Xuenou > Popular > Jessica Biel, ‘Candy’ Creators on Exploring Female Rage, Navigating Dueling Candy Montgomery Projects
Jessica Biel, ‘Candy’ Creators on Exploring Female Rage, Navigating Dueling Candy Montgomery Projects
Biel stars as the '80s housewife accused of murder in Hulu's latest series, with an HBO Max take on the same story coming soon.

Alex Hedlund, Nick Antosca, Timothy Simons, Dash McCloud, Antonella Rose, Jessica Biel, Melanie Lynskey, Pablo Schreiber, Raúl Esparza and Robin Veith at the ‘Candy’ premiereJerod Harris/Getty Images

With Candy, the Hulu miniseries exploring the gruesome 1980 murder of Betty Gore at the hands of friend Candy Montgomery, Jessica Biel continues her exploration of the crime thriller genre, also exec producing the project after previous involvement with The Sinner and Cruel Summer.

“I just loved the writing so much when I read the first few scripts, and the opportunity to get into the creative team at more of the ground level and to develop a story like this and tweak it for me, my portrayal of this person, that’s the joy of it for me,” Biel told The Hollywood Reporter of her interest in the series at its Los Angeles premiere on Monday. “And then of course the character is so intriguing, she’s so compelling — what happened to her and what she did and how it ended up, it’s beyond belief. If someone wrote this as something fiction you wouldn’t believe it, like it’s too crazy.”

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Montgomery, a suburban Texas housewife, was accused of brutally murdering Gore (played by Melanie Lynskey) with an axe after having an affair with Gore’s husband Allan (played by Pablo Schreiber). To play the character, Biel donned a short curly wig and large glasses, which she described as “transformative. I didn’t recognize myself, which is exactly what you want when you’re having to put yourself into the shoes of someone that you really truly don’t understand.”

The costume was also jarring for those around Biel on set, as her producing partner Michelle Purple joked, “she looked like my 96 year-old grandmother, it was a very surreal experience for me” and showrunner and co-creator Robin Veith teased that after a wig test, Biel “just became another person, and it just felt like so natural on her. I was like, ‘You look like every 20-year-old hipster in my neighborhood right now.'”

Veith and fellow co-creator Nick Antosca began work on Candy after their success on another true crime tale, The Act; the showrunner said that when embarking on the script in the fall of 2019, “there was something about this story, about a woman’s explosive rage at 10 o’clock in the morning, seemingly over very little, that felt apropos of the #MeToo moment of like, ‘Hey, we can actually talk about this feminine rage, this female rage that we carry around with us that we’re not supposed to acknowledge.'” That idea became even more timely, she said, when the pandemic hit and rage became universal.

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Jessica Biel, Disney TV Studios and ABC Entertainment chairman Dana Walden and Melanie LynskeyFrank Micelotta/PictureGroup

And it appears the Candy creatives aren’t the only ones finding Montgomery’s story ripe for exploring — Love and Death, a HBO Max limited series, also follows the murder and is set for release this year, with Elizabeth Olsen taking on the lead role.

“I’m actually excited,” Veith said of the dueling shows. “The thing about this story is there’s like 100 ways to tell this story. I’m also the person who watched three Fyre Festival documentaries that came out at the same time, I watched them all back-to-back. I just love different perspectives, so I’m very excited for what they’re doing. We were already well into what we were doing and we had a take and a story that we wanted to tell and that’s what we did.”

Added Antosca, “We were already in the writers room when that was announced, so you just make the show that you want to make. I’ve had similar experiences in multiple past shows where there was a similar project going on at the same time in totally parallel development, so I’m like used to it now. All respect to them and all the other projects, you just make the show that you want to make.”

Also at the premiere, held at Hollywood’s El Capitan Theatre, Veith shared her thoughts on why scripted true crime adaptations are having such a moment on TV currently, pointing to the (largely female) true crime audience who were brought up to be on constant alert.

“My theory is we enjoy true crime so much because we’re adding to our arsenal,” she said. “You see something like, ‘Oh I’m not falling for that one!’ It’s just another thing to look out for, our conditioning. And also to pat ourselves on the back like, ‘They didn’t get me!'”

Candy is now streaming over five consecutive nights on Hulu.