With the return of âInsecure,â Issa Rae looks to loosen her characterâs inhibitions for a bolder Season 2
It wasnât that long ago that Issa Rae couldnât afford HBO. Now sheâs about to launch the second season of her critically acclaimed series âInsecureâ on the premium cable network.
The L.A. native, who bypassed the conventional Hollywood system in launching her career, is part of a generation thatâs offering a fresh perspective on the complexity of coming into your own, with all its thrills and heartaches.
The first season of the the series, which she created, executive produces and stars in, drew praise for its portrait of that restless stage of thirtysomething-dom when work, love and friendship donât seem to be measuring up.
And Rae has been working hard to make sure Season 2 doesnât slip.
The grind began last November at the W Hotel in West L.A., where ideas flowed alongside mimosas â sometimes poolside â as she and show-runner Prentice Penny mapped out where they wanted to take the show next.
The debut season ended with some growing pains. The wreckage from the broken relationship between Issa Dee (Rae) and Lawrence (Jay Ellis) remained messy with the last moments of the finale revealing Lawrence having revenge sex with bank teller Tasha (Dominique Perry); meanwhile, the friendship between Issa and her bestie Molly (Yvonne Orji) had weathered the storm of unpleasant truths.
âWhat excited me about the characters is that everybodyâs worlds were turned upside down, and the rebuilding wasnât going as planned,â Rae, 32, said during a recent sit-down.
Rae recalled knowing two things for sure going into that Season 2 brainstorming session:
1) She wanted Issa to go through what she calls the âho phase,â dating and sleeping with guys without inhibition. âIt was something I really wanted to explore with Issa, the character. It was something that I missed out on in a way. And it feels like once youâre past a certain age, itâs frowned upon, like, âgirl, youâre too grown to do that.ââ
2) She wanted Lawrence to still be involved with Tasha.
Penny offers this insight on Season 2: âIssa and I think of it this way: Remember â or imagine â what happens when you have broken up after so many years with somebody and youâre hit with realities youâre maybe not ready to face. Thatâs what youâre going to see on this show. Overall, we liked this theme of the face you present publicly versus what youâre going through behind closed doors.â
Beginning Sunday, viewers will see those faces when the sophomore season premieres. And there could be more eyeballs this time around. In a vote of confidence, HBO moved up the premiere date so it could place âInsecureâ in a plum spot behind the networkâs ratings powerhouse, âGame of Thrones.â
âFor us it was like âYeah, baby!ââ Penny said of the new time slot. Rae described it as âso freaking cool.â
Cool, sure. But not without some repercussions.
The writers room opened up just after Thanksgiving 2016 to begin work on the 10 episodes ordered for Season 2. The assumption was the show would again have a fall rollout. But a couple of weeks in, word came from HBO brass of the interest in bumping up the showâs premiere date. Not wanting to pass up the opportunity Rae and Penny decided to trim the episode count to eight.
âBecause itâs the second season, you donât ever want anybody to be like, âYou could tell they rushed itâ or âItâs not as good as Season 1,ââ Rae said. âWe had lots of discussion about whether or not to accept HBOâs offer.â
âWe were like, âBut itâs âGame of Thronesâ!â she continued, remembering the animated debate, âbut we were also like, âThe time! And we want it to be good! Will we be too rushed?â Eight episodes seemed to make everyone happy. But it was definitely a constant scramble. I would rest between takes.â
That reality seemed to be on display during a visit to the showâs set on the Sony Pictures lot in Culver City.
In May, filming on one of the later episodes of the season took place with a scene in Issaâs apartment. The character was supposed to be startled awake by her alarm and leave in a mad dash. As the director yelled âaction,â a voice off screen stood in for the sound of the phone: buzz, buzz, buzz, the voice said.
Long silence. ⌠No mad dash.
âWake up, bitch!â executive producer Melina Matsoukas jokingly yelled from behind monitors.
âYou said four buzzes!â Rae shouted back, amused.
âShe wasnât getting up so I thought she was really sleeping again,â Matsoukas mumbled with a laugh to those around her.
Raeâs goal for Season 2 was to stay authentic, but for the characters to be a bit more bold. Even the title scheme builds on the concept of raising the stakes â the season premiere is titled âHella Great,â Episode 2 is âHella Questions.â
Rae and her producers also knew that, with the foundation now in place, they wanted to elevate the look of the series.
âI wanted it to feel as filmic and cinematic as possible without losing that real feel,â said Matsoukas, who also directs on the series and is known for her music video work with Rihanna and BeyoncĂŠ.
Matsoukas said attention was paid to visually express the dimness of some of what the characters are experiencing â making use of mixed lighting and letting some scenes hang in the shadows.
âI want to tell a real story,â Rae said. âAnd I want it to also look and feel real.â
The vein of authenticity is important to Rae and speaks to her roots in the DIY world of YouTube.
Before the writer-actress was exploring the themes of race and identity on âInsecure,â she tackled them on the Internet â most notably through her Web series âThe Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl.â That she was able to parlay âBlack Girlâ into an HBO series that has struck a chord with viewers â including former President Barack Obama â keeps her motivated.
âJust being able to have a TV show, on the air, on a premium cable network â a show that I am proud of is something that I donât take for granted,â Rae said. âAnd knowing that this came from, in its earliest stage, a YouTube video that I posted in 2007, on a whim, that trips me out in the best possible way.â
And as a black woman in Hollywood, the significance of that is not lost on her.
âIâve watched the tides change,â Rae said. âIâve watched people not be interested in anything black women have to say or be interested in a specific thing black women have to say to âOh, black women are everything, pitch us ideas! Weâre interested now. âScandalâ worked â what else is there?â
âAnd I know the struggle,â she continued, âof having your first show and wondering if it will still be your voice and wondering, if you put your foot down, will you lose an opportunity not only for yourself but for your peers who are trying to break through? I get it. But our time is coming.â
And the online world remains an integral component of her career and her desire to do her part to help expand the spotlight on minority voices. Sheâs coy about her latest, rumored project, which originally started as an Internet meme. A photo of Grammy winner Rihanna with Oscar winner Lupita Nyongâo taken in 2014 at a Miu Miu fashion show went viral earlier this year, prompting calls to turn it into a buddy movie. Twitter users suggested Ava DuVernay as the director and Rae as the screenwriter. It wasnât long before Netflix reportedly hammered out a deal to make it a reality.
âI owe the Internet my entire career, I wouldnât be here today without it,â Rae said, dancing around the status of the project. âJust the fact that someone nominated me to even be a part of the project, then people co-signed â it was incredible.â
In tribute to her online roots and loyal following, HBO is making the first season of âInsecureâ available for free on its YouTube channel â as well as HBO.com â for 24 hours starting at 3 a.m. PT on Sunday.
âIâve had people come up to me so many times saying, âI wish I could watch your show but I donât have HBO, I canât afford it,â Rae said. âI tell them straight up, âI didnât have HBO either. I get it. I mean, I was using my friendâs password until I got the show.â Then I was like, âOK, I guess Iâll pay.â So I get it. And Iâm glad itâs now accessible to more people.â
And not only can Rae afford HBO these days, sheâs finally getting around to commemorating this chapter in her life with a yacht party this weekend.
âIâve been trying to do yacht stuff this summer to feel like a high roller,â she said. âWhether I document on social media will depend on my level of inebriation and seasickness.â
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