In a roundtable interview published by the Los Angeles Times on December 28, 2021, the newspaper spoke to Andrew Garfield, who opened up about the process he underwent while preparing for a role he’d never want to revisit: Jim Bakker in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.” As Garfield told the Times, “I hope to never play someone like Jim Bakker again because it was deeply painful having to tap into that.” He explained that playing Bakker, who went to prison for five years after scamming thousands of dollars from his followers, led Garfield to experience “a universal sense of fear of being unlovable” and that he’d be seen as “an empty, fraudulent, useless husk of a human being.” And in order to stay true to the role, Garfield, in a way, felt the same.
Despite the difficulties in playing Bakker, the actor spoke highly of another role which earned him praise this year: as Jonathan Larson, the gifted, doomed composer and lyricist in the biopic/musical “Tick, Tick…Boom!” As Garfield told the Times, “Jon Larson was close to the inevitable thing that’s chasing all of us, which is death … he somewhere knows he’s not got a lot of time here to sing his song.” In comparing his roles in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye” and “Tick, Tick…Boom!,” it says a lot that the latter — a role as complicated as they come — would be more of a relief than the former.