In early March, as the collective obsession it spawned was at its height, I had the chance to ask: Have Andrew Scott and Dakota Fanning seen the viral TikTok series âWho TF Did I Marry?â
The actors were seated in a sparsely decorated holding room at a Hollywood screening venue where their new limited series, âRipley,â was about to be previewed. Nearly seven decades after Patricia Highsmithâs novel âThe Talented Mr. Ripleyâ first introduced the world to its titular grifter, Tom, the story of one of pop cultureâs most infamous pathological liars is now getting an eight-episode treatment on Netflix. And the 50-part social media saga by Reesa Teesa (real name Tareasa Johnson) about a walking red flag â an ex-husband who allegedly made up family members, faked phone conversations and, in their search for a home, duped her with fake bank statements that turned out to be screenshots from Google Images â was further proof that stories of scammers and fraudsters never go out of style.
âOh, my God, I know!â Fanning said, her eyes wide with excitement. âI wanted to watch that, but havenât. There are a lot of videos, right?â
âWhat is this?â Scott asked, curious to understand the enthusiasm.
âItâs this woman who got scammed by her ex and made these videos where she is like filming in the bathroom or her car and telling the story,â Fanning said.
âOh, wow,â Scott said, brows furrowed.
The cunning con man whoâs brought them together has left a more lasting impression, inspiring the 1960 French film âPurple Noon,â the 1999 vehicle for Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jude Law, and now âRipley.â
Developed for television by Steven Zaillian (âThe Night Ofâ), the series was originally set up at Showtime before moving to Netflix, with production spanning from summer 2021 to spring 2022. The lavish thriller, which is shot in black and white, stars Scott as the eponymous scam artist; Johnny Flynn (âEmmaâ) as Dickie Greenleaf, the wayward heir to a wealthy Manhattan dynasty with whom Ripley becomes obsessed; and Fanning as Marge Sherwood, Dickieâs girlfriend, who is suspicious of the new man in town.
The dark, subversive antihero saga begins as Tom is enlisted by Dickieâs father , who mistakenly assumes Tom is a friend of his son , to venture to Italy to cajole him into returning home. Tom becomes infatuated with Dickie and his lifestyle, then kills him to avoid being deserted â and the cover-up spirals from there. Itâs an apt parable for the social media age, in which the carefully crafted image can be seductive to a damaging degree. But Zaillian didnât embark on the adaptation with that in mind.
âIt had nothing to do with now,â Zaillian said by telephone. âThe big draw for me was to spend more time with this particular character. ... I think thereâs a lot of things about him that are like all of us. He has aspirations, he has envy, pride â he might have more than we have, or heâs just willing to go further to get it. I think one of the reasons that heâs endured as a character so well over all these years, is because we do relate to him.â
While Dickie is the person Tom becomes fascinated by, the dynamic between Tom and Marge brings the tension.
âTheir relationship changes,â Zaillian said. âFrom the moment she meets him, Marge is suspicious of him. At a certain point, he appeals to her vanity. She starts to think, âWell, maybe he is OK,â because, frankly, sheâs gonna get something out of it. And so it kind of goes back and forth. Her opinion on him constantly changes.â
Scott and Fanning talked about their own experiences being duped, why we canât get enough of con artists, and climbing all the seriesâ stairs.
What do you think it is about con artists that audiences stay fascinated by?
Scott: We talk so much about backstory when weâre talking about characters and I sometimes think thatâs just mythical, because when youâve got backstory about somebody, you have power. When you donât, [the character has] all the power. Itâs more sinister.
Fanning: I think Tom Ripley is the original catfish. Also, what kind of separates it from other interpretations of con men, or whatever you want to call it, is you kind of get to see how he does it all, in pretty gripping detail. Sometimes some of those details are glossed over; in this, youâre on that ride of how itâs all done and I think that makes the particular character of Tom Ripley even scarier. Also, you start sympathizing with him.
Scott: And you see his mistakes.
Fanning: I should want him to get caught, but I donât.
Scott: I was always like, âI want to be able to feel what itâs like to be him, not necessarily be a victim of hisâ ... âWhat would I do if I was him in these moments?â
âThe Talented Mr. Ripleyâ really asks the question, âIs it better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody?â And it grapples with the cost of buying into the life youâre fed to believe is ideal. What did you find interesting in exploring the complexity of those themes against the social media era we live in?
