âThe Actâ shows a new side to the Gypsy Rose Blanchard case â and its two stars
If you think your relationship with your mom is complicated, Huluâs new series âThe Actâ will offer a dose of perspective.
The first season of the anthology drama, starring Patricia Arquette and Joey King, follows the strange real-life case of Dee Dee Blanchard and her daughter, Gypsy Rose. For years, Dee Dee (Arquette), a single mom living in Missouri, convinced the public that her wheelchair-using daughter (King) was chronically ill â all while collecting donations and gifts from charity organizations.
That is, until Gypsy Rose, after figuring out the sham, plotted her motherâs murder. The pair gained national attention after a 2016 BuzzFeed article and an HBO documentary, âMommy Dead and Dearest,â chronicled their troubled and tragic mother-daughter relationship. (Gypsy is serving a 10-year sentence after pleading guilty to her role in her motherâs death.)
Experts have said Gypsy likely was the victim of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a mental disorder in which a caretaker induces or fabricates illness in another person to gain attention or sympathy. Pop culture most recently put that form of abuse into view in HBOâs âSharp Objects.â
âThere are two people whose main desire is to love and be loved; they just go about it in the most unhealthy way,â says King, seated alongside Arquette, during a recent interview.
âYes,â adds Arquette, âthese were two people on a collision course. Nothing good was going to come of this. One of them was always going to end up dead.â
Huluâs scripted dramatization, which premieres Wednesday, is based on the BuzzFeed article by Michelle Dean, who is also a writer and executive producer on the series. (Dean served as co-showrunner along with âChannel Zeroâsâ Nick Antosca.) It follows Lifetimeâs take on the events (âLove You to Deathâ) earlier this year.
In an interview, Arquette and King talked about diving into the stranger-than-fiction story, portraying a troubled mother-daughter relationship, and being untethered to Hollywoodâs standards of beauty. The interview has been edited for space and clarity.
There are two people whose main desire is to love and be loved; they just go about it in the most unhealthy way.
— Joey King, who plays Gypsy Rose Blanchard in Huluâs âThe Actâ
With stories like these â that are just so bizarre and wild â itâs easy to lose sight that there are real people involved and to go for the sensational. Were you worried about that going into this project?
Arquette: I think thereâs a lot of things that lend themselves in this story to turning it into some kitschy thing. They love Disney, and their house was pink, and their room was purple, and the way that Gypsyâs voice had this affectation, and all the layers of deception. But I think people can understand a maternal relationship, even their mom over-mothering them. [And] I think most people make humor out of something that they canât really imagine. Theyâre in utter shock that someoneâs mom would intentionally harm them in any kind of way or make sense of how they could harm their own child.
Then thereâs this kind of overarching thing of what happens at the end. Itâs like [Gypsy] claims back her power, and there is a serious price to pay. Was that the right choice or the wrong choice? Were there other choices? But when you have Stockholm syndrome, on top of Munchausen by proxy victim, can you even see the choices that are ahead of you?
What sort of research did you both do before digging in?
King: I watched the documentary countless times. I found any interviews, any home videos I could scramble on the internet. It was really helpful to have Michelle Dean on our show, because I would go to her a lot. I would call her up a lot just for stories and information. The craziest thing for me was watching interviews of Gypsy now versus seeing footage of her home when she was younger and how different she is.
Gypsyâs kind of become a master manipulator herself. So itâs hard to know whatâs real and whatâs not. It was difficult to grasp on to anything, because I personally canât say I can relate to anything about Gypsy.
Arquette: My daughter happened to be going away to school when we started this. Thereâs a natural instinct I as a mom have, to want to keep my daughter close, to want to keep her safe, to be worried about her in the world, to miss her so much, to wanna hug her so much, to miss her childhood, sheâs growing up. Iâm gonna take all those normal feelings but exploit them to perverse levels. I did kind of pull from my own normal feelings to a distorted feeling.
We havenât really seen this kind of complex mother-daughter relationship on-screen until recently.
Arquette: I donât know that in the past there was a ton of value people found in a mother-daughter relationship â especially one like this thatâs kind of sick. You might have a âGilmore Girlsâ kind of thing. But to have a relationship like this â thatâs deadly, thatâs toxic â we havenât really seen that. I donât think Iâve ever played a mom this dysfunctional before. Well, Joyce âTillyâ Mitchell [in âEscape at Dannemoraâ] was dysfunctional. But I mean where the dysfunction is focused on the child-parent relationship.
You both really had to transform yourselves for these roles. What do you think about the discussions when actresses play characters that arenât the prototypes of beauty or of sexual beings?
Arquette: Hereâs the reality: There were times when I was at my peak weight as Tilly in [âEscape at Dannemoraâ] â I havenât lost all the weight â and I was in a high altitude and I did think I was going to have a heart attack. It did feel physically dangerous to me at a certain level. That wasnât fun. Other than that, I mean, thereâs a million 19-year-old porn stars with the perfect body, right? But guess what, a lot of people are watching porn of big beautiful women, all this other stuff, older women. I say screw the idea Hollywoodâs been putting out that thereâs only one idealized woman thatâs allowed to be sexual. Thereâs a big, vast difference of sexuality. And if we donât look like Joey tomorrow, is that supposed to stop?
King: People calling me brave [for shaving my head] â itâs so funny to me because I wouldnât have done it any other way. Gypsy goes through this weird sexualization where she knows sheâs different. She knows she looks different. She knows she sounds different. She has these teeth that are fake and silver-capped. She has this feeding tube. But she still has this primal urge to be sexual and to feel sexy and to make someone else feel sexy. And itâs uncomfortable for her, feeding tube and all, but she does it. And she does it with a lot of confidence. She puts on a sexy voice. Itâs actually empowering to see people like Tilly who were like, âI am sexy and I want to be sexual.â And people like Gypsy who had all these physical and emotional restraints but still was thinking to herself, âI wanna be sexy.â Thatâs reality. Everyone has that desire to feel good and feel like someoneâs going to want them.
How do you think Dee Dee and Gypsy fit into the evolution of female characters weâre seeing on-screen?
Arquette: Iâm really grateful for this part and also âDannemoraâ because, at 50, I was sort of like, I donât want to be likable anymore. I donât care. My whole real life has been funneling me towards being a likable person, making likable choices, being a nice girl. I donât care anymore. I just want to tell the truth of the character. Men donât have to worry about that. I want to see all kinds of women, all kinds of expressions, all kinds of feelings.
King: Yeah, I agree with you. Iâm so thankful that I got the opportunity to play this role because I, like you, was so excited and so ready to dive into something that it didnât matter what I looked like.
I feel like as a young girl, Iâve been very lucky not to have fully been exposed to some of the real disaster stories of Hollywood and all the things that people go through. But I remember being 15 or 16 â two different times back to back I was asked to lose weight for a role, and then the next time I was told I wasnât pretty enough for a role. I was like, are you kidding me? You asked me to lose weight for a role. Iâm a normal, average, very healthy person. You want to play with my mental health for your little movie that youâre trying to make? I want to be able to go from something like âKissing Booth,â where itâs all about fun teenage stuff, to something like this. Just give us the chance. We can do it all.
âThe Actâ
Where: Hulu
When: Starting Wednesday
Rating: TV-MA (may be unsuitable for children under 17)
Twitter: @villarrealy
More to Read
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.