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Jackson has long wanted to see book adapted

Actor finally brings vision for ‘Ptolemy Grey’ to life in series

- By Mark Meszoros

Samuel L. Jackson has been dealt pretty good cards when it comes to aging.

“I was fortunate enough to be blessed with a really great gene pool,” the actor said. “There’s a lot of Alzheimer’s in my family, but people live a long time, too.”

The history of Alzheimer’s disease in his family is a big reason why the performer long has been captivated by Walter Mosley’s 2010 novel, “The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey.”

Jackson is an executive producer of Apple TV+’s six-episode adaptation of the work and stars as its titular character, a man suffering from crippling dementia and memory loss who, through the use of an experiment­al drug, is able to recapture a wealth of recollecti­ons for a finite period.

“It’s something I’ve been preparing for a long time,” Jackson said at the show’s panel during a Television Critics Associatio­n’s event in February, in which his co-star, Dominique Fishback, and Mosley, the limited series’ writer and another of its executive producers, also took part.

“Walter can tell you how long we’ve talked about doing this and how badly I’ve wanted to do it. I’ve seen this series for about 10 years in my head.”

At the time of the panel, Jackson was in London, again reprising the role of Nick Fury for an upcoming project in Disney-owned Marvel Studios’ cinematic universe. Fury, a highly skilled intelligen­ce operative, may be the only character he has played that he knows as well as Mosley’s creation.

“I repeat (Fury) a lot. I know who he is, and he’s easy to access,” Jackson said. “Ptolemy was easy to access because I read the book a lot. I mean, I read the book a lot of different times in different time periods when we were trying deals with other people to get it made.”

Problem was, he said, earlier potential collaborat­ors saw “The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey” as a movie.

“I was always banging my head against the wall about that because I never wanted to tell the story that way,” Jackson said.

Instead, he, Mosley and four directors have about six hours to tell the story, which begins with a focused, well-dressed Ptolemy, pouring himself a drink, handling a gun and making an audio recording for Fishback’s character, Robyn, in which he apologizes for what is about to happen.

We then flashback two months, to a disheveled Ptolemy living in squalor, struggling to remember things from minute to minute. Eventually, Robyn — an orphaned family friend trying to get her life together — will clean and debug his home and then move in to take care of him.

She’ll also take him to an appointmen­t with a medical specialist made for him by his nephew Reggie (Omar Benson Miller), who has since been shot and killed. Although Robyn has reservatio­ns, Ptolemy decides to undergo the cutting edge, memory-restoring treatments offered by the doctor — portrayed by Walton Goggins — because he hopes to solve the mystery of who killed Reggie, as well as unearth what he believes to be buried treasure.

Through the first few episodes, the viewer experience­s the character’s challenges with memory loss in rather vivid detail.

“I don’t know of any show like this one,” said Mosley, whose other novels include “Devil in a Blue Dress,” “Fearless Jones” and “Blood Glove.” “Just concentrat­ing on having a whole experience around a person who’s experienci­ng dementia in a television environmen­t (is unusual).”

Jackson may have been so intimately familiar with the character that the mental preparatio­n for the role was no great burden, but turning him into a man of Ptolemy’s age required him spending about 90 minutes in the makeup chair.

For Fishback — whom Jackson said he saw in 2020’s “Project Power” and immediatel­y believed the production had found its Robyn — the prep work does typically happen farther in advance.

“I mean,” Jackson said, “she probably wouldn’t even want you to know that she journals her characters, which is kind of crazy. I don’t have time for that.”

As Jackson was receiving a round of laughter, Fishback said, “Well, actually for this one, I made a PDF about —” “I know,” Jackson said. “The book,” she concluded. “I remember,” he added. “I just really wanted to bring Robyn from the book to the series as much as we could,” she said, “And Walter was really great about that.”

You can see why Mosley may feel the story is in the right hands.

“I have so much help,” he said, referring to all the behind-the-scenes folks who worked on the series, as well as those in front of the camera. “Sam literally knows the book better than I do. Dominique knows it just as well as I do. They did an extraordin­ary job of making it look and feel the way the book wanted to be.”

Returning to the unpleasant but familiarto-many topic of Alzheimer’s, Jackson said family members including a grandfathe­r, uncle, aunt and his mother have suffered from it directly.

“I watched them change, deteriorat­e and become different people over the years,” he said, adding he appreciate­s giving “an audience an opportunit­y to know that they aren’t the only people who watch their loved ones deteriorat­e that way.”

 ?? HOPPER STONE/APPLE TV+ ?? Samuel L. Jackson, from left, Dominique Fishback and Walton Goggins in the series “The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey.”
HOPPER STONE/APPLE TV+ Samuel L. Jackson, from left, Dominique Fishback and Walton Goggins in the series “The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey.”

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