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As a supporting cast, we don't mention Adrian Lester and Marc Warren, Warren (as Danny Blue)'s performance is of course It's remarkable, but from the beginning to the end, he is the most individual guy in the whole drama. We young women are not cute. This kind of guy who is not reserved or deep. Lester (Mickey Bricks) looks like a 13 o'clock virgin man, with the words "My sister gives Tangtang, I will teach you five, four beauties and three loves, and learn from Raining's good example", and can never satisfy the neurotic and private hobbies of modern people. Robert Glenister (Albert) is so goddamn ridiculous. Personal favorites are Jaime Murray (Stacie Monroe) and Robert Vaughn (Ash Morgan). Jaime plays a different female image in each drama. In the first season, she played the role of an artistic sister, a senior publicist, a girlfriend of a gangster who used to extort blackmail, a Hepburn movie star, a Russian refugee, and a luxury hotel. The female white-collar worker, the old lady, the policeman, and she seems to have played the role of the buck-toothed girl and horse, which profoundly tells us that the skin is all clouds.
Jaime's grasp of these characters is not yet out of himself, not "becoming the other" or "as the character replaces itself". I don't think it really matters - her character is first a liar and then a liar in various roles. How Stacie acts has nothing to do with Jaime. But the role of Ash Morgan could almost give Robert Vaughn the title of a veteran. As a criminal logistics, in addition to the installation and destruction of various monitors, counterfeiting, decoration, site selection, delivery, website creation, research on various system loopholes and other all-purpose glue work, it is often necessary to play a supporting role in a bureau, playing everything Pedestrian character.
In the case of selling the Hollywood sign in the fourth season, he played the role of a middle-aged man who was extorted, a sissy makeup artist, and a mental patient. It seems that he played five or six roles in one episode. The victim asked: Am I? saw you recently? (And several times...) Quite hilarious. All kinds of life are frozen in his bad smile. Could this be the precision of the legendary talented actor?
The protagonist can always have only one personality, but the supporting roles condense all kinds of life. Having lived again and again in a show that takes life, I think Murray and Vaughn must have had a great time.
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