Anthony Carrigan (āBarryā) joins Phil Dunster (āTed Lassoā), Janelle James (āAbbott Elementaryā), Delroy Lindo (āUnprisonedā), Adam Scott (āParty Downā), Molly Shannon (āThe Other Twoā) and Jessica Williams (āShrinkingā) on the Los Angeles Timesā Envelope Comedy Roundtable.
Todayās top comedy series also happen to be some of the best dramas on television. Such shows as āBarry,ā āShrinkingā and āUnPrisonedā mine humor in the dark corners of intense subjects ā PTSD, grief and incarceration. āAbbott Elementaryā turns the depressing realities of a broken public school system into a gold mine of laughs. Dashed dreams and losing streaks are the lifeblood of āParty Down,ā āThe Other Twoā and āTed Lasso.ā
āMy favorite kind of comedy is trauma drama,ā says Adam Scott, who plays an out-of-work actor turned part-time bartender in the returning Starz series āParty Down.ā āMe too, itās trauma drama,ā replies Jessica Williams of Apple TV+ās āShrinking.ā āEverything is so sad all the time. Even laughing can be sad. Any time something really traumatic is happening, thereās also something really funny. Thereās somebodyās crying over the casket. Or thereās a really intense breakup scene, and [the Spin Doctorsā upbeat love song] āTwo Princesā is playing in the restaurant.ā
āWith āTed Lassoā we never get to a point when it becomes too heavy,ā adds Phil Dunster, who portrays the egotistical soccer star Jamie Tartt in the hit Apple TV+ series. āWe had a mission: Weāre still going to address all of these really huge, horrible issues, but weāre going to do it with a twinkle in the eye. With a tongue in the cheek.ā
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These actors, along with Janelle James of ABCās mockumentary āAbbott Elementary,ā Anthony Carrigan of HBOās āBarry,ā Delroy Lindo of Huluās āUnPrisonedā and Molly Shannon of HBOās āThe Other Twoā came together in late April for The Envelope Comedy Roundtable, where they discussed what it takes to turn tears into laughter, fan expectations and lovely man calves. Their conversation can be seen on Spectrum News 1 on June 9.
The characters on HBOās brilliant comedy-drama never stopped evolving. As the show wraps its four-season run, the main cast sits down to reminisce.
These excerpts have been edited for length and clarity.
Janelle James: āAbbottā is about an underfunded elementary school, with children [and teachers] who donāt have the resources that they need, or much of anything. So I think thatās why itās amazing that our show is so funny. And thatās why my character pretty much exists. Iām a joke machine to get people out of the seriousness of what weāre trying to tackle.
Delroy Lindo: Thatās interesting, but you donāt lead with the thought that this is a really serious subject matter, right?
James: I donāt think Quinta [Brunson], the creator, ever would categorize it as a comedy, or as a dramedy, or straddling the line, but that is what the show is about. On its face, itās a very serious topic, but weāve managed to make it super funny.
Jessica Williams: I learned that after I was on āThe Daily Show.ā Jon Stewartās philosophy was āThis is like veggies, but people think itās dessert.ā You know, it doesnāt need to be too serious. People will get the message, even if youāre moving around it, without getting it too on the nose.
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āPeople will get the messageā Jessica Williams says of comedy series ā like her show āShrinkingā ā not having to be too on the nose with their issues.
Molly Shannon: Or getting too heavy-handed.
Lindo: Iām thinking about Richard Pryor. That was his genius. To tackle really profound issues and make it hilarious.
Phil Dunster: When things are being packaged as a drama, as something that is supposed to be a far more serious way of telling the story, I still feel there has to be some lacing of humor. Youāve got to bring them into it ā¦ and you have to find different ways to do that.
Adam Scott: It gets claustrophobic if itās just all seriousā¦ Whether itās comedy or drama, I really lean on the writer. In any comedy, I find the funniest stuff is when it is the most serious moment of the [characterās] life. And if itās written correctly, you donāt have to vary that much how youāre playing it. Itās the surroundings and the writing that guide whether itās funny or not.
