A Chat with Chipo Chung, AD: The Bible Continues' Mary Magdalene
EntertainmentObviously, I have razzed AD: SECOND HELPINGS OF BIBLE quite a bit. But if there’s one thing that’s worth highlighting about show, it’s the diverse cast. Hollywood’s still churning out absurd whitewashed spectacles like Exodus: Gods and Men, and yet AD, a network television miniseries, managed to assemble a more interesting ensemble.
That’s because (after making their miniseries The Bible) producers Mark Burnett and Roma Downey seem to have committed themselves to make a real effort to broaden their casting for the sequel. Their pick for Mary Magdalene: Chipo Chung. The Chinese-Zimbabwean actress has appeared on Doctor Who and Sherlock; she also popped up in Fortitude, a popular UK
TV show set in the Arctic that’s destined to be the next prestige drama nobody’ll shut up about. But she’s also an activist, speaking out about diversity in the film business and serving as a trustee for S.A.F.E., which tackles issues like HIV education through theater.
We chatted about her philanthropic work and her approach to one of the most fraught characters in Western history, Mary Magdalene. Also go-kart racing.
You’ve worked on a lot of different kinds of projects—Doctor Who, Fortitude. What drew you to this particular project? How’d you end up on AD?
Well, I love historical epics. As a kid, growing up, I loved Gone with the Wind. That was my favorite movie. And doing period dramas—I think that in fact was one of the first things I said to my agent when I came out of drama school, was I wanted to do British period dramas. But there aren’t a lot of people of color in those dramas. So I was thrilled to get this part, because it is really a sort of Hollywood classical style and seriously period in terms of the costume. And that attracted me.
And then, as far as the character is concerned, I love that she’s a representation of the divine feminine. In religions we often get perspectives from men, and I love the fact that she’s a woman who’s touched by God.
I was wondering—it’s an interesting project because it does seem to me it’s a traditional telling of the story and it’s from a very Christian perspective and traditionally women have been left out of that story or played a secondary role. Do you feel you got the creative freedom to play that role as the you described it?
What’s lovely about AD is that Mark Burnett and Roma Downey, they do a lot of consultation about the scripture stuff. But they’re actually very open and free about the parts that aren’t so specific in the Bible. So there’s a lot of creative license, and Mary Magdalene in the Bible, the most important moment for her is the scene of the resurrection, which is episode two. But after that, she’s not actually mentioned again. So they have a lot of freedom to explore the mythology of her—who was this woman who was working in a man’s world and how did she get around? So as the story develops, there’s more license with her than with the other characters, like Peter and Saul, who are very tracked in the Bible.
It starts off as a story that people know. But as it goes on, it’s actually a story people don’t know at all. And I think you’ll see it’s very developed. But it has its own style. To me, what was attractive about it—it’s about this group of activists living in a very tumultuous and dangerous world in which they’re persecuted. And that’s sort of first century but it’s also very twenty-first century. It’s not unfamiliar territory if you look at the world that we live in now. And that’s really fascinating. Because there are a lot of religious conflicts, political conflicts. For me it’s about working through really violent social change. They get thrown into prison a lot, and they live in an apartheid system. And I come from Zimbabwe, so you know, I look at South Africa when I was growing up and it’s not dissimilar to that.