt was about committing to her reality and what she cares about and what matters to her and how sheโs trying to convince herself that everythingโs just fine.โ
She pauses. โI wouldnโt know how to be funny,โ she affirms. โItโs not my wheelhouse. I was aware that there was a lot that was ridiculous, but life is often so ridiculous, isnโt it? Things are going very wrong in her life with her husband and everything. It gets harder and harder for her to toe that line as she tries to pretend itโs not going wrong.โ
Weisz mostly relied on her โimagination and Juliaโs wordsโ to portray the character. Sheโs known a lot of professors over the years, especially when she lived in New York City, which helped. She understood that despite the characterโs misbehavior in the series โ like breaking into her bossโ office โ sheโs decently good at her job. โTimes are changing and her husband is in this deep crisis and her reputation is on the line,โ Weisz says. โBut I think she thinks sheโs a beloved teacher and an esteemed professor.โ
To play M, Weisz had to be totally on her side. She knows itโs generally important to be able to defend the person youโre playing, but she also says the character felt โpsychologically true.โ
โItโs very hard to do something if it doesnโt feel like that,โ she says. โThe writing is the beginning of my job and this was so well written. But I wouldnโt be able to play someone unless I could totally be in their point of view.โ
Jonas says what makes M compelling is that itโs hard to put a label on her or know what to expect.
โVladimirโ is an adaptation of Julia May Jonasโ novel. The author says M is difficult to pin down.
(Sophia Spring/For The Times)
โIs she right? Is she wrong? Is she psycho? Is she sane? Is she brilliant? Is she all of those things? Or none of them? You canโt pin her down,โ Jonas explains. โAnd thatโs what makes her so exciting to watch. Youโre not quite sure what the choice is that sheโs going to make next other than being deeply smart and well read.โ
โVladimirโ began shooting in July 2025 in Toronto, which stood in for an undefined liberal arts college town. It was deliberately shot while Weiszโs young daughter with husband Daniel Craig was out of school for the summer. Although the actor felt tethered to the character while on set, she could easily dissociate at the end of the day. Sheโs repeatedly keen to clarify that sheโs nothing like M even as she defends her, as if sheโs slowly realizing just how unhinged the character comes off in the series.
โI deeply empathize with her and understand her,โ Weisz says. โBut I left her when I got home. Sheโs like a projection of what a viewer might want to live out.โ
Jonas adds, โItโs allegorical in nature. What if I could just take this man and chain him up? Itโs making that literal for us to watch. Itโs about that female id deep inside of us.โ
Both Woodall and Jonas were struck by Weiszโs intuitive approach to the character. Woodall and Weisz didnโt discuss Mโs relationship with Vladimir during filming.
โShe loves as much spontaneity as possible, and she loves to not really know ahead of time what the actorโs going to do,โ Woodall says. โFor someone whoโs as well established as she is and so beautiful, it was really fun to see her allow herself to be the butt of a joke and look ridiculous. Some of the scenes that we shot, we would finish, and she would burst out laughing. She leaned into it and had a lot of fun with it.โ
โRachel is completely surprising,โ Jonas adds. โThe first time Iโd see a scene Iโd think, โOh, thatโs not how I wrote it at all.โ And then I would see it a second time and I would realize what she was doing. Thatโs what makes her so alluring as an actor. Sheโs funny and interesting and a little off-key but fully committed, and you never know what sheโs going to do next.โ
Weisz has always wanted to be an actor, but she didnโt realize it could be a career until college. Sheโs drawn to writing and to singular voices. โI loved joining hands with Juliaโs imagination,โ she says. โI love writers. Iโm not one because itโs too solitary, but theyโre my favorite people to be with.โ
โSheโs funny and interesting and a little off-key but fully committed, and you never know what sheโs going to do next,โ says Jonas about Weisz.
(Sophia Spring / For The Times)
She tends to select projects based on the script, but otherwise she isnโt picky. Weisz has done everything from quirky indie films to prestige drama to high-octane action to Marvel. She won the Oscar for supporting actress in 2006 for โThe Constant Gardenerโ and was nominated again for โThe Favourite.โ
โIn the beginning of my career, I just did whatever job I got so I could pay the rent,โ she says, shrugging. โI wasnโt picky. Now Iโm in this luxurious position where I can choose things. Itโs really about the character and writing, if it appeals to me or if it seems it would be interesting to pretend that story.โ
Since our interview in January, Universal Pictures confirmed the production of โThe Mummy 4,โ which will feature Weisz and Brendan Fraser reprising their roles as Evelyn and Rick OโConnell (Weisz didnโt appear in the third installment). Prior to that announcement, though, Weisz is cagey about the film. โTheyโre seriously talking about it,โ she says. โBrendanโs been very involved. It sounds very interesting.โ
Being interested in a character or a story is what ultimately drives Weisz. Her performance in โVladimirโ completely eschewed vanity and instead fixates on what makes this woman go off the rails. M wants so badly to control her own narrative and is unable to face the reality of her life, but sheโs also a talented writer and professor who wants the best for her family.
โPeople are contradictory,โ Weisz says. โThey can be brilliant at their jobs and have a very messy personal life. This is someone who is human. I know itโs very heightened and ridiculous, and it is in the genre of comedy, but itโs very true. Humans can have these massive contradictions.โ
Although Weisz instinctively understands M, questions linger. She hasnโt decided whether M is complicit in her husbandโs misbehavior (โThatโs a hornetโs nest,โ she says) and sheโs not sure what happens to the character in the end. Even during the editing process sheโs struggled to see M from the outside. โI just see her,โ she says. โI donโt see me there at all.โ
As the interview wraps, Weisz worries I wonโt have what I need. Did she say enough about the series? Did she overly defend her character?
โIโm still aligned with her point of view,โ she acknowledges again. โI think sheโs โ I was going to say I think sheโs reasonable, but that might not be quite the right word.โ
The actor laughs. โI am aware that is not the right word.โ