
She calls sexuality “a primal part of who we are” and “part and parcel of who I am” and she’s interested in exploring it in her work, she says, “because as a woman, I find it to be a huge centre of our power that has been misused and misrepresented a lot of the time”. “I know literally three girls who started smoking because you used to smoke.” Gugino’s other current roles capitalise on that allure like Daisy, the thief she plays on the cable noir Jett (in televisual limbo now that Cinemax has killed its original programming division), or Stella, which she will act opposite Audra McDonald’s Blanche and Bobby Cannavale’s Stanley in a Streetcar Named Desire revival this summer.Ĭarla Gugino in Anatomy of a Suicide with Ava Briglia and Celeste Arias. “God we were all so in love with you in school,” another character says. She fascinates people even – or especially – when she doesn’t mean to. Her character, Carol, has a perilous kind of magnetism. “So for me, there were personal elements. “All of us have those moments when you just don’t know what your value is here and what the value of staying is,” she says.
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And it should.” She has been reading accounts of suicidal ideation and listening to podcast interviews, working toward someone who “is always trying to crack life. “It’s a really tricky place to live in,” she says. Playing a woman who wants to die makes emotional claims, too. It simultaneously tracks three generations of women in three time periods (roughly: the 1970s, the 2000s, the 2030s), with many lines spoken in unison, which means that it demands extreme technical rigour. Photograph: Everett/Rex ShutterstockĪnatomy of a Suicide spoke to her, Gugino says, viscerally and intellectually.

Gugino with Dwayne Johnson in San Andreas.
