In 'Mayfair Witches,' Alexandra Daddario takes a dark turn
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, November 23, 2024


In 'Mayfair Witches,' Alexandra Daddario takes a dark turn
After earning an Emmy nomination for her performance in “The White Lotus,” Daddario is taking on her first lead TV role, in AMC’s latest Anne Rice adaptation. (Thea Traff/The New York Times)

by Sarah Bahr



NEW YORK, NY.- Despite much evidence to the contrary, Alexandra Daddario still does not consider herself a famous person.

But there are moments when she is reminded, as she was on a chilly day in November, at a cafe and juice bar in Manhattan’s West Village. For most of an hourlong conversation, she had managed to sip her honey almond matcha latte unnoticed. Then a college-age woman approached the table, as giddy as she was effusive.

“Excuse me,” the young woman said. “I’ve literally seen you in ‘The White Lotus.’ You’re my favorite actress.”

Daddario’s striking sea-blue eyes — you’ll see them plastered all over New York City’s subways and bus stops right now, advertising the new AMC series “Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches” — widened in genuine surprise. She glanced around, as if to verify that there were, in fact, no other “White Lotus” actresses in the cafe.

But of course not. There was only this woman whom millions watched in her Emmy-nominated performance as Rachel in Season 1 of the HBO series “The White Lotus.” This woman who is about to take her first lead in a major TV series, debuting Sunday, in which she plays Dr. Rowan Fielding — an adopted last name, in a departure from the novels — a neurosurgeon who discovers that she is descended from the family of Mayfair witches.

Daddario smiled, stood up and put her arm around the woman. In her cheetah-print coat, black turtleneck and strappy black sandals she was, she acknowledged, a little overdressed for the setting, but she had come straight from a photo shoot. She clicked into red-carpet mode as the woman’s friend clicked a picture on her phone.

“Is that OK?” she asked the friend, giving her the chance to examine the photo and make sure a do-over wasn’t necessary.

It wasn’t necessary.

This was familiar territory for Daddario, 36, who is no stranger to successful self-curation. Her Instagram, with nearly 23 million followers, is full of tasteful photos of herself in Paris, at home in Los Angeles with her new husband, on vacation with no clothes in the infinity pool, a careful mix of #inspo and sex appeal that marks the expert millennial influencer. Call it cheugy, call it smart; either way, she appears to be doing something right.

But after a string of action-adventure roles — demigod Annabeth Chase in two “Percy Jackson” movies, intrepid lifeguard Summer Quinn in “Baywatch” — Daddario’s choice of characters in recent years, and her persuasiveness in inhabiting them, speak of greater depths. Like Rachel, who faces anguish over recent big decisions, Rowan must also reckon with opposing forces inside her. There is darkness to her that belies her comely exterior.

It was that complexity, Daddario said, that drew her to the new AMC series, based on Rice’s Lives of the Mayfair Witches horror trilogy from the 1990s. In conversation, one sensed that Rowan’s less savory impulses were especially a draw.

“If you were given powers, what would you do?” she asked. “Would you be able to control yourself and do only good? I don’t know if any of us can say yes.”

(BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.)

“Mayfair Witches” is AMC’s second big series to draw from Rice’s work. The network acquired rights to 18 of Rice’s novels in 2020, the year before her death, including the many books of her Vampire Chronicles series and the Mayfair trilogy. The reimagining of “Interview With the Vampire,” which premiered in October, was the first of at least five Rice-based series AMC hopes to debut.

Those two book series have combined to sell tens of millions of copies and earn a famously protective fan base, known for scrutinizing — not always kindly or from the most enlightened perspectives — every decision taken in a screen adaptation. (Some fan responses to “Interview,” which, among other things, altered the racial makeup of some characters, were particularly nasty; the show has already been renewed for a second season.) Daddario is familiar with that kind of stress.

The pressure was similar when she was doing “Percy Jackson,” she said.

“You’ll always have people who think something is supposed to be this or that way, so you just have to go in with good intentions and try to bring life to the character,” she said.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM.)