Scott: Itâs about somebody whoâs literally not being seen by a lot of people. Really just lives in the undergrowth. What I find moving about it is that I think heâs got a great appreciation for all the stuff that Dickie Greenleaf just takes for granted. Heâs really brilliant at what he does. Dickie and, to a certain extent Marge, are not great artists, but they have that totally at their disposal. Thereâs a theme of who gets access to the arts, and who is able to go to these beautiful locations and educate [themselves]. Tom, as heâs doing all these extraordinary things, is actually falling in love with Italy, painting and food and clothes and just the beauty of the world.
âItâd have devastated me to see somebody else play it. I donât think I could watch it,â Paul Mescal says, contemplating his reaction if he hadnât landed a role in the Andrew Haigh film..
As an actor, your goal is to make an audience believe that youâre somebody else and you will go to your own lengths to do that. Did it give you insight into whatâs driving Tom or how far heâll take it?
Scott: Heâs not a natural-born killer. Heâs not going over there with any of this in mind. Heâs trying to survive.
Fanning: Somebody approached him.
Scott: Exactly. Somebody approached him. He didnât do anything. Then he caught some feelings. Then that happened. All these extraordinary places he goes to arenât because heâs going, âOh, I always wanted to go to Venice.â He goes there because he has to.
Maybe not to the extent of what we see in this series, but have you ever been duped?
Fanning: The feeling that I hate the most is being tricked and duped â even in small ways when you feel like everyone else knows something that you donât know. I hate that. Itâs awful.
Scott: I will give you a specific example that happened to me last week. I arrived to Los Angeles. I was really jet-lagged, it was about 8 oâclock. I thought: OK, Iâm going to go to the gym to keep me alive. And itâs a well-known, good gym. Went to do my workout and put my stuff in the locker. When I finished and went to take a shower, I thought, Iâm not gonna put my trainers into my locker; Iâm only going to be in the shower for five minutes. I come out and someone had stolen my trainers! Thereâs just one sock there. I was like, âWhat the fâ?â You just feel so violated. And Iâm thinking, âI have to go home. My shoes are gone.â So I had to wear these extraordinarily massive flip-flops from the spa. I still canât believe someone stole my trainers and one sock. But it is a really weird feeling to be stolen from. I know you can be emotionally conned. Iâve experienced that before as well, with one of those bank fraud things. You do feel something has just been ripped from you. Itâs a horrible feeling.
Tom is always paranoid about being watched. You both are public figures. Can you understand that paranoia?
Fanning: It doesnât just have to do with being an actor or a celebrity anymore. I try and keep everything together. But there was one time that I was learning to drive and I was with my mom. We didnât have a destination; I was just practicing. And there was paparazzi following behind me every turn and watching me park. I finally got out of the car and I was like, âI am trying to learn to drive. I am not going anywhere. Youâre going to be going up and down this hill all day.â He was very nice. One time, I was moving into my house and my garage and he â it happened to be the same man â was parked nearby and I was like, âPlease donât film me moving my personal items into my house.â But in general, I think now everybody worries about being surveilled in some way.
Andrew, do you notice when itâs happening to you? When someone has their phone positioned a certain way?
Scott: Absolutely. And my real feeling about it is: just be better at it. Be better at disguising it! Not for anything to do with what my job is, just as a human being. Itâs the fact that you think I canât notice how obvious you are making it. Recently, I was on the tube in London, it was this relatively empty tube, and this girl [mimics person pointing phone in his direction] and she very badly took a photo and the flash went off. And I turned and was like, âIf you want a picture, please just ask me.â And she was like, âI didnât take a picture of you.â Somebody from down the car was like, âMate, we saw it. You did. The flash went off.â So then she got up and got off at the stop. The shame. She was Tom Ripley! She was just lying to my face.
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1. âI know you can be emotionally conned,â says Andrew Scott, who plays the grifter Tom Ripley. 2. âThe feeling that I hate the most is being tricked and duped,â says Dakota Fanning. (Evelyn Freja / For The Times)
I want to talk more about the Marge-and-Tom dynamic. Unlike the 1999 adaptation, where Marge is more warm and welcoming to Tom and wants him to fit in, in the series, like in the novel, sheâs skeptical of him from the start. How did you map out the pacing of her wariness?