What kind of misconceptions do people have about you based on the characters you play? Anthony, letās start with NoHo Hank of āBarry.ā
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Anthony Carrigan: The biggest misconception is that Iām a Chechen mobster. Truly, people are baffled as soon as I start speaking in my normal voice. They look at me and theyāre like, āYouāre not Russian, youāre not Chechen?!ā Theyāre mildly disappointed to learn that Iām from Massachusetts. So then theyāre like, āOK, do it. Yeah, do the voice, do the voice.ā And I always do because Iām a people pleaser. Thatās something I have in common with NoHo Hank. But Iām not a criminal, and I do not run a criminal enterprise. Just saying it now: no family ties.
Jessica Williams: OK. I was pretty stressed when I met him.
Janelle James says sheās much less āonā than her āAbbott Elementaryā character.
Janelle, Ava Coleman is the fame-seeking principal of āAbbott Elementary.ā Sheās an MVP of one-liners. Do people expect you to be like her?
James: I am not always on like she is. I am mostly off, so her insatiable quest for fame and social-media savvy and all of those things [are not me]. I donāt like taking pictures or selfies or any of those things, and Iām pretty introverted. She is not. Sheās, like, this big ringmaster-type of character. Thatās what people want when they meet me. But thatās why itās fun to play her. Itās like putting on a whole new personality.
And Phil, Jamie Tartt is a soccer superstar with a deep Mancunian accent.
Dunster: They expect me to be really good at football, which is terrible, because when people pick me for their side, theyāre like, āYou suck.ā
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Scott: Are you legitimately bad?
Dunster: Iām OK. They edit around it. But mostly, people are disappointed in my football ability. And the accent, which is a lovely thing. People are like, āOh, I believed you.ā
Adam, for āParty Down,ā did you have to prove you could mix a drink before you landed the role?
Adam Scott gives a tip of the hat to Ted Danson and āCheersā for some of his work on the comedy āParty Down.ā
Shannon: Thatās great. I worked with Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt. They loved activities on āMad About You,ā if you notice. Iām not good at that at all. Iām always impressed with somebody that will add, like, putting on a watch in a scene. Taking a sip of water. It gives me the giggles. So when I do activities, itās āHelen Hunt activities.ā I always say that on set, that Iām being like Helen Hunt.
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āBarryā and āTed Lassoā just ended amazing runs. How hard is it to let go of characters youāve inhabited for so long?
Anthony Carrigan thanked his NoHo Hank āBarryā character at the seriesā end.
Carrigan: I donāt know about all of you, but whenever thereās a character that you really love playing, you love expressing this part of you or identifying with this human being, it really does take up a certain space in your spirit. And when you have to put that down, itās sad. I did like a little ritual afterwards, where I hung up my costume and I was like, āThank you, Hank.ā
Dunster: Did you like pretend to shake the sleeveās hand?
Carrigan: Yeah, it got really intense [laughs]. Things donāt last forever, but you kind of want them to. But because it has a shelf life; thatās what makes it special. Thatās what you do appreciate about it. So, yeah, Iām very sad about it. But at the same time, Iām excited for whatās next.
Shannon: People used to say that to me when I got āSaturday Night Live,ā āOh, that must be a great steppingstone.ā And I was like, āA steppingstone?!ā
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Williams: Yeah, same with āThe Daily Show.ā
Molly Shannon of āThe Other Twoā never saw her time on āSaturday Night Liveā as a stepping stone to other work.
Shannon: I was like, āIāve been hustling my whole life to get to this point.ā This is the break of a lifetime. I looked at it as an island that I wanted to live on forever. I never saw it as a steppingstone.
James: Itās probably naive of me, but when I read this pilot of āAbbott,ā I knew it was gonna go. Whether Iām there or not, this is going to go. I knew immediately. It was so well written, I could see it in my head as I was reading it. It was hilarious on paper. Thatās hard to write something that makes you laugh out loud.
Scott: You know, I watched that pilot again ā¦ and it is one of those great pilots. Because they really do put the flag in the ground, like, āWeāre going to confront this public school issue.ā And thatās a really moving story.
