Rule No. 1: You better be tough
NEW YORK â Glenn Close wasnât too pleased to find out at the end of the first season of âDamagesâ that Patty Hewes, the scheming attorney she plays on the FX thriller, was the one responsible for the attempted killing of her protege Ellen Parsons.
âI was upset!â exclaimed Close, curled up on her dressing room couch at a Brooklyn sound stage. It was a drizzly winter afternoon, and the actress had just finished shooting a scene for the showâs second season, which premieres Wednesday. âI didnât want her to be a psychopath. I think at the end she sincerely regrets what she did and is really relieved that it didnât happen.â
At least thatâs her interpretation. The writers of âDamages,â a layered, twisting drama about personal and professional power games, donât give a lot of clues about where theyâre headed, even to the cast. The actors are often in the dark about their charactersâ motivations or misdeeds, a dynamic that Close, who was accustomed to more defined film roles before taking this part, admits took some adjustment.
âItâs certainly not for sissies,â she said. But well worth it, she hastened to add, comparing the experience of acting in the show to âliving a novel.â
âThe more the characters go through life, the baggage gets heavier and more interesting,â Close said. âAnd to take a whole audience along with you on that ride is kind of thrilling.â
The ride is set to get even more exhilarating in Season 2. Ellen (Rose Byrne), still shattered by the death of her fiance, returns to work with a new mission: to take Patty down. Having discovered that her boss was responsible for the attempted hit on her life, Ellen is now working as an FBI informant, assisting a criminal investigation of the firm.
âLast year was a little bit of a king and a pawn,â said Glenn Kessler, who created the show with his brother Todd A. Kessler and their friend Daniel Zelman, and together serve as its executive producers. âNow itâs very much two kings in play. Thatâs been very fun, because you let both characters bring their full arsenal of abilities and manipulation.â
If thereâs any theme this season, Todd Kessler added, âitâs Ellen transformed.â
Byrne relished the change, saying she struggled trying to portray Ellenâs naivete in Season 1, when she was a first-year associate helping Patty with a massive class action suit that took a deadly turn.
âThe audience knew more than her, and that was a hard position to be in,â Byrne said. âNow sheâs on this path of revenge. Sheâs a warrior. . . . For me, it was like, great!â
âDamagesâ went through its own crucible of sorts last year. Although the dramaâs intricate plotting attracted critical acclaim -- and garnered both Close and supporting actor Zeljko Ivanek Emmys -- its complex storytelling failed to attract a large audience. The first season drew an average of 2.5 million viewers for premiere viewings of each episode and a cumulative audience of 5.1 million a week. Those werenât the blockbuster ratings FX had envisioned when it snapped up âDamages,â hoping it would succeed âThe Shieldâ as the basic cable networkâs new tent-pole series.
John Landgraf, president of FX Networks, said heâs optimistic that more viewers will tune in for Season 2 now that buzz for the program has grown. It also helps that Sony Pictures Television, the studio that co-produces âDamages,â agreed to shoulder more financial risk when FX renewed the program for two more seasons.
âI donât have any fears about this show anymore,â he said. âIâm very confident it will remain on our schedule for a long time to come.â
Still, as they mapped out the second season, the producers had long discussions with Landgraf about whether the showâs labyrinth narrative was an impediment at a time when serialized programs have struggled. To make âDamagesâ more accessible, early episodes were designed so that viewers could begin watching any time in the first several weeks and not feel lost. The story is still told in two time frames, skipping between the present and six months in the future, but a major case gets resolved midway through the season, offering âan important carrot for the audience,â Landgraf said.
But other than that, âDamagesâ continues to embrace the dense storytelling for which itâs become known.
âOur decision was weâre not going to do violence to the show creatively,â Landgraf said. âIt is what it is, and weâre going to stick to our guns.â
The seriesâ complexity has attracted a slew of top-shelf actors to the cast this season, including William Hurt, reuniting with Close for the first time since they costarred in the 1983 movie âThe Big Chill.â Hurt plays Daniel Purcell, a scientist who has a past with Patty and seeks her help when he gets entangled in a cover-up at his company.
âHe steers the course of destiny-slash-fate over the second season,â Todd Kessler said.
Ted Danson is back as Arthur Frobisher, the chief executive whom Patty defeated last season, while Timothy Olyphant (âDeadwoodâ) has joined the show as Wes Krulik, a mysterious figure who starts up a passionate affair with Ellen after bonding with her in grief counseling. Marcia Gay Harden portrays Claire Maddox, the in-house counsel of a powerful coal company that Patty takes on.
Harden said Close lobbied her to take the role, in which she goes up against Pattyâs tough-as-nails litigator.
âShe knew she wanted a woman she could go head to head with, but how that plays on camera and how that plays in the writing is something that both of us are trying to be really keen about keeping honest,â Harden said. âEverybody loves the banter, the tit for tat, the catfight. But itâs a cliche as well.â
On a recent afternoon, they filmed their first scene together, an encounter Close jokingly dubbed beforehand âthe battle of the Manolos.â Outfitted in sleek suits and high heels, the women eyed each other across Pattyâs richly appointed office. Dispensing with chitchat, Claire relayed that her boss had authorized her to make a settlement offer.
âWhatever settlement figured heâs authorized -- tell him to triple it,â Patty responded with calm iciness. âAnd weâll start boring ourselves from there.â
After the scene wrapped, Harden let loose a peal of throaty laughter.
âLadies and gentleman,â she declared, gesturing to Close, âPatty Hewes, with my jugular in her hands!â
Patty may be haunted with guilt about the measures she took to win the Frobisher case, but there are no signs that she has relinquished her competitive drive.
âHer primary need may be to win,â Zelman said. âOne of the things sheâs doing this season is grasping at the extremes she had to go to in the previous season, and one of the central questions of this season is, how far will she go?â
This time, her adversary is the energy industry, a story line inspired in part by environmental attorney Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Close introduced to the showâs producers.
âThereâs a passion in him for what heâs pursuing that was thrilling to us to hear about,â said Glen Kessler. âAs he fleshed out some of these stories and the players involved, it was the kind of thing where we were like, well, thatâs kind of ripe for our show.â
After personalizing the drama of accounting fraud in Season 1, Todd Kessler added, âweâre trying to do the same thing with whatâs going on behind the scenes with the power brokering.â
Just how the writers tie together Ellenâs quest for revenge with Pattyâs pursuit of the energy lobbyâs influence on government remains to be seen. Byrne called this seasonâs plot âpretty much as murky, if not more so,â as last yearâs.
âThereâs so much story that to me, Iâm like, how . . . are they going to wrap this all up?â she said.
The writers themselves arenât quite sure. They have a general idea of how theyâd like the season to conclude but leave open the possibility of changing their minds at the last minute, an approach they say gives the series an improvisational quality.
âThe show becomes almost a collage,â Zelman said. âIt very much feels sometimes like weâre throwing things up on the wall and saying, âOh, wait a minute, that goes there.â â
The actors have gotten used to flying blind, even though it means they regularly receive scripts the morning theyâre set to shoot a scene.
âItâs one of the great pleasures, acting in this, because you really donât know and sort of take it scene by scene,â said Tate Donovan, who plays Tom Shayes, Pattyâs right-hand man at the firm, as he crammed to learn lines in his dressing room. âYou could end up being a murderer or a savior. You have no idea. And what it does to all of us is that thereâs no room for judgment -- we just do. Itâs an exercise in being present.â
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