Marsden Calls Reality-Comedy Hybrid Series a “Live Theater, High-Wire Act”
The actor landed the role of a lifetime on Freevee’s comedy series: Himself.

The comedy series centers on Ronald Gladden, an unsuspecting everyman who believes he’s a subject in a documentary examining the ins and outs of the court system in the United States. What he doesn’t know, however, is that the case for which he was selected as a juror is completely fake — and all of the people involved, from his fellow jurors to the judge, lawyers, plaintiff and defendant, are actually actors.
“This is unlike anything you’ve ever seen before,” Marsden, 49, says, describing the comedy as “a live theater, high-wire act” that felt like “a four-week-long improv show.” The stakes were high from the beginning. “You get one take,” says Marsden. “If he sees a hidden camera, or someone calls somebody by the wrong name, the whole thing is upended. That was really exciting to me, just from the perspective of [wondering], ‘Can we pull this off?’ “

The actor admits that he’s long wanted to do improvised comedy onscreen. “I love Christopher Guest’s This Is Spinal Tap and Waiting for Guffman,” says Marsden. “That kind of improvisational comedy where you have an outline, but a creative license to go in and play opposite people who can speak the same language. I was always looking for an opportunity like that.”
As production started, Marsden said his castmates and the crew slowly filled up Gladden’s “trust bank,” in which they spent hours filming court scenes “where we’re just listening to attorneys drone on.” Once it was clear that Gladden did believe everything was real and it was all being captured for a presumably uneventful documentary, that’s when everyone around him started to push the comedic moments. For Marsden, that meant pushing the limits of who he was as a public figure.
“It was so fun to play against the backdrop of one of the greatest equalizing experiences we have as Americans,” he says. “Nobody gives a shit who you are at jury duty — you’re just one of the rest of us.”
Once the truth was revealed to Gladden, Marsden dropped the facade — and the two have remained in touch after filming. “He said to me, ‘The fact that James Marsden was there made it more believable,’ ” says Marsden. “That was a nice compliment, that I anchored the believability: ‘I’m on jury duty with this actor, who’s kind of a prick.’ “