The Emmys’ restricted collection/TV film performing classes have come to signify a few of the finest and most-talked-about reveals on tv, and this 12 months’s crop of contenders is not any exception.
The seven actors who joined the 2025 Envelope Roundtable have been Javier Bardem, who performs father, sufferer and alleged molester Jose Menendez in Netflix’s “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story”; Renée Zellweger, who reprises her function because the British romantic heroine in “Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy”; Stephen Graham, who co-created and stars in “Adolescence” as the daddy of a teenage boy who commits a heinous homicide; Jenny Slate, who performs one of the best pal of a terminally ailing lady in FX’s “Dying for Sex”; Brian Tyree Henry, who portrays a person posing as a federal agent with the intention to rip off drug sellers in Apple TV+’s “Dope Thief”; Elizabeth Banks, who takes on the function of an estranged sibling and recovering alcoholic in Prime Video’s “The Better Sister”; and Sacha Baron Cohen, who seems because the deceived husband of a profitable filmmaker in Apple TV+’s “Disclaimer.”
The 2025 Restricted Collection / TV Film Roundtable: Elizabeth Banks, left, Sacha Baron Cohen, Jenny Slate, Javier Bardem, Brian Tyree Henry, Renée Zellweger and Stephen Graham.
Lots of you progress between drama and comedy. Folks usually assume, “Drama’s very serious and difficult, comedy’s light and easy.” Is that true?
Banks: I believe the diploma of problem with comedy is way increased. It’s actually exhausting to sustainably make individuals chortle over time, whereas [with] drama, everybody pertains to loss and pining for love that’s unrequited. Not all people has nice timing or is humorous or will get satire.
Henry: There’s one thing enjoyable about how intently intertwined they’re. In my collection, I’m enjoying a heroin addict operating for my life, and I’ve this codependency with this pal … There’s a scene the place I’ve been in search of him, and I’m excessive out of my thoughts, and I discover him in my attic, and all he’s speaking about is how he has to take a s—. And I’m like, “But they’re trying to kill us.” You simply see him wincing and going by all these [groans]. It’s so humorous, however on the identical time, you’re simply terrified for each. There’s all the time humor someplace within the drama.
Banks: There’s a purpose why the theater [symbol] is a contented face/unhappy face. They’re very intertwined.
Renée Zellweger of “Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy.”
Renée, with Bridget Jones — how has she modified over the past 25 years and the place is she now with “Mad About the Boy”?
Zellweger: No one’s the identical from one second to the subsequent, one chapter to the subsequent and positively not from one 12 months to the subsequent. It’s been a extremely attention-grabbing type of experiment to revisit a personality within the totally different phases of her life.
What I’m actually grateful for is that the timing runs in parallel to the type of experiences that you’ve got in your early 20s, 30s and so forth. With every iteration, I don’t should faux that I’m lower than I’m, as a result of I don’t wish to be the character that I used to be, or performed, when she was 29, 35. I don’t wish to do this, and I definitely don’t wish to do this now.
So it was very nice to satisfy her once more on this place of what she’s experiencing within the second, which is bereavement and the lack of her nice love, and being a mother, and making an attempt to be accountable, and reevaluating what she values, and the way she comports herself, and what’s necessary and all of that, as a result of, in fact, I relate to that on this second.
There’s a sure degree of sociopathy.
— Brian Tyree Henry, “Dope Thief,” on the lengths actors will go to get the shot
Stephen, “Adolescence” follows a household coping with the fallout of their 13-year-old son being accused of a brutal homicide. You direct and star within the collection. What was it like being immersed in such heavy subject material? Did it come dwelling with you?
Graham: We did that first episode, the tip of it was fairly heavy and fairly emotional. After we stated, “Cut,” all of us older actors and the crew have been very emotional. There have been hugs and a little bit of applause.
After which everybody could be like, “Where’s Owen?” [Cooper, the teenage actor who plays Graham’s character’s son]. “Is Owen OK? Is he with his child psychologist?” No, Owen’s upstairs enjoying swing ball along with his tutor. It was like OK, that’s the best way to do that — to not take myself too significantly after we say, “Cut,” however when I’m there, immerse myself in it.
Let’s be sincere, we are able to all be barely self-obsessed. My missus, she’s one of the best for me as a result of I’d cellphone her and say, “I had a really tough day. I had to cry all day. My wife’s died of cancer, and it was a really tough one.” She goes, “The dog s— all over the living room. I had to go shopping and the f— bag split when I got to Tesco. There was a flat tire. They’ve let the kids out of school early because there’s been a flood. And you’ve had a hard day pretending to be sad?”
Bardem: I completely agree with what Stephen says. You’ve gotten a life with your loved ones and your kids that you must actually take note of. It is a job, and also you simply do the job pretty much as good as you’ll be able to with your individual limitations. You set every little thing into it once they say, “Action,” and whenever you’re out, you simply depart it behind. In any other case, it’s an excessive amount of.
