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Ivan Mbakop isn't sure Zenzo survived AMC's 'Parish' season finale

Rodney Ho, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Entertainment News

ATLANTA — Most actors embrace playing an unremitting bad guy because it’s fun.

Ivan Mbakop, in the juiciest role of his career, gets to indulge in evil power-mongering as a trigger-happy gangster named Zenzo from Zimbabwe dealing with challenges within his family and outside his family in AMC’s “Parish,” which just concluded its six-episode first season on AMC Sunday night.

The series, set in New Orleans, features Emmy nominated Giancarlo Esposito (”Breaking Bad,” “The Mandalorian”) as Gray, a broken and broke driver with a criminal past who reluctantly returns to his shadowy ways to pay the bills and eventually avenge the death of his teenage son. Mbakop’s character is not a fan of Parish ― or his more sophisticated, even-keeled younger brother, who goes by Horse and runs their very dirty human trafficking operation.

“In African culture, the father usually gives the elder brother the family business,” said Mbakop, who has lived in Atlanta since 2008, in a recent interview at a Starbucks in Smyrna. “But Zenzo is so brash, so abrasive, his father in South Africa allowed Horse to take over the business. There’s some serious resentment over that.”

When Horse brings outsider Parish into the fold, Zenzo is deeply suspicious. His revenge? He becomes a mole, feeding info to a rival human trafficking gang run by Bradley Whitford’s Anton to try to get his brother (and Parish) killed so he could take over.

“Horse brings someone in we don’t know,” Mbakop said. “Worst of all, he’s American. If you notice, our entire crew is from Zimbabwe. Who is this outsider?”

 

The season finale leaves a cliffhanger, which makes it unclear if Mbakop’s character survives as the siblings battle it out for supremacy and their father flies in from South Africa to resolve the family dispute.

Mbakop isn’t sure his character will see a second season, which AMC has not yet committed to. But he hopes so. “Zenzo is a lion,” he said. “He fights for a living.”

For Mbakop, he said he’s still learning the craft of acting. He would come to set on his days off to watch how the TV show was being made and observe Esposito. “I got a front-row seat to see a legend at work,” he said.

Esposito, he said, isn’t a Method actor who needs to stay in character to play his character. He recalls their first scene together, which is super tense. “I walk out. He walks out behind me,” he recalled. “We’re in the hallway. When they call cut, we burst out laughing like little kids.”

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©2024 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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