Nicole Kidman series ‘The Undoing’ takes viewers (and its actors) on pulsating ride

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In ‘Big Little Lies’, Nicole Kidman’s last series from David E. Kelley for HBO, everybody was lying, and everyone knew it. But in their new project together, ‘The Undoing’, it’s not clear who’s telling lies.

In the six-part limited series, Kidman plays Grace Fraser, a high-priced Manhattan therapist, married to Hugh Grant’s Jonathan, a successful child oncologist. But when the beautiful mother of one of his former patients — and schoolmate of their young son, Henry (Noah Jupe) — is found bludgeoned to death, their lives unravel as unseemly pieces of the story begin to rear their ugly heads, in true Kelley style, with episodic cliffhangers that will leave jaws agape weekly.

Susanne Bier talks with Hugh Grant and Nicole Kidman behind the scenes.
Image Credit: HBO

“The cliffhangers are beyond genius,” Grant says. “The way I can really judge is that, when I was reading the scripts, did I want to quickly pick up the next one? And the answer was always ‘Yes.’ And that’s very rare.”

It is Grant’s character who leaves the audience — and his on-screen wife — wondering if he can be trusted at his word about his role in the events.

Kelley began developing the series a number of years ago, based on Jean Hanff Korelitz’s 2014 novel, “You Should Have Known.” After finishing “Big Little Lies,” he shared drafts of the first two ‘Undoing’ episodes with Kidman, who had a similar response to Grant’s.

“He would slowly give them to me, so I was on the roller-coaster journey of it, not knowing what was going to happen when I would read the next,” she says from Sydney, on the set of yet another upcoming Kelley series, “Nine Perfect Strangers.” “I’ve been so fortunate to have him. He can write for me in a way that I’ve never experienced with a writer before.”

Not long after signing on both as an actor and executive producer, Kidman and her producing partner, Per Saari, approached Danish director Susanne Bier to helm the series. “I was trying to find a female director who would be great for this,” the actress recalls. The two had met over the years but never discussed working together. “But when I watched her series ‘The Night Manager,’ for which she also directed every episode, I was just, ‘Wow!’ And I’d seen her Danish films and was just captivated by her.”

When Bier read the script for the first episode, “it could either have gone more thriller or more drama,” she says, convincing Kelley to go with the former. Kidman agreed with the choice: “It could have been just a psychological study, without that pulsating ‘Whodunit?’ through it. And, like David, she loves taking people on a ride.”

Though a few other actors’ names had been tossed around, when it came time to cast Jonathan, Bier quickly suggested Grant. While the actor built his career long ago playing the charming, handsome, likeable “Hugh Grant character,” he was loath to continue that sort of typecasting, something he has quite purposefully stepped away from in recent years.

“I’ve been doing nothing but dark characters for years now,” he says. “In fact, there was some hesitancy on my part. I could sense that they were thinking, ‘Well, who better to convince everyone that Jonathan’s a lovely guy than the old Hugh Grant persona?’ I was resistant to go back to that.”

He even worked up an entirely different approach to the character, giving him a back story in Paris as a pretentious pseudointellectual. “I had the whole costumes and hairdo down and everything. But then I realised that what they were thinking was perfect for the coup d’etat that occurs shortly in” the series.

In fact, the actor skilfully plays with that well-known persona to the benefit of the story. “Jonathan’s always been very, very good at charming people,” Grant explains. “And the debate you want the audience to have is, ‘Is this entirely real, or is this studied and manipulative in some way?’ And the trick with that is to try not to make him boring or nauseating, but … to make people think, ‘Is this guy a little too good to be true?’ I wanted people to wonder if there was a little nylon in the cotton of my shirts.”

Nicole Kidman’s character has a complicated relationship with her father, played by Donald Sutherland.
Image Credit: HBO

The audience isn’t the only one smelling nylon. Grace’s wealthy father, Franklin, played by Donald Sutherland, has never thought much of her husband. “Franklin smells moral corruption,” Sutherland says via email. “He’s smelt it coming from himself, and he has purged himself. He smells it coming from Jonathan, and it hurts his nose.”

Though it isn’t specifically clear where Franklin’s riches came from, by the time we meet him, “he is where most men his age are,” Sutherland explains: “The imminence of death is a lurking presence. The future is insignificant. The past has to be apologised for.”

