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Bob Odenkirk back to comedy in ‘Lucky Hank’

It’s not often a talent like Bob Odenkirk jumps so quickly from one critical darling to another show, but that’s what’s happening on Sunday in the premiere of “Lucky Hank.” No, this is not another spin-off of the “Breaking Bad” universe, but it does feature Odenkirk filling out another morally complex character on the AMC network, just without the drug cartels. William Henry Deveraux Jr. may not be as conniving as Saul Goodman, but his mid-life crisis has the potential to lead to a similar comedy of errors. The Associated Press has the story:

Bob Odenkirk back to comedy in ‘Lucky Hank’

Newslooks- (AP)

Bob Odenkirk loves Saul Goodman, but he’s also ready to leave the character behind. He played the underhanded, calculating lawyer on “Breaking Bad” and then for six seasons on “ Better Call Saul.

The Emmy-nominated actor hopes viewers will next take to him in the dark comedy series AMC’s “ Lucky Hank,” debuting Sunday, as Hank Devereaux, a college English professor who is department chair at an underfunded college, going through an identity crisis. He wrote a novel that no one read, yet his father’s retirement from the academic literary world was covered by the New York Times.

FILE – Bob Odenkirk, left, and Mireille Enos, cast members in the AMC television series “Lucky Hank,” poses for a portrait during the Winter Television Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 10, 2023. (Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP, File)

“Guys always want to be greater than their dad if they do the same thing or are similar, or they want to be the opposite of their dad and usually they can’t achieve either thing perfectly,” said Odenkirk recently over Zoom.

Odenkirk was drawn to the fact that Hank, with his discontentment and intelligence, is also quite witty. Some may not realize or forget that Odenkirk has a background in comedy. He was a writer on “Saturday Night Live” and worked with some of its most notable breakouts including Adam Sandler, Chris Farley and Chris Rock.

“Saul Goodman was funny, but Saul wasn’t aware of how he was funny. Usually he was funny to you, the audience, but he wasn’t trying, but he was utterly serious about what he was doing,” explained Odenkirk. “This guy is making jokes. He’s saying things that he knows are funny and meant to be funny. That’s really fun to play. That self-awareness, I love it and it’s one of the reasons I wanted to play this part.”

Bob Odenkirk, right, the star and executive producer of the AMC television series “Lucky Hank,” shares a laugh with actor Rhea Seehorn at the premiere of the series, Wednesday, March 15, 2023, at the London Hotel in West Hollywood, Calif. Odenkirk and Seehorn were fellow cast members in the AMC series “Better Call Saul.” (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

“Lucky Hank” is based on the novel “Straight Man” by Richard Russo. Co-creators and co-showrunners Paul Lieberstein of “The Office” and Aaron Zellman say the series takes a lot of liberties from the book.

“I’ve done a lot of adaptations,” said Zellman. “You realize an entire chapter of the book may be a moment in a scene. It’s just a different animal and you have to invent a lot more stuff.”

“Lucky Hank” also comes at a time where Odenkirk is still processing a 2021 massive heart attack on the set of “Better Call Saul.” His heart stopped for 18 minutes and Odenkirk came out of it feeling a mixture of energy and exhaustion, with no real memory of what happened.

“Two weeks later he was like, ‘All right, guys, when do we go out and pitch this thing?’ said Zellman.

“It’s also a sense of, like, ‘You might be making a terrible decision,’ laughed Lieberstein.

FILE – Bob Odenkirk, a cast member in the AMC television series “Lucky Hank,” poses for a portrait during the Winter Television Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 10, 2023. (Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP, File)

Odernkik says the heart attack “was as serious as you get before they put you in the ground” and it left him with similar questions about his own life that Hank has.

“I’m in it right now. I’m in it right now thinking about, ‘I’m 60. What do I want to do with the rest of my life? How do I want to live?’ That’s different from the last 10 years, which, you know, was about Saul Goodman and a lot of getting work done.”

He stars opposite Mireille Enos as his wife, Lily, who tends to balance out Hank’s cynicism but is also facing her own questions of self-identity and purpose. Enos is best-known for playing dark, serious roles like in “The Killing.”

Bob Odenkirk, the star and executive producer of the AMC television series “Lucky Hank,” poses at the premiere of the series, Wednesday, March 15, 2023, at the London Hotel in West Hollywood, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

“We had a lunch together in New York when she was considering playing this part,” recalled Odenkirk. “At the end I said, ‘You have a great smile. How come I’ve never seen it?’ She goes, ‘They never ask me to do light material.’ She’s always on the run, being chased…,it’s always such intense drama, which she’s amazing in, but she’s got a lightness and a spirit to her that I don’t think she’s had an opportunity to show. It’s really on display here as Lily.”

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