Sure scenes, sure moments stick with you as a result of we work with what we’re. However I believe it doesn’t make you a greater actor to actually keep in character, as they are saying, for twenty-four hours. That doesn’t work for me. It really makes me really feel very confused if I do this.
On the present “Monsters” I attempted to guard Cooper [Koch] and Nicholas [Alexander Chavez], the actors who play the kids, as a result of they have been carrying the heavy weight on the present on daily basis. I used to be making an attempt to make them really feel protected and liked and accompanied by us, the adults, and allow them to know that we’re there for them and that that is fiction. As a result of they have been going actually deep into it, they usually did an incredible job.
Elizabeth Banks of “The Better Sister.”
Elizabeth, in “The Better Sister,” you painting Nicky, a sister estranged from her sibling who’s been by fairly a little bit of her personal trauma.
Banks: I play a drunk who’s misplaced her baby and her husband, principally, to her little sister, performed by Jessica Biel. She is grappling with trauma from her childhood, which she’s making an attempt to not carry ahead. She’s been working [with] Alcoholics Nameless, an unimaginable program, to get by her stuff. However she’s additionally a fish out of water when she visits her sister, who [lives in a] very rarefied New York, literary, fancy wealthy world. My character principally lives in a trailer park in Ohio. There’s so much happening. And there’s a homicide thriller.
I liked the complication … but it surely introduced up all of these issues for me. I do assume you completely depart most of that [heaviness] on set. You’re mining all of it for the character work, so that you’ve bought to search out it, however I don’t have to then infect my very own kids with it.
Sacha Baron Cohen of “Disclaimer.”
Sacha, you’ve got performed and created these actually gregarious characters like Ali G or Borat. Your character in “Disclaimer,” he’s not a personality you created, however he’s very understated. Was {that a} problem?
Cohen: It took me a very long time to work out who the character was. I stated to [director] Alfonso [Cuarón], “I don’t understand why this guy goes on that journey from where we see him in Act 1.” For me it was, how do you make this particular person distinctive?
Jenny Slate of “Dying for Sex.”
Jenny, “Dying for Sex” is predicated on a real story about two mates. One has terminal most cancers, and the opposite — your character — helps her proper up till the tip. Discuss what it was prefer to play that function in a collection that alternates between biting humor and deep grief.
Slate: Michelle Williams, who does an excellent job on this present, her power is extending outward and [her character] is making an attempt to experiment earlier than she does the best experiment of all, which is to cross over into the opposite aspect. My character is actually on the market, not on the market willy-nilly, however she is going to yell at individuals if they’re being impolite, wasteful or if she feels it’s unjust. [And she’s] going from blasting to taking all that power and making it this tight laser, and pointing it proper into care, and realizing extra about herself on the finish.
I’m a peppy particular person, and I felt so excited to have the job that a number of my day began with calming myself down. I’m at work with Michelle Williams and Sissy Spacek and Liz Meriwether and Shannon Murphy and being, like, “Siri, set a meditation timer for 10 minutes,” and making myself do alternate nostril respiration [exercises].
Brian Tyree Henry of “Dope Thief.”
Brian, many individuals got here to know you out of your function as Paper Boi in “Atlanta.” The collection was groundbreaking and like nothing else on tv. What was it like transferring out of that world and onto different initiatives?
Henry: Folks actually thought that I used to be this rapper that they pulled off the road from Atlanta. To me, that’s the best praise … After I did “Bullet Train,” I used to be shocked at how many individuals thought I used to be British. I used to be like, “Oh, right. Now I’ve twisted your mind this way.” I used to be [the voice of] Megatron at one level, and now I’ve twisted your thoughts that approach. My path in is all the time going to be stretching individuals’s imaginations, as a result of they get so connected to characters that I’ve performed that they actually consider that I’m that particular person.
Folks really feel like they’ve an possession of who you’re. I really like the problem of getting to pressure the imaginations of the viewers and myself to see me in a departure [from] what they noticed me [as] beforehand. As a result of I understand that after I stroll in a room, earlier than I even open my mouth, there’s 90 various things which can be placed on me or taken away from me due to how I look and the way I carry myself.
Javier Bardem of “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story.”
Javier, since doing the collection are you now ceaselessly requested about your individual opinions on the Menendez case? The brothers declare their father molested them, and that’s partially what led to them murdering their dad and mom.
Bardem: I don’t assume anyone is aware of. That’s the purpose. That was the beauty of enjoying that character, is you must play it in a approach that it’s not apparent that he did these issues that he was accused of, as a result of no one is aware of, however on the identical time you must make individuals consider that he was succesful.
I did say to Ryan [Murphy] that I can’t do a scene with a child. As a result of at first, they do drafts, and there have been sure moments the place I stated, “I can’t. It’s not needed.” The one second that I had a tough time was when [Jose] has to face [his] younger child. It was solely a second the place Jose was imply to him. That’s not in my nature.