How do you flesh out complex characters? Like Edwin of āUnPrisonedā ā heās just out of prison after many years, and heās trying to re-acclimate into society and mend issues with his adult daughter. The show is based on creator Tracy McMillanās own story.
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Lindo: The first thing I did was I met with Tracyās father. And this character is inspired by Tracyās dad. So he and I hung out. He was very generous in terms of what he shared with me about his life. Then I connected with a few organizations whose clients are formerly incarcerated people ā¦ I was educating myself about that world, and then I began the process of bringing Edwin to life.
Delroy Lindo met with the man his āUnPrisonedā character is based on.
James: I donāt remember any school principals at all. I was really just like, āOh, what would I be if I was somebody that wanted to be on camera?ā Itās not a new phenomenon of people wanting to be famous, but there is a new phenomenon of regular people who arenāt in the business. We see them on social media.
Scott: And the job of being a principal is almost, like ...
James: ... secondary. A thing that people forget, as the show goes on, is the reason [the school] is being filmed is because she wants to be famous. It has nothing to do with the students or anything; she brought these cameras in. Thatās why sheās so on, because she knows the cameras are there and this is her show. And I think itās just so funny and brilliant, because she is now famous.
What about the colorful criminal NoHo Hank?
Carrigan: He was just described as a very polite gangster. Like, a gracious host. ā¦ When I started to mess around with him, I pulled things from random places. So Jean-Claude Van Damme and some ā80s action were a huge inspiration. The coolness factor. Hands on the hips and trying to be so suave. It just kind of started to take on a life of its own.
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Dunster: People ask me if [Jamieās] inspired by this [footballer] Jack Grealish, who is very similar in tone. Jack Grealish is the most handsome, and heās the best. He has lovely calves. Heās kind of like an ostentatious character. If he plays for your team, you love him. If he plays against them, you jeer him and hate him. I took the parts of someone like Jack Grealish ā¦ and in the same way with Hank for āBarry,ā you take the thing that is on the surface, like a gangster, and then you undermine it.
Phil Dunster admits heās not much of a soccer player. āThey edit around itā on āTed Lasso,ā he says.
Carrigan: Right. You subvert expectations.
Williams: With Gaby, I really wanted to be a therapist that people wanted to find, and then I also wanted someone who lives externally. If somethingās happening, you can just see it. Thereās kind of like a childlike expression with her. Oh, and annoying Harrison Ford. That became a big part of Gaby. How annoying can she possibly be to this older man? Sheās more of a lighter character. She needed to balance out Harrison Fordās character, who has Parkinsonās, and Jason Segelās character, who is grieving the loss of his wife.
Adam, you play an out of work actor in āParty Down.ā Was that, erm, hard to channel?
Scott: When we started the show, back when it was originally on, like, in 2009, we were on this network that wasnāt quite known for making shows, and we were their only show, and people didnāt really know about it. That didnāt happen until it was canceled. So, while we were making it, we were like, āNo one is watching this, we couldnāt even get it reviewed.ā But we loved it.
Williams: Itās funny, itās such an iconic show. I remember when I was in high school and I watched it. And it was so good, but it was one of those cool shows that all the cool kids watched. They watched āArrested Developmentā and āParty Down.ā
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Scott: When people discovered it, they discovered it themselves. And so there is, like, some ownership over it. It made people feel connected to it, which is great. Thatās why we ended up being able to make more 13 years later, is because people dug it up and discovered it and liked it.
For actors Riley Keough, Emily Blunt, Kathryn Hahn, Niecy Nash-Betts, Murray Bartlett and Paul Walter Hauser, learning new skills come with the job.
Was there a time when you thought youād made it big but maybe you hadnāt actually quite yet?
