Michael Fassbender goes into spy mode in new thriller series ‘The Agency’

‘I found the world … to be fascinating,’ two-time Oscar nominee says of show that delves into the world of espionage and covert agents

Michael Fassbender has gone undercover many times as an actor. But if he was asked to try his hand at espionage in real life, he readily admits he’d be a disaster.

“I would not be good,” the 47-year-old says with a sheepish grin in a video call from London. “ I think the stress would be too much. I’m too emotional a person to be able to navigate it correctly.”

Playing make-believe government agents operating in a shadowy world that he can leave behind when a director yells, “Cut!” is more his speed. “I can dive in and get little flavours of what these lives are without having to go the whole way,” Fassbender says chuckling.

Michael Fassbender and Jodie Turner Smith
Michael Fassbender and Jodie Turner-Smith in a scene from “The Agency.”Photo by Paramount+

He hasn’t done much TV since a 2001 role in Steven Spielberg’s Band of Brothers helped launch his career, but getting a chance to star in an espionage thriller that explores the sacrifice of covert work is exactly the type of work Fassbender relishes.

“I’d seen the original series with Alicia (Vikander), my wife. We watched it in 2020 and loved it. I found the characters to be super interesting and I found the world, and the people that operate in that world and go into that line of work, to be fascinating,” he says.

Fassbender had no idea that there were talks of a remake, but when the project came to him early this year he leapt at the chance to star in the revamp. “I read the scripts and loved them and loved this new take on it … Jez Butterworth and John-Henry respected the original, but wrote it in their style with their flair,” he says.

Michael Fassbender
Michael Fassbender as a covert agent, codename Martian, in “The Agency.”Photo by Paramount+

But The Agency expands its story beyond Martian and Samia as it follows a vast roster of secondary characters, including his handler, Naomi (played by Fassbender’s Steve Jobs and Alien: Covenant co-star Katherine Waterston), and Richard Gere and Jeffrey Wright as Bosko and Henry, two London-based agents higher up the CIA’s chain of command with their own secrets.

Wright, who was nominated for an Oscar earlier this year for his work in American Fiction, says he was drawn to the series because he grew up in Washington, D.C. “surrounded by that culture.”

“There’s a lot to be explored in terms of what’s driving someone like Henry to do what he does,” Wright, 58, says. “At times there are these moral ambiguities and ethical issues that he crosses, but he’s trying to do the best he can. For himself and in service of his country … I wanted to explore that and to see where he succeeds and where he fails.”

The Agency
Jeffrey Wright and Richard Gere in “The Agency.”Photo by Paramount+

Even though Fassbender found himself getting sucked into the undercover life, he maintains he’s exactly where he wants to be — playing a part and never getting too attached.

“I just couldn’t make the sacrifice of not seeing my children and my wife. Maybe I could have done that type of work as a younger man,” he says thinking aloud. “I didn’t really know what I wanted to do when I discovered acting at 17, 18. But before that, I was thinking, ‘What do I want to do?’ Journalism appealed to me. Being out in war zones or places in conflict to see what was going on there … but at this point in my life, I’m glad I got to do this instead.”

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