But it is his complicated relationship with his daughter that he must reckon with. “Because he’s very wealthy, he has enormous amount of control over Grace,” Kidman explains. “He wanted her to come back and live with him and be his daughter … But everyone’s got different motives.” Though, notes Sutherland, “To be able to feel and then express love for an adult child that had been for so long suppressed went to the core of me.”

Unlike her father, Grace and Jonathan are anything but snobs — as is often the case in shows in which Kidman appears written by Kelley, who regularly explores the lives of rich people. “I think he likes taking the facade away, showing that underneath there’s lots of secrets,” she explains. “The demise of a very wealthy structure — I think he kind of enjoys that.”

Bier adds that Kelley’s take on rich people is “almost a sarcastic treatment of them. We’re all slightly envious of that world, and we are slightly on the outside of it. We enter in, but we are quite constantly reminded of the lack of warmth in that world.”

Kidman’s character, Grace, is a giver, a therapist — like Kidman’s own father in real life. “They don’t live with that kind of opulence, as the other moms in her son’s school do,” Bier explains. “She’s chosen a path that’s not about money, though she has not completely freed herself from that world.”

Grace’s main focus, Kidman says, is protecting her son, Henry, played superbly by young Jupe, a veteran of Bier’s “Night Manager” and able to play emotional scenes at the same level as his co-stars. “He’s just so fluid and brilliant at emotionally being able to access anything,” Kidman says. “He’s got the skills and depth of an adult. He’s this boy-man.”

Accessing those emotions is not quite so easy for Grace, a private introvert. “I asked myself, ‘How am I going to be able to carry the six hours with this interior woman, who speaks, but doesn’t give away a lot?’” Kidman says. The answer came on the first day of production, from a director who knew how to use the full breadth of the actress’s skills. “Susanne just said, ‘I’ve got ideas.’ And she literally had the camera in my face, or it felt like almost in my brain at times.”

Key with Kidman, says Bier, is that “she can do every single thing with her eyes. With Nicole, it isn’t just emotions — it’s also thoughts. And this is where she’s very, very different from everyone else. You don’t just know what she’s feeling — you know what she’s thinking.”

Grant felt the same authenticity when working with the Oscar winner. “There’s always a thought in her head. She’s just incapable of being fake,” he says.

The two would regularly engage in improvisation on set, typically delivering a different performance — and different interpretation — with each take filmed. In one scene where Jonathan reveals an important revelation about his sister — an emotional release for him — Grace seems hardly moved, offering little response.

“Every single take was totally different,” Bier says. “In one take, Nicole might be crying, and in another, she might be very cold. Or in one, Hugh might be crying, and another he’s trying to kiss her,” leaving a plethora of storytelling wealth to choose from in the editing room.

“It’s very much in response to what the other actor is doing,” the actress explains of her craft. “I will always respond in the moment to what I’m feeling. And it helps if the other person, like Hugh, is doing it, too … My belief in acting is, yes, there’s a story that runs the gamut. But the magic of each scene is in the way human beings respond to each other. So I try to stay very, very present, and in the moment, responding and listening, and still within the structure of the character.” Having a director who is on-board with that type of performance is key, she says. “It’s almost like Susanne and I were playing the character together.”

Hugh Grant and Nicole Kidman play Jonathan and Grace Fraser, seen here trailed by Noma Dumezweni as lawyer Haley Fitzgerald, in ‘The Undoing.’
Image Credit: HBO

The practice is also one Grant enjoys, something he notes he learnt from Meryl Streep, observing her as they worked together in 2016’s “Florence Foster Jenkins.” “Meryl’s always different in every take. You know your lines so deep that you literally can’t forget them, but you play whatever thought comes into your head. The sorcery of filmmaking means that the camera likes things which are absolutely fresh and minted in that moment. And as soon as you do anything that’s repeated or pre-rehearsed, it goes dead.”

It helps to have a scene partner like Kidman when shooting what Grant adds is essentially a “very long, six-hour movie.” “She’s got immediate access to the emotions of her character,” Bier says. “She’s like some otherworldly being. She enters into a different space. It’s as if she’s talking a different language.”

Kidman credits her ability to live in her character’s emotions to her early study of Russian literature, such as Dostoevsky and Tolstoy, as well as plays by Henrik Ibsen and Anton Chekhov. “When that penetrates you very, very early, the complexity of human nature and what that means,” she says, “it forms the complexity of who we are as individuals. And that’s what’s exciting to me, always.”

Don’t miss it!

‘The Undoing’ is streaming now on OSN.