Williams: Well, I just find that I get mistaken for every other Black actress thatās ever existed. āShrinkingā had just come out, and people were like, āWe love you on āThe Bear.āā And Iām just like, āOh, my God, thatās not me.ā Or when I was on āThe Daily Show,ā people would think I was my friend Sasheer [Zamata], who is also on āSNL.ā
Shannon: Can I say one thing about [making it big]? I think so much of the drive to be in show business is thereās some hole or youāre trying to prove yourself. My mom died when I was little, when I was 4, in a car accident. That gave me the drive to, like, make it and maybe make my mom come back from the dead. I was like, maybe my mom died when I was 4 because she was like, āThis little baby, meh.ā I want to get over that.
Lindo: It does make sense. But you know, I found good work consistently enough no matter what people think [of me]. ... You know what? Fā you.
James: Thatās the freedom.
Lindo: Itās in the work. Itās in the work, man, itās in the work.
Carrigan: As soon as you start to buy into that other stuff of expectations of where you are ...
Delroy: You canāt buy into that sā.
Carrigan: Where you should be, what is expected of you to do next? That next thing?
Lindo: Thatās right, itās a trap.
When inhabiting potentially hard to love characters, how do you ingratiate them to an audience? Molly, your āThe Other Twoā character, Pat Dubeck, is a Hollywood mom, and she can be a lot.
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Shannon: The writing is so good. Chris [Kelly] and Sarah [Schneider] are really good at writing for me, so I really relate to the character. Pat cares so much about her family, and sheās ambitious. Sheās an Ohio mom coming to New York City with big dreams for her son to be the next pop superstar and her two other children. But at the end of the day, she cares so much about her family and wanting to be with her kids, so it has so much heart.
Clockwise from left, Jessica Williams, Phil Dunster, Molly Shannon, Delroy Lindo, Anthony Carrigan, Janelle James and Adam Scott comprised the 2023 Envelope Comedy Roundtable, which premieres on Spectrum News 1 on June 9.
(Shiho Fukada)
Lindo: We all keep coming back to the writing. We keep coming back to the depth of the writing, the acuity of the writing, the accuracy of the writing. How that resonates for all of us as actors and how on some level it makes our job not easier per se, but it certainly makes the process that much more doable.... The writing, the writing, the writing.
Carrigan: And you feel it, too. Youāre reading it, but you understand it like youāre watching it. Youāre living it and youāre laughing at it in the moment.
Lindo: I remember years ago, I was working on a not very good TV show.
Dunster: Go on, name it. Go on, say who it is.
Lindo: I will not. But one of the actors who came to do a guest-starring role was somebody who had worked for many years on another TV show. And I said, āMan, how was that?ā He had done six or seven or eight seasons, and he said, āMan, we were always fighting the writing.ā ā¦ Maybe this is indeed a golden age of television, in how the writing is supporting the actors. Weāre not having to fight against them.
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Strong writing also lends a spontaneity, especially in comedy. That said, how much improv takes place on your respective shows?
Shannon: Oh, when I was shooting [āThe White Lotusā] with [creator, writer, director] Mike White, there was one night where they wanted all the actors to go to the Upright Citizens Brigade to improvise. I said, āI donāt really do that.ā And they were like, āOh, you can do it.ā So I tried it and I was terrible. Mike was in the audience ...
Williams: Oh, no. Thatās a totally different skill set.
Shannon: It was all, like, miming, opening refrigerators, taking a drink. Aprons being tied. Tablecloths being pulled. I was frozen in fear. I was terrible. I was so bad that Mike put his cap over his head to hide.
Scott: I would so love to watch you do that, Molly, I love it so much.
James: Itās hard to fail that big in front of people.
Shannon: When I was on stage, I was, like, trying to think of other careers. Like, āIām so bad at this.ā Maybe Iāll be a teacher, I could go back to temping ...
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Lorraine Ali is news and culture critic of the Los Angeles Times. Previously, she was television critic for The Times covering media, breaking news and the onslaught of content across streaming, cable and network TV. Ali is an award-winning journalist and Los Angeles native who has written in publications ranging from the New York Times to Rolling Stone and GQ. She was formerly senior writer for The Timesā Calendar section where she covered entertainment, culture, and American Arab and Muslim issues. Ali started at The Times in 2011 as music editor after leaving her post as a senior writer and music critic at Newsweek Magazine.