Genius (American TV series)
Genius is an American anthology period drama television series developed by Noah Pink and Kenneth Biller which premiered on April 25, 2017 on National Geographic.
The first season follows the life of Albert Einstein, from his early years, through his time as a patent clerk, to his later years as a physicist who developed the theory of relativity; the season is based on the 2007 book Einstein: His Life and Universe by Walter Isaacson. In April 2017, National Geographic renewed the series for a second season, which follows the life and artistry of Pablo Picasso and aired from April 24 to June 19, 2018. In April 2018, National Geographic renewed the series for a third season, which is set to follow the life of Aretha Franklin and will premiere later in 2020.
Synopsis
The first season chronicles two periods in the life of Albert Einstein: the first as a patent clerk struggling to gain a teaching position and doctorate, the second as a scientist respected for his development of the theory of relativity.The second season chronicles two periods in the life of Pablo Picasso: the first as a young man first discovering his talent, the second as a celebrated artist struggling with the rise of fascism and the price of fame.
Cast and characters
Season 1
Main
- Geoffrey Rush as Albert Einstein
- Samantha Colley as Mileva Marić
- Richard Topol as Fritz Haber
- Michael McElhatton as Philipp Lenard
- Emily Watson as Elsa Einstein
- Ralph Brown as Max Planck
Recurring
- Robert Lindsay as Hermann Einstein
- Claire Rushbrook as Pauline Einstein
- Helen Monks as Maja Einstein
- Edward Akrout as Laurent Debienne
- Nicholas Rowe as Jost Winteler
- Lucy Russell as Pauline Winteler
- Shannon Tarbet as Marie Winteler
- Alicia von Rittberg as Anna Winteler
- George Webster as Julius Winteler
- Henry Goodman as Walther Rathenau
- Alistair Petrie as Heinrich Weber
- Jon Fletcher as Marcel Grossmann
- Seth Gabel as Michele Besso
- Sally Dexter as elder Mileva Marić
- Nikola Đuričko as Leo Szilard
- David Dencik as Niels Bohr
- Predrag Bjelac as Miloš Marić
- Catherine McCormack as Marija Ružić–Marić
- Corrado Invernizzi as Pierre Curie
- Klára Issová as Marie Curie
- Charity Wakefield as Betty
- Jodhi May as Helen Dukas
- Zoe Telford as Clara Haber
- T. R. Knight as J. Edgar Hoover
- Vincent Kartheiser as Raymond H. Geist
- Eugene Simon as Eduard Einstein
- Ed Stoppard as Hans Albert Einstein
- Joseph Arkley as David Bohm
Season 2
Main
- Antonio Banderas as Pablo Picasso
- Clémence Poésy as Françoise Gilot
- Samantha Colley as Dora Maar
Recurring
- Poppy Delevingne as Marie-Thérèse Walter
- Robert Sheehan as Carlos Casagemas
- David Wilmot as José Ruiz y Blasco
- Jordi Mollà as Salvador Ruiz
- Edward Akrout as Laurent Debienne
- Charlie Carrick as Manuel Pallarès
- Sebastian Roché as Emile Gilot
- Adrian Schiller as Jaime Sabartés
- Will Keen as Paul Rosenberg
- Maria Jose Bavio as María Picasso y López
- Aisling Franciosi as Fernande Olivier
- Stéphane Caillard as Geneviève Aliquot
- Bruno Paviot as Marcel
- Elena Martinez as Dolores
- T. R. Knight as Max Jacob
- Seth Gabel as Guillaume Apollinaire
- Tracee Chimo as Gertrude Stein
- Johnny Flynn as Alain Cuny
- Kerr Logan as Georges Braque
- Tchéky Karyo as Henri Rousseau
- Jack Brett Anderson as Géry Pieret
- Eileen O'Higgins as Eva Gouel
- Gerran Howell as Karl-Heinz Wiegels
- Lucas Englander as Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler
- Simon Buret as Jean Cocteau
- Sofia Doniants as Olga Khokhlova
- Nicola Perot as Ubaldo Oppi
- Tom Cullen as Luc Simon
- Zachary Fall as Paulo Picasso
- Michael Gor as Sergei Diaghilev
- Margaux Chatelier as Geneviève Laporte
- Dimitri Leonidas as Kostas Axelos
- Ed Stoppard as Paul Éluard
- Vincent Londez as André Breton
- Valentina Bellè as Jacqueline Roque
- Emile Feltesse as Jean Renoir
- Sand Van Roy as Florelle
- Michael McElhatton as Jonas Salk
- Luis Soto as Eugenio Arias
- Andrew Buchan as Henri Matisse
Season 3
Main
- Cynthia Erivo as Aretha Franklin
- *Sanai Victoria as Little Re
- Courtney B. Vance as C. L. Franklin
- David Cross as Jerry Wexler
- Malcolm Barrett as Ted White
- Patrice Covington as Erma Franklin
- Kimberly Hébert Gregory as Ruth Bowen
- Rebecca Naomi Jones as Carolyn Franklin
Episodes
Season 1: ''Einstein'' (2017)
Season 2: ''Picasso'' (2018)
Production
Development
