Cape Argus

Moss-Bachrach on getting grilled in ‘The Bear’ season 3

- KARISHMA DIPA karishma.dipa@inl.co.za The Bear

HOLLYWOOD actor Ebon MossBachra­ch is thrilled for viewers around the world to witness his character’s transforma­tion on the multiaward-winning series, The Bear.

The highly-anticipate­d third season premiered in South Africa at the end of June.

During a recent round-table, the 47-year-old actor, who plays Richard “Richie” Jerimovich, said that viewers will get a chance to see a new side to his character in the new instalment.

“I think making season one and season two sort of prepared me perfectly for this season and there are certainly developmen­ts in my character.

“Ritchie is trying to reform some of his behavioura­l shortcomin­gs and sort of be a more loving member of his community.”

Moss-Bachrach won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for his portrayal of the gruff but lovable character, known as “Cousin”.

He also won scores of other accolades for this role, including a Critics Choice Award and a Screen Actor’s Guild Award, while also receiving Golden Globe and Spirit Actor Guild Award nomination­s.

The Bear, which centres on young chef Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto, played by the ever in-vogue Jeremy Allen White, also bagged several honours.

White won an Emmy for Outstandin­g Lead Actor in a Comedy Series honour, while his co-star, Ayo Edebiri, and the show’s creator, Christophe­r Storer, also took home prizes.

At the 2024 Golden Globe Awards, it took home three statues, including one for Best Comedy Series and won a host of accolades at this year’s Critics Choice Awards.

Dubbed, one of the most stressful shows on TV, with its cacophony of yelling and chaotic menu prep, it has been lauded for capturing the pressure and intensity of working in a kitchen.

The series touches on universal themes and life lessons which resonate with audiences, as Berzatto is forced to contend with the soul-crushing realities of small business ownership, in the wake of inheriting his family’s Italian beef sandwich business and dealing with his brother’s suicide.

Amid all the chaos, the writers work in humour, to remind viewers that laughter is the best medicine.

The Bear is at its essence an age-old underdog story and this is evident in Cousin’s journey on the show, explained Moss-Bachrach, who has starred in several Hollywood production­s, including No Hard Feelings alongside Jennifer Lawrence, Mona Lisa Smile with Julia Roberts, Fantastic Four and Girls.

“I think he was kind of a dinosaur in season one, existing in the past, and the world was changing around him”.

He explained that Ritchie’s turning point came in season two when he spent time training at a Michelin-star restaurant.

“In that episode and the following episodes in season 2, he finds that there is indeed a place for him in this more modern world, but then between that realisatio­n that he has and then actually living it, that’s where the work is.

“In this season, he’s trying to turn that idea that he’s had, with now being in front of the house and finding ways to elevate a restaurant.

“He’s trying to live that in a day-today way, which is difficult, and it’s easier to have that idea, to have that initial inspiratio­n, but to do the work is really the challenge.”

Moss-Bachrach added that other characters also go through a transforma­tion in the new season.

“I think it's more insightful into Carmy, we saw that in many ways, he’s a broken person and was not dealing with things in the first two seasons, but with this one, we get to understand more about who he is,” he said.

“Also, there’s a real tenderness in the third season.

“It expands in its love of all the characters and there is a gentleness to the ways the characters are treated.

“You can tell that the film-makers love the world and the population of this show and then finally, I would say that they pushed the style of the show, the film-making, and the cinema of it feels more experiment­al and more ambitious to me,” he added.

Moss-Bachrach said that he didn’t feel pressured by his Emmy win when he began filming for season three.

“I think that if you are not thinking about yourself and your profession in a critical way, you are perhaps not doing the work that you should be doing,” he said.

“It’s very hard to make a TV show and there’s sort of a distractio­n, all the nerves are part of a static that gets turned down when I am in a scene and I just focus on my scene partner.”

The actor added that it’s “astonishin­g” that the show has connected with so many people from all walks of life.

“It’s one of the most beautiful experience­s that I’ve had in my life, that I can be all over the world and talking to people from so many types of background­s and all different types of ages, it’s such a privilege that I get to have.”

* season 3 is streaming on Disney+.

 ?? | Supplied ?? EBON Moss-Bachrach returns as Richard ‘Richie’ Jerimovich in The Bear season three.
| Supplied EBON Moss-Bachrach returns as Richard ‘Richie’ Jerimovich in The Bear season three.

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