The new series’s showrunner and creator, Esta Spalding (“Becoming a God in Central Florida”), who is an executive producer with Michelle Ashford (“Masters of Sex”), pointed to Daddario’s versatility as a major factor in their decision to choose her to play Rowan.




“The tricky thing about this part is that she’s going to become a witch, but she starts out a surgeon,” Spalding said. “So you have to believe this woman is going to stride through the hallways of a hospital and open a person’s brain up and do an operation.”

Daddario, the daughter of New York lawyers, knew well the pressures and requirements of the white-collar world, too. After attending the Professional Children’s School, an Upper West Side institution geared toward aspiring child actors and dancers, she booked her first professional role — as Laurie Lewis on the ABC daytime soap opera “All My Children” — when she was 16. After small TV roles on “Law & Order” and “The Sopranos,” her big break came at 22 when she landed the female lead in “Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief,” based on the children’s fantasy novels by Rick Riordan.

“Kids are such a great fan base,” she said. “They don’t judge the movie harshly because they don’t know any better than to just love the characters.”

Her experience on “Percy Jackson,” she said, prepared her somewhat to star in the reboot of another popular franchise seven years later, this time for adults: “Baywatch” (2017). Although the film was a critical flop, it changed her trajectory.

“‘Baywatch’ raised my profile and changed the kinds of jobs I was being offered, maybe not in a positive way,” she said of the film, in which she spends a substantial portion sporting a low-cut red bathing suit. “But I’m glad I did it.”

While “Baywatch” turned up the spotlight, it did not turbocharge her career, which she felt had stalled in the years before the pandemic.

A boost arrived in the pop-culture juggernaut that was the first season of “The White Lotus.” Her turn as Rachel, a newlywed who begins to suspect that her decision to marry the rich and obnoxiously entitled Shane (Jake Lacy) might have been a huge mistake, provided one of the season’s few truly sympathetic characters.

“Rachel in that season was one of the few characters who needed to be kind of likable in a way the other characters didn’t,” said Mike White, who wrote and directed “The White Lotus.” “Alexandra had an unpretentious, natural approach to the character that was very sweet.”

Daddario, who has said she experienced similar romantic heartbreak to Rachel’s, slipped right into the role.

“Coming out of COVID, I really connected with her,” she said of Rachel. “She lives in this fantasy world where everything is going to be OK and is always trying to please. There was something so heartbreaking and cathartic about being able to tell that story.”

On set it wasn’t always so serious. Lacy applauded her sense of humor — and a tolerance for his “diva moves.”

“We did a scene where I had no shirt on, and I was doing pushups before the take,” he said. “I was like, ‘Hey, I’m sorry for the vanity of doing this, I just would like to look good on camera,’ and she was like: ‘Jake, I was in “Baywatch.” That’s everyone with no clothes on doing their best for months at a time. These 10 pushups are not making me think any less of you.’”

Rachel’s story is ultimately a tragedy, a grievous study in the pressures of class and the cost of compromise. If her character in “Mayfair Witches” is darker, it is perhaps more in kind than degree. But with Rowan’s darkness comes power.

“She toes the line between good and evil,” Daddario said, “and that’s interesting to explore.”

Spalding and Ashford knew they would face a significant challenge in condensing Rowan’s story into eight episodes: The first book in the series, “The Witching Hour,” runs more than 1,000 pages.

They restructured the chronology, condensing many of the historical elements into short segments that appear at the beginning of each episode. And they combined a major character from the novels, Michael Curry, Rowan’s love interest, with another character, Aaron Lightner, to create a new character, Ciprien Grieve, played by Tongayi Chirisa (“Palm Springs”).

Chirisa, 41, a Hollywood newcomer, recalled hanging out with Daddario for the first time over hamburgers in New Orleans, where the series was shot last year.

“She just felt like she was the girl from next door,” he said. “All the things that she’s experienced gave her this very well-balanced sense of who she is.”

The girl next door — OK, maybe the popular and attractive girl next door — is still how Daddario sees herself. She still has to audition for roles, she said. She isn’t being mobbed on the street. She can still get coffee while going mostly unrecognized.

“Beyond all the beauty, talent and glamour,” Lacy said, “there’s just a cool New Yorker.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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