You can’t have a series called American Gods without some honest-to-goodness gods. Neil Gaiman’s best-selling novel imagines a United States populated by deities who come into existence when mortal beings start to worship them, and that means that old gods like Bilquis, Anansi and many more will make an appearance in the new television series, debuting next month on STARZ. But it also means that new idols have risen over the centuries, and that audiences will be introduced to modern day deities like Technical Boy, Media and Mr. World.
American Gods made its exciting premiere at SXSW 2017 last weekend and the producers, Bryan Fuller and Michael Green, brought many of these new American Gods with them. I sat down with cast members Yetide Badaki (Bilquis), Bruce Langley (Technical Boy) and Crispen Glover (Mr. World) to talk about their daunting new task of being the audience’s new (and old) gods, and also with cast member Betty Gilpin, who plays one of the human beings who gets dragged into the bizarre story of American Gods.
American Gods premieres on STARZ on April 30, 2017. [Editor’s Note: This interview describes some key moments from the first few episodes of the series.]
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STARZ
Also: SXSW 2017 Interview | ‘American Gods’ Producers Bryan Fuller and Michael Green
Crave: It’s an obvious question, but I think people are going to want to know, were you fans of the book before you were cast?
Yetide Badaki: Yes, yes, yes! I think we already know what a geek I am. I will watch or read anything that has a hint of sci-fi or fantasy so I actually read the book when it first came out, and I’m a huge Neil Gaiman fan, so… YES. The answer is “yes.”
Bryan Fuller has such a distinctive style to his shows, and Michael Green as well. Is working them different than working with people on other television programs or movies? Or from perspective is it all just about the character?
Bruce Langley: I mean, I can’t speak from working on an abundance of other tv shows, but I think it’s a trickle-down mentality. So these guys are, they’re our patriarchs. They’re our leaders. They’re our family heads in many ways and they really do set the tone for the entire production. It’s an incredibly safe place to work. It’s loving, it’s caring, and I think that really does come down from them. So working with them and the whole experience of American Gods wouldn’t be the same without because of the environment they create for us to work, play, fail, laugh and enjoy ourselves along the way.
I’ve seen the first episode, and Yetide Badaki, you have quite a scene.
Yetide Badaki: [Laughs.] Yeah…
You get to swallow someone with your lady bits.
Yetide Badaki: Right, right.
How do you play that?
Yetide Badaki: [Laughs.] Well, first off, exactly what Bruce said there earlier. Exactly because a safe space has been created, you can go into that space and you can explore and find new things, and you know they’re going to make it gorgeous and interesting and fascinating. There are also a lot of levels underneath of what does that all mean? What is being shown about power and agency, especially of the feminine? So there are all these other things to think about and play with so that you’re not just thinking “Oh wait, I’m swallowing a guy with my…” [Laughs.] What did you say, “Lady bits?”
Crispen Glover: The first time I watched it what I liked about that scene was that there are so many layers to it. It certainly wasn’t just that kind of description. I mean ultimately that happens in there but there is a lot more going on, which seems to happen in general with the Neil Gaiman writing and the dramaturgy that’s being put forth by Michael and Bryan. So there’s a lot going on. All of the actors sitting here, there is depth. My part is, I don’t mean to include myself because you haven’t seen me yet, but all three of these actors really have a lot of depth and different elements that might seemingly be on the page.
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There are a lot of layers. I’m curious, do you have conversations with Bryan, Michael, Neil, the directors about the philosophical, religious implications about everything you do? Or is that left to your own devices?
Yetide Badaki: I would say that it’s a combo. It’s a conversation, it’s exactly that, a conversation where yes, you come with certain ideas and levels and they tell you certain things that they were thinking and then you start that dialogue. And you go, “Okay, that’s interesting, you were thinking this. How do we incorporate…?” So it is, it’s a dialogue, and that includes Neil and Bryan and Michael, and then the people that you’re playing with and the people on set and the visual [artists]. Also as you can tell there’s a lot of topical stuff going on, so things that came in on the day as well.
Betty Gilpin: I do feel like there was a really fun duality to play with in this script, of a simultaneous Greek tragedy level and then a very modern, noir-y, comic book-y type, very naturalist thing going on. For me it varied sentence to sentence, it kind of let you weave in and out of these stakes, of screaming at the sky, and then you’re talking out the side of your mouth. I think they let everybody go as far as they wanted to go on that day. I think that really shows in the pilot.
