Boardwalk Empire Recap: Performance Anxiety


Power is a performance. Its a matter of knowing your audience, picking up on whether you should be funny or scary, when to play to the cheap seats or act with awards-caliber subtlety. Isnt this the obstacle faced by Steve Buscemi in the minds of many viewers? His quiet, hangdog intensity as Nucky Thompson is an outlier in an era of volcanic, Byronic TV antiheroes. But thats the point: For all his successes before and after Prohibition, Thompsons decision to become more than half a gangster has forced him into a role he cant quite master. As Boardwalk Empire hits the halfway mark of its final season in tonights episode Cuanto it examines the nature of that performance, and those of other characters whove found themselves shoved onto stage.

As a boy, the future chairman of the boardwalk is brought before the Commodore, who offers the young Nucky a glimpse of his grand plans for the Jersey shore (and an unwitting peek at his collection of photos of sexualized young girls), grinning when the kid notes that this is Atlantic City as you wish it to be. That wish includes everything from a stronger transportation infrastructure to segregated housing. But Nuckys ability to follow along does nothing to placate his boss. You think youre a smart boy. If I say yes, youll think Im boasting. If I say no youll think Im lying. Dont try to parse me. The boy is trying his best, but this command performance is unscripted, in front of the toughest crowd in town.

Fall TV Preview 2014: The Good, the Bad & the Gotham'Boardwalk Empire' Season Premiere Recap: Boss of All Bosses100 Best Albums of the '90sPerforming With Missy Elliott, 17 Years Later

So hes naturally flabbergasted when he and his brother Eli are rewarded for going off-book. After catching them breaking into the Commodores hotel for a taste of the good life (read: indoor plumbing), Sheriff Lindsay takes the Thompson boys to his own house for a home-cooked meal with his kind, politically minded wife and smart, friendly family. They eat good food, they tell corny jokes, they negotiate a role for the patriarch in Mrs. Lindsays temperance crusade, over which the Sheriff conspiratorially shares a nod and a wink with Nucky. Its too much for the kid, who breaks down crying at his first glimpse of a life thats emotionally rewarding a life where he can simply be himself. Cut to an hour later, when hes asking the Sheriff to assassinate his own father. The terms with which Lindsay demurs are revealing: Dont go where you dont belong. Dont take what isnt yours. Dont pass your burdens on to others. Dont make me do my job because I will. Know your role, Deputy Sheriff Thompson.

In the present day, Nucky and his estranged wife Margaret have made a similar peace. Over drinks many of them, inducing a for-the-ages performance of drunkenness from actor Kelly MacDonald, whos never been better or sexier the two realize they are each comfortable with the nature of the other. Margaret recognizes Nucky as a man who solves precisely the kinds of problems shes having with Carolyn Rothstein. Nucky marvels at Margarets successes after leaving him: getting the better end of a deal with Arnold Rothstein, holding down a good job, raising two kids, all on her own terms. Is this a fight? Margaret asks when the conversation turns to their past infidelities. Weve had all the fights were going to have, he replies, calmly, securely. They dont need to keep up an act anymore. Whats there to fight about?

For other characters, the stakes of their fakery are much higher, the consequences of failure much more severe. When Lucky Luciano (referred to as such for perhaps the first time) comes to Chicago to sell Al Capone on the idea of a nationwide umbrella organization for Italian gangs, Als skeptical but less so of Lucianos suspicion that George Mueller, aka former G-man Nelson Van Alden, is the Fed who jacked him in Jersey a decade ago. In a command performance to end them all, Van Alden talks his way out of imminent execution by playing on his employers vanity: Sure, I may be a Fed and a murderer, but isnt Luciano undermining your authority a worse crime? For Capone a guy who privately screens newsreel footage of his criminality over and over this act hits all the right notes. Its an unlucky underling, whose only crime is a failure to provide an appropriate laugh track, who pays the price in Van Aldens stead. Hes beaten to death with a statue of the Empire State Building in front of portraits of Lincoln and Washington, in case you were worried Boardwalk Empire was getting subtle on us in its old age.

The most gut-wrenching failure, though, is Sally Wheats. Far more confident and less needy than any other woman the show has come up with, Patricia Arquettes Southern-fried bootlegger has always felt beamed in from another series which, frankly, is a great thing. Though shes astute enough politically to hang with major players in organized crime, shes done so (like Margaret) on her own terms, running her own business and calling her own shots. Naturally, she reacts to the soldiers who stop her after curfew like another eager audience, willing to enjoy any song and dance she serves them if the price is right. Even after the writing is on the wall in the form of the chilling phrase Youre whats wrong with Cuba, she finds she cant come up with the necessary lines to placate people who are, by definition, implacable when it comes to criminal capitalists like herself. She dies, a gun in her hand like a Capone-inspired kingpin in a 1930s Hollywood movie. Those films had a code: No matter how charismatic the performance, the bad guys always got it in the end.

Previously: All That You Cant Leave Behind