
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


For Hotel Costiera, Jesse Williams was drawn to making "something that is global.” The new Prime Video series stars Williams as Daniel De Luca, a former Marine who returns home to Italy to work at a hotel, only to find himself tasked with finding the missing daughter of the hotel’s owner. While he has “no complaints” filming in Positano paradise, “I tried to stay relatively disciplined, but I ate a lot of pasta and bread,” Williams told Newsweek’s H. Alan Scott. Of the character, he related to his duality. "I don't really say I'm half anything," he notes. "That has to have found itself stewing in something Daniel DeLuca is dealing with." And this series represents a new phase for Williams, taking creative control as a producer. "It certainly feels good... to bet on you in the same way you're trying to bet on yourself.” After leaving his iconic role on Grey's Anatomy, his first move was a deliberate challenge, first going to Broadway and now this, raising the stakes even further by creating an original show. “It's not based on IP or something else. Like it's really trying to forge something new in a space.” But at the end of the day, it’s all about the process. "I love the collaboration that exists in our business."
Subscribe to my newsletter: https://www.newsweek.com/newsletter/the-culture/
Follow me: https://linktr.ee/halanscott
Subscribe to Newsweek’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/newsweek
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
By Newsweek4.9
5656 ratings
For Hotel Costiera, Jesse Williams was drawn to making "something that is global.” The new Prime Video series stars Williams as Daniel De Luca, a former Marine who returns home to Italy to work at a hotel, only to find himself tasked with finding the missing daughter of the hotel’s owner. While he has “no complaints” filming in Positano paradise, “I tried to stay relatively disciplined, but I ate a lot of pasta and bread,” Williams told Newsweek’s H. Alan Scott. Of the character, he related to his duality. "I don't really say I'm half anything," he notes. "That has to have found itself stewing in something Daniel DeLuca is dealing with." And this series represents a new phase for Williams, taking creative control as a producer. "It certainly feels good... to bet on you in the same way you're trying to bet on yourself.” After leaving his iconic role on Grey's Anatomy, his first move was a deliberate challenge, first going to Broadway and now this, raising the stakes even further by creating an original show. “It's not based on IP or something else. Like it's really trying to forge something new in a space.” But at the end of the day, it’s all about the process. "I love the collaboration that exists in our business."
Subscribe to my newsletter: https://www.newsweek.com/newsletter/the-culture/
Follow me: https://linktr.ee/halanscott
Subscribe to Newsweek’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/newsweek
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

91,163 Listeners

1,273 Listeners

9,115 Listeners

113,323 Listeners

69,583 Listeners

59,567 Listeners

4,834 Listeners

3,551 Listeners

58,462 Listeners

356 Listeners

10,990 Listeners

973 Listeners

2,895 Listeners

13,683 Listeners

442 Listeners

8 Listeners

20 Listeners

0 Listeners

1,679 Listeners

12,870 Listeners