After nearly 50 years in Hollywood, Mandy Patinkin still considers himself a âhired hand.â
âThatâs how I like it,â the actor says over the phone from his home in upstate New York, while inviting his Great Pyrenees-yellow lab mix Becky to sit with him.
Thatâs the career advice a friend â a celebrity whom he doesnât want to name-drop â gave him over dinner back in 1978. All he wanted was to be an actor and to maybe, just maybe, one day sing some songs. âThat was my whole wish,â Patinkin says with a warm, gruff lilt. He hasnât looked back since.
Over time, Patinkin, 71, built a formidable resume with originating roles in Broadwayâs âEvitaâ and âSunday in the Park With George,â as well as career-defining parts in Barbra Streisandâs Oscar-winning classic âYentlâ and Rob Reinerâs witty fairy tale âThe Princess Bride.â Along the way, heâs also been lauded for his longtime music career.
On TV, heâs been a resident scene-stealer in a garden variety of sage but prickly surrogate dads-meet-advisors on TV â grim reaper foreman Rube Sofer in âDead Like Me,â Carrieâs mentor and veteran CIA officer Saul Berenson on âHomelandâ and now, the curmudgeonly Rufus Cotesworth, the so-called worldâs best detective who reunites with protĂŠgĂŠ Imogene (Violett Beane) on a cruise ship among the elite, in the whodunit Hulu series âDeath and Other Details,â premiering Tuesday.
âIt was a real mystery they constructed and a lot of red herrings and a lot to follow,â he says. âSo there would be a number of occasions where I would get so fâ lost and even I knew the answers, but I couldnât remember them, that I felt like I was in the mystery for real.â
Patinkin was approached with the Hulu series during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic â a time when he wasnât sure heâd work again. âWe were sitting around, isolated, masks â you know, all that garbage. And I was just wondering when weâd ever get opportunities to go back to work or when the world would come back to the living,â he says.
When he initially received the script for the pilot in 2021, he says he thought, âThis seems like fun to me.â He loved that the show was an ensemble piece and that heâd get to exercise one of his favorite acting skills â putting on an accent (a British one, at that). He also found himself back in his comfort zone, portraying a detective, a role he was familiar with thanks to âCriminal Mindsâ and âHomeland,â âto some degree.â
The sleuthing is admittedly not something that crosses over into his everyday life. You wonât find him on Reddit solving mysteries (âIâve heard of it, but honestly, I donât know what it is.â) and he doesnât like âClue.â âI do Wordle and I do many crosswords. Thatâs as much of a mystery that I can handle,â he says.
Before making any rash decisions â he sought the counsel of his family. âI donât trust myself, so I gave it to [my wife] Kathryn [Grody], whoâs 10 times smarter than me, a lot more than 10 times, a lifetime smarter than me,â Patinkin says. âAnd she said, âThis is good. This is good.â â
Then, he gave it to his son, Gideon Grody-Patinkin, and Gideonâs writing partner Ewen Wright, who both liked it as well. Finally, Patinkin was sold. âIt just became a nice, comfortable way to get back to the living,â he says of the project.
During the throes of the pandemic, Patinkin found a way to connect with audiences that was unique for him. With the help of Grody-Patinkin, Patinkin and Grody became social media stars. They had one rule for their son, however. They needed to review the content first before he posted it. âFor the most part, he abides by it,â he says and laughs.
Their son recorded wildly entertaining videos of his parents answering questions about their secrets to a long marriage and pop culture terms, doing a âvote danceâ to encourage people to elect Joe Biden in the 2020 election and capturing intimate moments of them eating buttered matzo and demonstrating the dance move âflossing.â
Those videos have evolved into what Patinkin calls the âfamily showâ â a series of live performances with Patinkin, Grody and Grody-Patinkin, who is usually behind the camera, onstage asking his parents questions. âPeople must have nothing to do because they come through to see us,â he says in a self-deprecating tone. âI feel so sorry for these people.â
Recently, Patinkin spiced up his social media presence with an Instagram Reel featuring him wearing a Ricky Martin tank top, short shorts and a backward Barbie pink baseball cap â an outfit he borrowed from his daughter-in-lawâs brother, who is a yoga instructor, to give his family a laugh when he was on a break from shooting âDeath and Other Detailsâ two years ago. He doesnât want to boast, but heâs âquite pleased at how beautiful my legs looked.â
âMy father had great legs and few people are aware that Iâve inherited my fatherâs legs,â he says. âAnd I do think that, say nothing else, that photograph gave justice to the genetic chain of âlegdomâ between my father and myself.â
Since sharing the clip â to his own surprise â heâs been dubbed a fashion icon by the internet. His response? âI think without a doubt, as you can see by that photo, that I am probably the greatest fashion influencer that has ever lived,â he says. The rest of his wardrobe, he insists, is teeming with hiking shirts from REI and the same pair of pants. âI love my uniform. My kids make fun of it. Itâs like camping, comfy cozy.â
The family business, one could say, has become his main focus. Patinkin and Grody were slated to star in âSeasoned,â a scripted series inspired by their real-life marriage helmed by their son and Wright until it was scrapped by Showtime in June. Patinkin says he was âoverwhelmedâ by the pilot â a 30-minute âpoetic, funny, heartfelt, enjoyable, entertaining recordâ of his and Grodyâs life together. Now, heâs trying to find a new home for it.
âThatâs my No. 1 dream in terms of the industry,â he says. Patinkin even has one of the key selling points on hand: They made it ânice and affordableâ to produce. âI love a good budget,â he says. âI donât like wasting a lot of money. It breaks my heart.â
Beyond âSeasoned,â Patinkinâs outlook is that of a self-described âJew-Buâ or Jewish Buddhist. Heâll take what comes, but he accepts that life is out of our control. So heâs not fretting over whether âDeath and Other Detailsâ will get a Season 2. âIâve been in the business long enough to know, if you need to know something, youâll know,â Patinkin says.
Though he might not be worrying about work, thereâs just one thing heâs mulling over: whether he and Grody should try psilocybin mushrooms. Patinkinâs kids want them to, but heâs not entirely sure heâll ever take the risk.
âKathrynâs a little more interested,â he says. âIâm too terrified at the moment.â Heâs not so sure he needs to expand his mind. âMy mind is opened up to a little too much right now,â he says, laughing. âI need to cut it down.â
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