Matthew Rhys, 'Widow's Bay' and 'The Beast in Me' Emmy nominee, challenges studios: 'Take the risk'
Published in Entertainment News
LOS ANGELES — Maybe there is something in the fog. Matthew Rhys landed two Emmy nominations in different categories for darkly comedic and darkly chilling turns this TV season.
Rhys is nominated for lead actor in a comedy series for his deft performance as Tom Loftis, a single dad and the mayor of a cursed New England island who is trying to balance the town's supernatural threats with his efforts to boost tourism, in Apple's TV's breakout horror-comedy series "Widow's Bay." The word-of-mouth buzz around the series, which premiered in April, intensified each week leading up to its finale last month and prompted chatter around its prospects as a major Emmys contender. The series arrived late in the season, so only its first seven episodes qualify for the 2026 awards cycle, but that was enough for Rhys is nab a nod.
It wasn't the only performance from Rhys that voters boosted. He is also nominated for lead actor in a limited or anthology series for his role as the sociopath Nile Jarvis, a famed and formidable real estate developer who once was the prime suspect in the killing of his wife, in Netflix's "The Beast in Me." Nile finds himself in a cat-and-mouse dynamic with his new neighbor (Claire Danes), an author in search of her next book subject who is suspicious of his innocence.
Prior to this year's nominations, Rhys received five Emmy nominations over his career, including for his lead roles in "The Americans" and "Perry Mason," as well as a guest actor nod in "Girls." He won in 2018 for his role as KGB spy Philip Jennings in "The Americans."
The Times spoke with Rhys about his nomination; these are the edited excerpts.
Q: Congratulations on your exciting morning — it's a big day in the Rhys-Russell household [Keri Russell, Rhys' partner, is nominated for lead actress in a drama for her role in "The Diplomat"] . Let's start with the most important question: What's in the fog, Matthew?
A: [laughs] I love how it took me a moment. I was like, "Wait, what?" Oh, yes, the fog! What's in the fog is an incredible Season 2.
Q: Place me in the moment when you got the news.
A: I was in Brooklyn Bridge Marina at the time. I just got off a boat, and I thought, "Oh, God, it's 11:40." So I thought quite possibly [they] got to our categories. I checked my phone and there were the many texts. That was the exciting moment because if you haven't been nominated, there's no text.
Q: Did one text stand out from the others?
A: The real pinch me moment — this is going to sound like a real name drop — but it really got me emotional because I thought, if I'd have told my 18-year-old self that Gary Oldman would text me to congratulate me, I wouldn't have believed it. That's when it got me in an emotional way because he's such a true hero.
Q: Let's start with "Widow's Bay," which recently wrapped its first season. There's something so thrilling about how it broke through the way that it did. What has struck you about how viewers responded to this horror comedy?
A: There was a great degree of nervousness about how this would land, whether indeed it would land at all, and the fact that it has, and kind of the depth and the complex nature that's landed or resonated with people in different ways, is what I've loved. Some people go, "Oh my God, it's so funny"; some people say, "Oh my God, it's terrifying" — some people say both. And some people pick up on the weirdest things, and then some people pick up on the most obvious, great things. But it's the length and breadth and the variety of its resonances that has really made me very happy, and really made me doff my cap to [creator] Katie Dippold, for what she did.
Q: What should networks and studios take away from the success of "Widow's Bay" if they are really paying attention?
A: Take the risk. And challenge audiences. Everyone's more than ready for it and thirsty for it in a real way. I really hope this does something in the Hollywood psyche, where they go, "Let's put away the remakes and let's just get after new challenging, original material."
Q: What guidance did you get from Katie about who Tom was and how to play him?
A: She's dizzyingly collaborative, so she said, "Tom is yours." It was more me going, "But what about this for Tom?" She would help, but she really said, "Tom is yours to create now. Everything I've done is on the page." And it was. That's the beauty of her writing. If you're true to it, and you don't get in the way of it, it sings.
Q: The way Tom reacts to situations and people is such a masterclass in facial expressions. Did you recognize that would be your tool for your performance early on?
A: We had a kind of sliding scale — Hiro [Murai, executive producer and director], myself and Katie — because it was a departure for me. I'd go, "I don't know where this lives or where reality lives." And as much as anyone can say, "Play for real" — playing it for real can mean many things. It can mean a very minimal reaction, and it can mean a great reaction, and so there were times when I was like, "I'm gonna hit the sliding scale, and you let me know where it should be landing, or where, in your opinion, it's landing in a real way." Sometimes they were like, "Maybe a little less," and then they were like "Maybe a little more." That element of collaboration was was wonderful, too.
Q: The moment on the boat is a GIF I send often. The jolt.
A: It's funny, we have a great and incredible stunt coordinator Paul [Marini]. He said, "You have to lead where the momentum of the energy would be; it'd be your hips. So let your hips lead, and then let your body follow." And I was like, "Oh, that's smart. Then if you do that, then it has a degree of comic effect to it. But my pelvis hasn't quite recovered.
Q: Sort of like your dance moment in "The Beast in Me" — lead with the hips. This is your thing, Matthew.
A: Anytime, in the stage direction, it says "dances," I'm like [mimics vomit sound]. That strikes ice in my veins because I'm always like, "Oh my God."
Q: That's your horror comedy.
A: That is my true horror comedy because my dancing can be horrific and comical when it is to be neither.
Q: Let's talk about "The Beast In Me." Nile Jarvis was also quite the departure from you. What was your entry point to understanding him and figuring out how chilling to make him?
A: It was a lot of YouTube watching, where you just type in "psychopaths" and stuff comes up. I read Jon Ronson's "The Psychopath Test and "The Journalist and the Murderer" [by Janet Malcolm]. The writing was so strong in "The Beast in Me," so much of Nile was preemptively done for me. As [director] Antonio Campos said, "The trick might be not to do too much because enough has been said." Everyone has this predisposed idea of who he is and, therefore, the idea we came up with was to do not as little as possible, but to be minimal with it because he's aware of what everyone thinks of him and there's a degree of enjoyment and relishing in that.
Q: Have you been able to sensibly eat a roast chicken since?
A: No, not sensibly. It's become Pavlovian for me now. When I eat roast chicken, I devour it in a slightly psychotic way. I love that scene. It's an astute piece of writing to say so much about someone without words.
Q: What would you be best suited to achieve: rebranding the town of Widow's Bay as a tourist destination or charming your neighbors into signing paperwork for the construction of a running path through the backwoods of their properties?
A: I'm not saying I could charm the neighbors, but I would attempt to charm the neighbors. Playing Tom was exhausting in a way that playing Nile wasn't. I always spent the end of the day on "Widow's Bay" going, "My God, I'm exhausted" — because you're just vibrating on a higher level with Tom. It's always like, "Listen, please!" The pitch is always higher; you're always like, "You've got to listen to me!" Or if you're terrified, you're just hyperventilating.
Q: I know the news of these nominations is still fresh and I don't want to tell you how to approach the big night, but I just have to say, this could be the moment you take a page from Philip Jennings of "The Americans" and come with a wig and get up so when they pan to you during both categories, you can make them feel distinct.
A: That's exactly what I'm going to do. I'm going to Jennings it. I'm going to PJ it. When it pans to me in the second category, I'm gonna be gonna look completely different. I'm going to be dressed as Elizabeth [Jennings].
Q: Well, congratulation. How do you think you and Keri are going to celebrate?
A: Keri, in true "Americans" style is having me meet her in a clandestine spot that I don't know anything about, so who knows what. I don't know what the afternoon is going to unfold, but it's a big surprise. She might end up killing me, who knows.
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