Bryan Cranstonâs âBreaking Badâ breakout
Itâs a tough job, and Bryan Cranston is more than glad to do it -- playing Walter H. White, the frazzled antihero at the center of AMCâs âBreaking Bad,â that is.
Though playing White, a meek chemistry teacher who gradually transforms into a hard-core drug dealer after he finds out he has life-threatening cancer, is âa dream come true,â Cranston pointed out that the character and the seriesâ increasingly dark tones have taken an emotional and physical toll on him.
âAt the end of the day, I take two moist towels, put them on my head and wash all of Waltâs energy off of me, and leave him at work,â Cranston said, sighing heavily.
After decades of being mostly relegated to guest shots and supporting roles in TV and film, the actor has found a breakout role in AMCâs âBreaking Bad.â Cranston was previously best known as the buffoonish father on âMalcolm in the Middle,â but âBreakingâ has scored him two consecutive Emmys for outstanding actor in a drama series, an achievement that has propelled him to the top tier of TV dramatic actors.
And the character of White, whose initial rationale for getting into the drug trade was to give his family a financial foundation after he died, now joins a gallery of prominent antiheroes such as gangster Tony Soprano (âThe Sopranosâ), corrupt detective Vic Mackey (âThe Shieldâ) and advertising hotshot Don Draper (âMad Menâ) at the center of complex dramas.
Additionally, the show has established AMC, which also airs âMad Men,â as a venue for quality original programming.
In its third-season premiere this month, the series drew its largest audience ever, attracting more than 3 million viewers.
âBreaking Badâ has grown consistently darker as creator Vince Gilligan maps out what he calls Whiteâs journey from âMr. Chips to Scarface.â Cranston, who directed the season opener, says he is particularly excited about the upcoming episodes: Even though he had his doubts when âBreaking Badâ started that it would work, he now has total confidence in its direction.
âWhat made me want to do this in the beginning was the notion of taking a character and completely changing him from one kind of person to another,â he said last week while relaxing in the immaculately tasteful San Fernando Valley home he shares with his wife, actress Robin Dearden, and their young daughter.
He added, âThatâs never happened on TV before. I knew we would have to find a way to make this man sympathetic. If we didnât make him relatable or identifiable to the majority of the audience, we wouldnât have a show. His actions are indefensible. All we were hoping for was to get an understanding of why heâs doing this, not to condone his actions.â
Still, despite the critical acclaim surrounding âBreaking Bad,â Cranston and its cast, including Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn and Dean Norris, catching the cultural zeitgeist has been more elusive than it has been for other A-list dramas such as âThe Sopranos,â âMad Menâ or âThe West Wing.â Entertainment-oriented magazines have passed him by for covers. Though âMad Menâsâ Jon Hamm and January Jones, who have not won Emmys, have hosted âSaturday Night Live,â Cranston has not gotten the call.
Gilligan, who praised Cranston as a solid and âcourageousâ actor, said he is mystified: âBryan truly deserves to be more noticed. He is much more a chameleon than most actors, and he truly disappears into his role.
âPerhaps itâs that quality that has kept him from getting more covers or things like that. Hopefully that will change because he can absolutely do anything. If he hosted âSaturday Night Live,â he would hit it out of the park.â
But Cranston is much more understanding and philosophical about the road of celebrity, and he is more devoted to the craft of acting than to the more superficial trappings of fame. Visitors to the Cranston home wonât spot his Emmys on the living room mantel. Nothing in the front rooms of the home suggests that he is an actor on hit TV shows and movies.
âThereâs this notion that in order to draw attention and to be considered for roles I want to be considered for, you need a certain amount of notoriety,â he said.
âI never pursued that. My goal has always been to be a working actor.â
Leaning forward, he added, âWould I like to host âSaturday Night Liveâ? Hell, yes, Iâd love to. But itâs not going to have a big impact on my life if it doesnât happen.
âI feel good our show is doing well and âMad Menâ is doing well, and we have a symbiotic relationship, and, itâs fair to say, a healthy competition. We can only benefit by their success, and they can benefit by ours.â