A lot of the older gods that we see have classical descriptions, but the newer gods like Technical Boy and Mr. World, you get to create that godlike personae and iconography from, obviously Neil Gaiman’s writing, but a lot of it is going to be your performance. Is playing a god different in any way than playing a person? Does it require more gravitas?
Crispen Glover: I keep saying that when I first met with Michael and Bryan, something that they said to me about my character was, “We are the world, we are the children.” And I liked that. It actually really means something.
Bruce Langley: In terms of approaching it with more gravitas, I think it’s a similar vein to approaching something as a quote-unquote “bad guy,” which is something that, an actor, you never do that. You never approach it along that way. You approach it as a character. With Tech Boy the really interesting thing is he literally thinks on a different paradigm of thought. So in terms of biological brain cycles he is literally thinking faster and differently than everything else that’s living, so that was a lot of fun.
I think what I’m getting at is that, as a god, you are by definition worshipped. That’s got to affect your mentality, that’s got to affect your confidence and the way you interact with and view the world.
Yetide Badaki: The interesting thing about that question is, and this was mentioned earlier, that part of what we’re talking about is how belief becomes cemented. So we exist because people believe in us. And yes, you do take worship, and there’s something that makes you very dependent, actually, on the worshippers as well. One of the questions that we’re asked often is, “What god would you want to be?” and I’m going, I would want to be one of the people. Because if you are able to create a god, how powerful must you be?
Bruce Langley: Very cool. Very cool.
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Sandra Dahdah/Getty Images for SXSW
I’m not sure I can top that but I am curious, Betty Gilpin, your role has been expanded a lot from the books. In the books you kind of vanish after the first couple of chapters.
Betty Gilpin: Yeah.
But we see in episode four, you get to go on the road a bit. Can you tell us about where you’re going? I know you don’t want to ruin it, but we tease this?
Betty Gilpin: Yeah, I think Audrey is sort of used to being the friend in Laura’s movie about her life. I think that she is sort of used to being her [Laura’s] sidekick and I think she kind of, in episode four, she gives it back to her and tells her what for, really. There’s a kind of freedom in Laura being dead, that Audrey can say all the things she’s wanted to say to her face. I think for fans of the book that’s going to be so fun. It’s as if they get to go into the book and walk around inside and go into doors that are just described as walking past, and kind of choose your own adventure through all these characters. Audrey gets to be one of those doors and there are hundreds of others.
Are there particular moments that were part of the production, or a part of your characters, that you’re particularly excited for people to see?
Bruce Langley: There are definitely some bits. Orlando Jones’s introduction to the series at the start of episode two is something I am incredibly excited for people to see. His introduction as Anansi, or Mr. Nancy, I shan’t tease or spoil any more than that but when it happens people will know. I’m really looking forward to it.
I got to see that bit. I knew he was an underrated performer but god damn…
Yetide Badaki: Amazing.
What about you…?
Yetide Badaki: Well, that’s exactly what I was going to say because growing up in Nigeria, telling stories by the fire, we were told all these Anansi stories. I had never seen a live-action depiction of Anansi. This, in my knowledge, is the first I’ve seen out there. So to see Orlando in that scene, just, he kills it. He knocks it out of the park. I can’t wait for people to see it.
Crispen Glover, anything in particular…?
Crispen Glover: It sounds funny but I purposefully haven’t read the book because I know that if I do, I’ll start getting conceptions in my head about how not only it should be played, but how it should be interpreted. I don’t want to go, “Oh, well this isn’t right,” because I trust Michael and Bryan. So I want to be informed, essentially, as things are coming into me so I don’t have that preconceived element. I know I can get that way if it’s based on a literary element, and I just know the literary element is excellent and the people that are interpreting it know what they’re doing as well. So I know probably less than everybody sitting at the table.
What is it that you get that way about? What do you get invested in, the way that people get invested in American Gods?
Crispen Glover: Well, I’ve made my own films as well and it’s something I’ve been thinking about, which could be a problem for acting. It’s a different kind of thought process, I find, for the directing versus the acting or the creation of the scene, and I don’t want to get into that part of my head.
Have you talked to Neil at all about your performance?
Crispen Glover: No, I worked with him on Beowulf, which I think came out in [2007], and that’s when I met and talked to him. He’s a great person and I know that internally and what he’s doing as a writer is excellent so I have complete in him as well.
He’s given you no input on Mr. World?
Crispen Glover: I haven’t talked to him since this has come around. I look forward to talking to him but I haven’t since 2007 or 2008.
