Houston Chronicle

Adams the voice of abuse in ‘Sharp Objects’

- By Yvonne Villarreal

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Get actress Amy Adams and director JeanMarc Vallee into a room together and, at some point, Led Zeppelin might start blaring through the puny speakers of an iPhone, with Adams doing a subtle singalong midway.

“We could keep this going,” Adams warns, as she bobs her head in time along with Vallee to the iconic band’s “What Is and What Should Never Be” inside a Beverly Hills hotel recently. The musical moment is enough to make you wonder what could have been. The two were set to team on a biopic of Janis Joplin, with Adams, a multiOscar nominee whose work in films such as “Arrival,” “American Hustle,” “Nocturnal Animals” and “The Master” propelled her to the top ranks of Hollywood actresses, set to play the ’60s rock singer.

That project was ultimately shelved. But music, ever so slightly, has finally united them in a different endeavor: HBO’s “Sharp Objects.”

Making its premiere Sunday, the limited series is an adaption of the 2006 debut novel of the same name from author Gillian Flynn, whose other novels, “Gone Girl” and “Dark Places,” were made into feature films.

“Sharp Objects” is a psychologi­cal thriller that stars Adams as Camille Preaker, a troubled reporter with a penchant for drinking and cutting herself, who has been assigned to cover the mysterious murders of two young girls in her small Missouri hometown of Wind Gap. The journey to her fictional home also forces Camille to confront the corrosive effects of her psychologi­cally abusive relationsh­ip with her mother, Adora, played by Patricia Clarkson.

It’s a series 12 years in the making — and, well, one that was originally poised to be a feature film. That is until Marti Noxon, the writer and producer behind “UnReal” and, currently, “Dietland,” persuaded the producers who had optioned the book that the only smart way to make this was for TV.

The eight-episode miniseries is directed entirely by Vallee, who won an Emmy for helming the first season of last year’s critically acclaimed “Big Little Lies.” And in keeping with Vallee’s reputation for preferring songs over score music to amplify emotions, “Sharp Objects” makes noticeable use of music, including Led Zeppelin (hence the jam session) — for reasons that will reveal themselves as the series plays out on the small screen.

Adams and Vallee spoke about what drew them to “Sharp Objects” and about their working relationsh­ip. Q: Amy, what opportunit­y

did you see in this character, in terms of expanding the types of portrayals we see of women on screen?

Adams: She just has such a deep pain. That’s something that I sense in people around me, I sense in myself — there’s a darkness or pain and it’s not something that we share openly. That’s what I’m always interested in exploring … this private experience of life. And I think we all take from books. Even if we don’t have similar vices in common with Camille, I think you can take away this idea of feeling alone or feeling unwanted or an alienation from family, which creates alienation itself. In the book, the line that got me, which always gets me, is her boss says — or she’s recalling something her boss said — and she says, “Curry always said I was a soft touch.” Outside of all of these really dramatic vices that she has, she’s a really tender heart and she cares. I find the most tender people are the most easily wounded, and they end up with the biggest scars.

Q: What did you bring out in each other in your respective roles?

Adams: In the nature of working I can be a very heady person. I like to think, and I like to plan, and I can be, like, precise. When you’re working in the way Jean-Marc works, it kind of takes you out of your head and puts you into a very visceral place. “Exhaustion” isn’t the right word, but you just stop telling a story and start living the story.

Vallee: When she

started to act, she’d use a tone down and start to talk more (Vallee speaks softly to demonstrat­e). The first day of shooting, I was like, “OK, that’s Camille’s voice she’s doing, hmm?” And I wasn’t sure about it. And you (Amy) just did it. You just went into this kind of talking where people have to listen — she’s a cerebral journalist, she has an obsession with words.

Adams: She also doesn’t want people to see her. You’re not gonna draw a lot of attention to yourself with volume. I didn’t know that you (Vallee) were like, “Oh, what is she doing with your voice?” You know, you’re not the first. I worked with … I won’t tell you what director, but I worked with a director and I brought out the voice that I was doing, and he literally went home and was like in full sweat until the next day, when he’s like, “Oh, no, no, no, yeah. It’s not Amy’s, she’s putting it on,” I’m sorry. You’re not the first to be freaked out. I didn’t know you were freaked out. That’s funny. I totally get it because we hadn’t had a conversati­on. Vallee: But, to answer your question, what I learned and what I saw from Amy is that she had an understand­ing for who is Camille. I don’t really verbalize, and she does and she did, and I was receiving this every morning and it was putting me in a safe place.

Q: The narrative touches on a lot of themes: the way your past can haunt you, the cycle of mental abuse,

the way women treat each other.

Vallee: Yes, that history of abuse is what is heartbreak­ing — behind all the murder, the investigat­ion (Camille) is doing — we want to discover what happened to Camille. And then, we get to understand the vicious cycle of abuse. And when you get to discover that’s why she’s cutting herself — this mother-daughter relationsh­ip that is so unique and so singular and so troubled. You’re supposed to feel protected and safe in your home with your mother, and you’re not.

Adams: That’s what’s interestin­g to me as well is this idea of generation­al violence between women, and it’s not something that’s been explored in this way, or at least that I’ve had the opportunit­y to explore. Every time I play something, I always do a lot of research, just to make sure if the story’s too out there, I’ve got to base it in reality and I always find so many stories or, by doing projects, people will approach me that I wouldn’t have expected to. I’ve shared some stories with a friend of mine about her relationsh­ip with her mother that I can’t even believe what I hear. And it just reminds me that these stories happen, and there is this generation­al cycle that’s hard to break but important to break.

 ?? HBO ?? Amy Adams stars in HBO’s eight-episode series “Sharp Objects,” which debuts Sunday.
HBO Amy Adams stars in HBO’s eight-episode series “Sharp Objects,” which debuts Sunday.

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