On April 28, 2016, it was announced that National Geographic had given the production a straight-to-series order, its first ever scripted series. The series was set to be based on the biography Einstein: His Life and Universe by Walter Isaacson and adapted by Noah Pink, who was also expected to co-executive produce. Executive producers were announced to include Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Francie Calfo, Gigi Pritzker, Rachel Shane, Sam Sokolow, and Jeffrey Cooney. Anna Culp was set to co-produce alongside Melissa Rucker. Ron Howard was expected to direct the first episode of the series. Production companies involved with the series were set to include Imagine TV, Fox 21 TV Studios, OddLot Entertainment and EUE/Sokolow.On April 19, 2017, National Geographic renewed the series for a second season. The subject of the second season was to have been announced during the finale of the first season, but was instead revealed to be Pablo Picasso the day after the finale, when the network and producers did not want to divert attention away from the season finale. The second season premiered on April 24, 2018.
On April 18, 2018, National Geographic renewed the series for a third season. The season was initially set to follow the life of writer Mary Shelley. Ken Biller is expected to return as showrunner, executive producer and writer. Also returning are executive producers Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Francie Calfo, Jeff Cooney, Sam Sokolow, Gigi Pritzker, and Rachel Shane. Anna Culp will return as producer. Returning production companies include Imagine TV, MWM Studios, and EUE/Sokolow. On February 10, 2019, it was announced that the subject of the third season would instead be American singer Aretha Franklin, known as "The Queen of Soul". The third season was slated to premiere on May 25, 2020 and air over four consecutive nights, but was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic and will air later in 2020.
Casting
Season 1
In August 2016, it was announced that Geoffrey Rush and Johnny Flynn would star in the series as Albert Einstein both as an old man and as a young adult, respectively. Additionally, it was reported that Emily Watson would also star in the series and that Michael McElhatton, Seth Gabel, Samantha Colley, Richard Topol, and Vincent Kartheiser had joined the cast. In November 2016, it was announced that Shannon Tarbet, Claire Rushbrook, and Robert Lindsay had been cast in recurring roles. On February 2, 2017, it was reported that T. R. Knight had been cast in the recurring role of J. Edgar Hoover.Season 2
On September 6, 2017, it was announced that Antonio Banderas would star in the second season as Pablo Picasso. On November 2, 2017, it was reported that Alex Rich would co-star in the series sharing the lead role of Picasso. It was further reported that Clémence Poésy, Robert Sheehan, Poppy Delevingne, Aisling Franciosi, and Sebastian Roché also joined the cast and that Samantha Colley, T. R. Knight, Seth Gabel, and Johnny Flynn were returning from season one in new roles.Season 3
On October 3, 2019, Cynthia Erivo was cast to play Aretha Franklin.Filming
Principal photography for season one took place in mid-2016 in Prague. Filming for season two began in November 2017 in Málaga and was expected to take place for over five months in various cities around the world, including Barcelona, Paris, and Budapest. Filming for the third season was set to commence in November 2019, for an early-2020 release. In March 2020, the production was shelved due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Reception
Critical reception
Season 1
The first season received mostly positive reviews. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series has an approval rating of 83%, based on 29 reviews. On Metacritic, the season had a score of 65 out of 100, based on 20 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".Science columnist Dennis Overbye of The New York Times described the series as a "tense binge-worthy psychological thriller full of political and romantic melodrama." Overbye further noted that Einstein himself, writing to his sister, wrote, "If everybody lived a life like mine, there would be no need for novels." According to Hillary Busis of Vanity Fair, the film shows, "... Einstein at work... peers into the über-genius's tumultuous love life ... his fraught emigration to the United States...". Busis quotes producer Ron Howard: "When you move past his scientific contributions, Albert's life story—what his youth was like, who his friends were, who his enemies were, his tumultuous love life—is a story people don't know... I think audiences are going to be riveted as we tell this ambitious and revealing human story behind Einstein's scientific brilliance."