Liev Schreiber balances fatherhood, ‘Ray Donovan’

RYAN PEARSON
AP Entertainment Writer

CALABASAS, Calif. (AP) — Nothing is more important than family.

That’s what the stoic Hollywood fixer played by Liev Schreiber tells his wife in the second season premiere of “Ray Donovan.” While it’s unclear whether his character believes his own words, Schreiber says that principle has shaped his career in recent years.

The actor has made it a priority to spend time with his two sons with longtime partner Naomi Watts — 6-year-old Sasha and 5-year-old Samuel. He set aside plans to direct again after 2005’s “Everything Is Illuminated.” He let others guide him into roles in theatre and on screen.

“It’s amazing how insignificant everything else becomes,” Schreiber said of his fatherhood. “It sounds romantic. But the reality is that you go brain dead for 2 1/2, 3 years and slowly return to the world. … You kind of lose all ambition.”

“That’s part of the thing about acting. It’s so easy to follow the career path that’s defined by the options presented to you,” he said. “Where with directing or producing or writing, there is a lot more self-motivation at play there.”

The 46-year-old actor looked as if he had mostly emerged from that haze during a recent shoot on the set of “Ray Donovan” in a gated neighborhood in Calabasas, the hilly Los Angeles suburb where the Kardashians and many other celebrities live.

Schreiber was directing the episode, his first gig outside of commercials in nine years. Sitting in a high folding chair, he reviewed a script on a MacBook Air, glancing up to watch cameras move into position on a monitor.

“We’re good. We’re good. We’re good,” he announced over a wireless microphone to the production crew. There was a pause. One actor was missing. “Oh right, that’s me,” he said with a tight smile, hopping up swiftly to take his mark for a scene in which Donovan confronts a music mogul and yells at his teenage daughter.

Schreiber says later he underestimated the difficulty of “pulling double duty” on the much-praised series, which weaves together stories of clergy sex abuse, unconventional family ties, violence, celebrity and Hollywood powerbrokers. The second season starts Sunday on Showtime.

“In order to do it correctly, you have to watch playback after every take. I just hated stopping … to see my own performance,” he said. “The hard part is directing without vision, without being able to see.”

It’s unclear what the future holds for “Ray Donovan,” which also stars Jon Voight, Eddie Marsan and Paula Malcomson. (Voight was nominated for an Emmy this past week for his unhinged performance as Donovan’s father, Mickey. He also won a Golden Globe for the role earlier this year.)

Schreiber and Watts have been splitting time between New York and Los Angeles in order to accommodate the shooting schedule. Schreiber says that’s been tough on his family. He yearns to return to New York full-time.

“It’s really demanding even when I’m not directing,” he said. “I should be so lucky to have this opportunity, and to be leading a company like this is pretty special.” However, he said, “to be honest, I would like to go home. I’m homesick. … If we don’t get picked up next year, is it a huge tragedy for me and my family? Absolutely not.”

Schreiber hasn’t had conversations with series creator Ann Biderman about his character’s long-term story arc, and often gets scripts for episodes three days before shooting them.

“I live literally minute to minute. It is so hard to imagine doing it again and again for me,” he said. Still, he’s found time to star as Russian chess champion Boris Spassky opposite Tobey Maguire in Edward Zwick’s “Pawn Sacrifice” and has other potential projects in development.

Back on set, Schreiber directs camera operators and fellow actors efficiently with a grim, concentrated look, sweating through temperatures over 100 degrees. After a successful sixth take, he claps his hands once — “We got it” — and returns to review the footage.

Schreiber’s face lights up when he overhears a visitor to set mention that she recently had a baby. “Have you been Ferberizing?” Schreiber asks excitedly, referring to a method of sleep training that he and Watts used for their sons. For a couple minutes, the set fades away. Schreiber is talking about his favorite role.

___

Online: http://www.sho.com/sho/ray-donovan/home

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Ryan Pearson at www.twitter.com/ryanwrd

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your WTOP account for notifications and alerts customized for you.

Sign up