Henry: I found, whereas doing my collection, “My body doesn’t know this isn’t real.” There’s an episode the place I’m shot within the leg, and I’m bleeding out and I’m on all this totally different morphine and medicines and all these things, and I’m actually mendacity on this floor, take after take, having to mime this. To undergo the delusion of this ache … in the midst of the takes, it was simply so loopy. I’d actually take a look at the crew and say, “Somebody hug me! Somebody!”
Stephen, that scene the place you confront the boys within the parking zone with the bike, I used to be similar to, “Oh, my God, how many times did he have to do that?” This child will get in your face, and I used to be like, “Punch the kid!” My coronary heart went out to you, man, not simply because the character however as you being in there.
Graham: As a result of we did it multi function take, we had that distinctive high quality. You’re utilizing one of the best of two mediums. You’ve bought that magnificence and that spontaneity and that actuality of the theater, after which you’ve got the naturalism and the reality that we’ve with movie and tv. So by the point I get to that last bit, we’ve been by all these feelings. After I open the door and go into [Jamie’s] room, every little thing’s shaken. Nevertheless it’s not you. It’s an out-of-body expertise and simply comes from someplace else.
Bardem: Pay attention, we don’t do mind surgical procedure, however let’s give ourselves some credit score. We’re beneficiant in what we do as a result of we’re placing our our bodies into an expertise. We’re doing this for one thing greater than us, and that’s the story that we’re telling.
What have been a few of the tougher or troublesome moments for you, both in your profession or your current collection?
Zellweger: Making an attempt to not do what you’re feeling within the second typically, as a result of it’s not applicable to what you’re telling. That occurs in most reveals, most issues that you just do. I believe all people experiences it the place you’re bringing one thing from dwelling and it doesn’t belong on the set. It’s not possible to depart it behind whenever you stroll in as a result of it’s greater than you’re in that second.
Banks: I’d say that the factor that I labored on essentially the most for “The Better Sister” was [understanding] sobriety. I’m not sober. I really like a bubbly rosé. So it actually did carry up how a lot I take into consideration ingesting and the way social it’s and what that ritual is for me, and the way this character is considering it on daily basis and deciding on daily basis to remain sober or not. I’m additionally an enormous fan of AA and sobriety applications. I believe they’re unimaginable instruments for everyone who works these applications. I used to be grateful for the entry to all of that as I used to be making the collection. However that’s what you get to do in TV. You get to discover episode by episode. You get to play out much more than simply three acts.
Stephen Graham of “Adolescence.”
Stephen, concerning the steady single shot. It looks as if it’s an extremely troublesome and complicated method to shoot a collection. Why do it?
Graham: It’s exceptionally troublesome, I’m not going to lie. It’s like a swan glides throughout the water superbly, however the legs are going quickly beneath. Quite a lot of it’s carried out in preparation. We spend a complete week studying the script, after which the second week is simply with the digital camera crew and the remainder of the crew. It’s a choreography that you just work out, getting an concept of the place they need the digital camera to go, and the chance to embody the area ourselves.
Cohen: That jogs my memory of a little bit of doing the undercover motion pictures that I do as a result of you’ve got one take. … I did a scene the place I’m carrying a bulletproof vest. There have been a number of the individuals within the viewers who’d gone to this rally, a number of them had machine weapons. We knew they have been going to get indignant, however you’ve bought to do the scene. You’ve bought one time to get the scene proper. However you additionally go, “OK, those guys have got guns. They’re trying to storm the stage. I haven’t quite finished the scene. When do I leave?” However you’ve bought to get the scene. I might get shot, however that’s not necessary.
Henry: There’s a sure degree of sociopathy.
Slate: I really feel like I’m by no means on my mark, and it was all the time a really variety digital camera operator being like, “Hey, Jenny, you weren’t in the shot shoulder-wise.” I really feel like such an fool. A part of it’s working by lifelong, longstanding emotions of “I’m a fool and my foolishness is going to make people incredibly angry with me.” After which actually nonetheless eager to take part and having no actual certainty that I’m going to have the ability to do something however simply make all of my fears actual. A part of the factor that I really like about efficiency is I simply wish to expertise the model of myself that doesn’t collapse into ineffective fragments after I face the factor that scares me essentially the most. I do this, after which I really feel the urge for food for efficiency once more.
Do you see your self in roles whenever you’re watching different individuals’s movies or TV present?
Graham: On the finish of the day, we’re all huge followers of performing. That’s why we do it. As a result of after we have been younger, we have been impressed by individuals on the display screen, or we have been impressed by locations the place we might put ourselves and lose our imaginations.
Now we have a number of t— on this business. However I believe if we struggle exhausting sufficient, we are able to come by. Are you aware what I imply? It’s individuals which can be right here for the fitting causes. It’s a collective. Appearing shouldn’t be a recreation of golf. It’s a group. It’s in entrance and it’s behind the digital camera. I believe it’s necessary that we nourish that.
Henry: And keep in mind that none of us are t—.
Bardem: What’s a t—? I could also be considered one of them and I don’t comprehend it.
Graham: I’ll clarify it to you later.