‘Penguin’ lessons: How HBO series avoided ‘giant franchise’ pitfalls
The last time a penguin was this serious of an awards contender, it was tap dancing with happy feet. Now, HBOโs โThe Penguin,โ fleshing out the origin story of the waddling, tuxedo-clad โgentleman mobsterโ after more than 80 years as one of the Caped Crusaderโs best-known adversaries, has earned a staggering 24 Emmy nominations. For her spinoff to 2022โs big-screen hit โThe Batman,โ creator Lauren LeFranc brought an unusual perspective, burrowing deeply into new histories of twisted, impassioned characters โ and stars Colin Farrell, Cristin Milioti and Deirdre OโConnell enthusiastically bought in.
โThe people whoโve come before me, whoโve had the opportunity to tell a story about a gangster, they tended to be men,โ said LeFranc. โCrime dramas, anything comic book-related, certainly with [predominantly] male characters, let alone someone whoโs considered a villain, itโs hard to find a lot of women whoโve had that opportunity.โ
LeFranc wanted to know everything about not just Oswald โOzโ Cobb (Farrell) but also the person who shaped him most, his upward-mobility-obsessed, dementia-suffering mother, Francis (OโConnell, in a role created for the series), and the person he would have to overcome in order to rise to power, his late mob bossโ daughter, Sofia Falcone (Milioti), in a version entirely different from the comics character.
Deirdre OโConnell in โThe Penguin.โ
(Macall Polay / HBO)
โFrancis was based a little bit on my grandmother on my dadโs side, whoโs Mexican and was an immigrant and had a lot of spite and anger, but was very driven and passionate,โ LeFranc said.
โWe definitely did talk about what that meant,โ acknowledges OโConnell, โand the way her grandmother conducted herself like a queen.โ
Francis and Oz are locked in a mother-son dance of death, as the wannabe crime lord feels constant pressure to succeed in her eyes. But the two are cursed by a horror from their past: As a boy, Oz killed both of his brothers, which Francis secretly knows.
All of this was news to the actor whoโd played Oz in the movie and had first suggested the Penguin get the TV treatment. Farrell said his previous thoughts about Ozโs backstory werenโt โa million miles away from what Lauren created, but what she created was unique enough for me to learn more about Oz as a man.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
โThe relationship between Oz and Francis was the cornerstone, the foundation around which I built everything that became Oz โ the intimacy between the two, the deep need Oz always had to feel his motherโs love and earn her pride.โ
All of that fit with LeFrancโs reimagining of a character usually depicted in a morning suit and top hat, with high-tech weaponry inside his umbrella: โIn the comics, he has often come from a wealthy family,โ she said. โWe changed his name to โCobbโ because โCobblepotโ always suggested wealth and prestige. I personally can relate more to someone who comes from nothing and is hustling. A man like Oz is often not seen in the way he feels he deserves.โ
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LeFrancโs backstories fed the idea that everyone is the hero of their own story. Itโs certainly not hard to root for antagonist Sofia Falcone, who viewers learn was betrayed by her own father and committed to a decade of mental torture in Arkham Asylum. In a sense, she becomes the seriesโ co-hero โ a hero who coolly slays almost her entire family in revenge.
Milioti said LeFrancโs โcare and protectivenessโ gave the actors freedom. โYouโre able to go to those big places; it feels so real. It gives you carte blanche to go as deep as you want and get as detailed as you want.
โYou know it when you see it, and you start drooling.โ
Colin Farrell and Cristin Milioti in โThe Penguin.โ
(Macall Polay / HBO)
Farrellโs cellular mutation into Oz has been widely discussed โ the dialect, the physicality, the incredible prosthetic makeup by Mike Marino and his team, and how Farrell illuminates that full-body mask from within. Less discussed has been Miliotiโs metamorphosis into the internally and externally scarred Sofia, hard as Gothamโs most brutal gangsters and free of the ties of conscience that could bind vengeful hands.
โThereโs a certain point where she has nothing to lose, and thatโs the scariest type of person,โ said Milioti, previously best known for comedy (โHow I Met Your Mother,โ โPalm Springsโ) and musical theater (โOnce,โ David Bowieโs โLazarusโ).
โIโd been looking to do something [in which] I could show a different color, and it reminded me a lot of doing theater because I didnโt feel boxed in. I could come in with the ideas I had and the feelings I was circling. We had this incredible hair and makeup department, they were so collaborative โฆ It felt very not necessarily what I would expect a giant franchise to feel like.โ
Tony winner OโConnell underwent her own transformation as Francis, and not just due to the characterโs rough-hewn, New York-like Gotham dialect, courtesy of coach Jessica Drake. Ozโs mother has Lewy body dementia, a degenerative condition that affects thinking, memory and movement.
โIt was very deeply important to me that I not sell it short at all,โ OโConnell said. โBoth of my parents suffer from dementia. I got lucky enough to find a woman who does [physical therapy] for people with Lewy [body dementia] and Parkinsonโs, and people let me into their homes.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
โItโs so funny because I kind of look like my mom when I see [the show] now. Everybody said my dad had Alzheimerโs, but looking back, he probably had Lewy, the way his hallucinations worked, the guilelessness that came over him, and also the way that his rage manifested; how angry it made him to be that helpless. I wanted Francis to be able to hold her dignity in the worst time, when people have to give up their dignity that way.
โI felt that for her, and I was carrying that for my parents.โ
Farrell had what he called his โcrutchโ โ the physical transmogrification โ which also sparked a germ of fear in him, of โbeing a one-trick pony,โ he said. โMike Marinoโs genius was so apparent, it would easily sustain interest over five scenes or four scenes in the film. But can I sustain interest, can I find a way to actually make this living, breathing human being who is complex?
At first, Farrell had suggested to โThe Batmanโ writer-director Matt Reeves that he play the Penguin with much more minimal makeup โ โMaybe the Penguinโs 170 pounds and 5 foot 10, and Irish,โ he jokes โ but in the end it only deepened his belief that the rise of Oz Cobb could sustain a story of its own.
โI remember saying to [โBatmanโ producer Dylan Clark], like, on Week 2 of โThe Batman,โ we should do a show on this. Thereโs so much more we could do with this.
โAnd then I was given the opportunity to do so much more, and I sโ myself, absolutely.โ
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)