Living A Double Life As Bubbles Wasn’t Easy For The Wire’s Andre Royo

HBO By Anya Stanley/May 24, 2022 11:17 am EST

HBO’s “The Wire” spearheaded a new kind of drama television upon its 2002 debut, earning heaps of praise for its patient, cumulative writing and talented cast of lesser-known (at the time) actors. When series creator David Simon pitched the show to HBO’s miniseries division, he envisioned a television version of The Great American Novel, writ large over a sprawling season depicting the dissolution of an American city — in this case, Baltimore, where Simon spent a year deposited with the city’s homicide unit for a year leading to his Edgar Award-winning novel, “Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.” The show is only vaguely a cop drama; its principals include law enforcement, drug dealers, politicians, stevedores at the docks, and addicts, all illustrating (over five seasons) the colossal failure of the government-initiated war on drugs.

Far more than a simple “cops and robbers” template, “The Wire” expressed an unprecedented level of interest in its players, none of whom are exactly what they seem. One of the series’ most compelling examples of this was Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins (so-named for the spit bubbles made when he’s in a heroin-fueled trance), played by Andre Royo. A recovering addict, Bubbles begins the show as the sort of onscreen junkie you’d come to expect from a cop drama, but quickly reveals himself to be resourceful and empathetic with far more complexity than the old tv caricatures would previously allow. That didn’t make it any easier for Royo to slip into the role, which was as taxing as it was fulfilling. Brett Martin’s book “Difficult Men: Behind the Scenes of a Creative Revolution” surveys the trajectory and impact of the series, and Royo gets a few words in about his experience as Bubbles.

Living A Double Life As Bubbles Wasn’t Easy For The Wire’s Andre Royo

HBO

By Anya Stanley/May 24, 2022 11:17 am EST

HBO’s “The Wire” spearheaded a new kind of drama television upon its 2002 debut, earning heaps of praise for its patient, cumulative writing and talented cast of lesser-known (at the time) actors. When series creator David Simon pitched the show to HBO’s miniseries division, he envisioned a television version of The Great American Novel, writ large over a sprawling season depicting the dissolution of an American city — in this case, Baltimore, where Simon spent a year deposited with the city’s homicide unit for a year leading to his Edgar Award-winning novel, “Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.” The show is only vaguely a cop drama; its principals include law enforcement, drug dealers, politicians, stevedores at the docks, and addicts, all illustrating (over five seasons) the colossal failure of the government-initiated war on drugs.

Far more than a simple “cops and robbers” template, “The Wire” expressed an unprecedented level of interest in its players, none of whom are exactly what they seem. One of the series’ most compelling examples of this was Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins (so-named for the spit bubbles made when he’s in a heroin-fueled trance), played by Andre Royo. A recovering addict, Bubbles begins the show as the sort of onscreen junkie you’d come to expect from a cop drama, but quickly reveals himself to be resourceful and empathetic with far more complexity than the old tv caricatures would previously allow. That didn’t make it any easier for Royo to slip into the role, which was as taxing as it was fulfilling. Brett Martin’s book “Difficult Men: Behind the Scenes of a Creative Revolution” surveys the trajectory and impact of the series, and Royo gets a few words in about his experience as Bubbles.

Far more than a simple “cops and robbers” template, “The Wire” expressed an unprecedented level of interest in its players, none of whom are exactly what they seem. One of the series’ most compelling examples of this was Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins (so-named for the spit bubbles made when he’s in a heroin-fueled trance), played by Andre Royo. A recovering addict, Bubbles begins the show as the sort of onscreen junkie you’d come to expect from a cop drama, but quickly reveals himself to be resourceful and empathetic with far more complexity than the old tv caricatures would previously allow. That didn’t make it any easier for Royo to slip into the role, which was as taxing as it was fulfilling. Brett Martin’s book “Difficult Men: Behind the Scenes of a Creative Revolution” surveys the trajectory and impact of the series, and Royo gets a few words in about his experience as Bubbles.

What am I doing today? Getting high or pushing that f***ing cart?

Separating one’s self from the complex men they portray day in and day out is a difficulty stars have voiced from the late James Gandolfini in “The Sopranos” to Nate Fisher (Peter Krause) of “Six Feet Under.” The intimate connections between cast and character is, if nothing else, a testament to the top-down creative compact with the narrative and the people that fuel it, part of the show’s lasting power.