15 Amazing Movies That Made SXSW a Big Deal:
Top Photo: Jonathan Leibson-Getty Images for Starz
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and Canceled Too Soon, and watch him on the weekly YouTube series What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
15 Movies That Make SXSW a Big Deal
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The Act of Killing
Joshua Oppenheimer's unique and horrifying documentary gives camera equipment to the perpetrators of the Indonesian genocide, and invites them to make a movie about the hundreds of thousands (or more) people they killed, by hand. The way they choose to present their unthinkable actions speaks volumes about the depths of human depravity, and the disturbing things that human beings can do when they are given permission by the government, society and themselves.
Photo: Drafthouse Films
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Beginners
Christopher Plummer won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Beginners, a sensitive comedy-drama in which he plays a man who finally comes out of the closet in his seventies.
Photo: Focus Features
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Boyhood
Richard Linklater's ambitious Oscar-winning drama was filmed over the course of 12 years, so that his young cast and the adults around them could age naturally over the course of the film. Boyhood would have been a brilliant coming of age story anyway, but the visual effect of watching the actors grow older in front of your eyes makes it absolutely hypnotic.
Photo: IFC Films
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Bridesmaids
The blockbuster Oscar-nominee that changed the way Hollywood looked at female ensemble films screened early at SXSW, where it become one of many big studio comedies to try their luck with the crowd in Austin, TX. (Other noteworthy comedies to debut at SXSW include I Love You Man, 21 Jump Street and Trainwreck.)
Photo: Universal Pictures
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The Cabin in the Woods
Drew Goddard's brilliant comedy, co-written by Joss Whedon, flipped the script on the whole horror genre, and changed the way every other "cabin in the woods" thriller will be looked at until the end of time.
Photo: Lionsgate
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Chef
Jon Favreau took a break from blockbusters by writing, directing and starring in this cult hit indie about a successful chef who goes back to basics and gets himself a food truck. The metaphor - eschewing an industrial complex and going back what you loved about the art form in the first place - is particularly poignant against the backdrop of the independent film festival.
Photo: Open Road Films
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Dogtooth
This disturbing drama from Yorgos Lanthimos, about children raised in isolation and instilled with strange ideas about the outside world, earned rave reviews and an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film.
Photo: Feelgood Entertainment
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Ex Machina
Alex Garland's damning sci-fi drama about artificial intelligence and the dangers of misogyny stars Oscar Isaac and Domhnall Gleeson as men who are trying to figure out what's going on inside the brain of a female robot, played by Alicia Vikander. Intelligent, vicious, Oscar-winning filmmaking.
Photo: Universal Pictures
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The Hurt Locker
Kathryn Bigelow's suspenseful drama about a bomb disposal unit in the Iraq war eventually won the Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, and turned Jeremy Renner into a major movie star.
Photo: Summit Entertainment
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The Invitation
Karyn Kusama directs one of the most acclaimed horror movies in years, a subtle thriller about a man invited to his ex-wife's house for dinner, who begins to suspect that something is going very, very wrong. He can't quite put his finger on it, and neither can you. Dread rarely feels this dreadfully exciting.
Photo: Drafthouse Films
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The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters
Audiences are still waiting for a great film based on a video game, but The King of Kong proves that great movies can at least be made about them. Seth Gordon's documentary looks at people who have dedicated their lives to beating the high score at Donkey Kong. By the end of the film you'll care about their quest almost as much as they do.
Photo: Picturehouse
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Moon
Duncan Jones made a huge splash at SXSW with Moon, an ambitious low-budget sci-fi film starring Sam Rockwell as the only man stationed on the moon's surface, falling prey to loneliness until an unexpected discovery makes him question everything about his existence. Funny, emotional, brilliant.
Photo: Sony Pictures Classics
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The Raid
One of the most propulsive action movies ever made, The Raid is the story of a SWAT team trapped in a high-rise full of criminals who want to kill them. It's a non-stop, expertly choreographed action thriller that raised the bar for just about every fight movie that followed.
Photo: Sony Pictures Classics
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Short Term 12
One of the most acclaimed dramas of 2013 stars Brie Larson as a woman helping teenagers at group home. The film won multiple prizes and shot Brie Larson to upper echelons of talented young actors in Hollywood.
Photo: Cinedigm
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Spring Breakers
Harmony Korine's sexy, sleazy, seductive, disgusting, celebratory and finger-wagging drama about college girls who go to Mexico for spring break and decide to never leave is one of the most distinctive and lauded films of the decade. James Franco gives the performance of a lifetime as their boyfriend, drug dealer and surreal gang leader, Alien.
Photo: A24