Fanning: The interesting thing about the novel and the scripts is that theyâre written from Tomâs perspective. The other characters have to fill in a lot of blanks. At first, that felt overwhelming. But Steveâs gift is his precision as a writer and as a director and the fact that he, whether itâs what you want to hear or not, knows exactly what heâs looking for and what he wants. I think my instinctual interpretation of Marge he was happy with, which was a relief to me. But we definitely played with it, like, âLetâs do a take where she doesnât believe himâ or âLetâs do one where she isnât so skeptical.â And then he would figure it out later â what Marge knew, what Marge didnât know. It was a little bit of a puzzle of keeping track of the timeline of her skepticism. But I was thrilled to play a character, a woman, that wasnât completely duped. I love that this Marge is quite skeptical from the beginning and we got to have fun with that.
Theyâre very much a mirror of each other.
Fanning: And her background is also not a privileged background. The jealousy of her is, âYou and I are alike, but you have it and I donât. And you donât deserve it still.â
Scott: They see through each other. Theyâre threatened by each other and you dislike about other people what you see in yourself. But I really believe that Tom loves Marge. I think itâs too easy to think: âOh, he hates her.â I think he finds her inconvenient because she, of all people, might mess it up for him. And Dickie is a little bit more trusting or maybe just not as emotionally intelligent.
Fanning: Theyâre frenemies.
Sexuality in Patriciaâs novels is sort of up to interpretation sometimes; itâs subtext. Andrew, what discussions did you have with Steven about how you wanted to approach that part of his identity?
Scott: I suppose it was something that I thought about a lot myself; it was very important to me to not label him too much. I did have some brief conversations with Steve about that. ... Weâre very concerned with labeling in 2024. I feel like heâs a character with a lot of secrets. And talking around it too much, I feel Iâve got to protect that character. I think you have to dramatize asking the questions rather than drowning the character in giving the easy answer to appease certain peopleâs ideas. To my mind, heâs a character who is Other. I feel like he wouldnât be comfortable in a gay bar; I feel like he wouldnât be comfortable in a straight bar.
Sometimes I think his sexuality or sensuality comes out of his relationship with things â art, clothes, props, music. I love the fact that we donât know. I think thereâs a lot of people who can relate to that. I enjoy the idea of pushing that â for him to be flirtatious with a man; for him to be flirtatious with a woman â and not diagnose him too much and not to impose too much of a sexuality. And I applied that to everything about him, not just his sexuality. Heâs the hero, but heâs an unreliable hero.
In the book, the three characters are very clearly telegraphed as being in their early to mid-20s, fresh out of college. How does a version of these characters who are somewhat closer to your age change your understanding of their behavior?
Fanning: I didnât think about it. I feel like everyone is almost ageless in it. Obviously with Marge, you can tell sheâs somebody who is kind of bright-eyed and bushy-tailed and finds herself in this place and hasnât had a lot of experience. Sheâs not a world traveler. This could be her first time out of the country. If I was thinking about age, I was thinking this is all still kind of new for her.
Scott: It was a concern because, obviously, in the book, heâs younger than I am... But thatâs not what [Highsmith] concerns herself with too much. Again, the sort of slipperiness of watching their behaviors and not caught up with: âWhatâs the age difference here?â Weâre not playing something like the evolution of teenagers. Thatâs not what the theme of it is and, so, it isnât really something that we thought about.
Fanning: Steve didnât care, so we didnât care.
Andrew, talk to me about the stairs. You had to endure a lot of stairs in the series.
Fanning: Oh God.
Scott: There was a lot of stairs. We got a lot of coverage ... of a lot of stairs.
I canât tell by the tone if heâs really upset by the memory.
Fanning: [laughs] No, heâs not upset. Itâs just the truth.
Scott: [laughs] Itâs just the truth. Thatâs the thing â itâs very evocative because when you go [to Italy], youâre going up lots of stairs. Thereâs no choice. To see what itâs like for a person from New York, whoâs experiencing this for the first time and has no money, and heâs making mistakes, he canât speak the language. But yes, thereâs a lot of those stair scenes where heâs got up and life is just tough. Steve isnât a one-and-done guy, so we certainly had a lot of takes with the stairs.
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