Photo: Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

Ryan Murphy

Ryan Murphyis speaking out about allegations that he neglected to contact the family members and friends ofJeffrey Dahmer’s victims while making the Netflix series about the serial killer’s life.

In an interview withThe Hollywood Reporteron Thursday, the prolific producer and director insisted that efforts were made to talk with the victim’s loved ones but that the team behindDahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Storynever heard back.

“It’s something that we researched for a very long time,” Murphy, 56, said. “And we, over the course of the three, three and a half years when we were really writing it, working on it, we reached out to 20, around 20 of the victims' families and friends trying to get input, trying to talk to people and not a single person responded to us in that process.”

He continued, “So we relied very, very heavily on our incredible group of researchers who… I don’t even know how they found a lot of this stuff. But it was just like a night and day effort to us trying to uncover the truth of these people.”

Netflix

Dahmer. Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. Evan Peters as Jeffrey Dahmer in episode 102 of Dahmer. Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. Cr. Courtesy Of Netflix © 2022

Shirley Hughes, the mother of Dahmer’s victim Tony Hughes, told theGuardianearlier this month that the show’s depiction of her son’s death and its aftermath “didn’t happen” how it is shown on screen. “I don’t see how they can do that,” the 85-year-old said. “I don’t see how they can use our names and put stuff out like that out there.”

Tony, who was deaf and could not speak, met Dahmer at a Milwaukee gay bar on May 24, 1991, according to theAssociated Press. Dahmer then took Hughes home, drugged him, and dismembered his body.

Both Murphy and Peters have previously said that an emphasis was placed on showing the victims' perspectives, but only Hughes' episode is fully realized in that way. “Something that we talked a lot in the making of it is we weren’t so much interested in Jeffrey Dahmer, the person, but what made him the monster that he became,” Murphy said. “We talked a lot about that… and we talked about it all the time. It’s really about white privilege. It’s about systemic racism. It’s about homophobia.”

Evan Peters in Monster.Courtesy Of Netflix

Dahmer. Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. Evan Peters as Jeffrey Dahmer in episode 105 of Dahmer. Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story.

But last month, Eric Perry, a cousin of victim Errol Lindsey, tweeted that the Murphy-helmed series is “retraumatizing” his family. “I’m not telling anyone what to watch, I know true crime media is huge rn, but if you’re actually curious about the victims, my family (the Isbell’s) are pissed about this show,” he posted onTwitter. “It’s retraumatizing over and over again, and for what? How many movies/shows/documentaries do we need?”

Perry later tweeted that his family was not notified about the project, writing, “My family found out when everyone else did.”

Rita Isbell, Lindsey’s sister, agreed that her family was not asked for input regarding the making of the series in anessay for Insider, and said watching the dramatic reenactment is still a very real trauma. “When I saw some of the show, it bothered me, especially when I saw myself — when I saw my name come across the screen and this lady saying verbatim exactly what I said,” she wrote.

She continued, “I was never contacted about the show. I feel like Netflix should’ve asked if we mind or how we felt about making it. They didn’t ask me anything. They just did it.”

Errol Lindsey.

Errol Lindsey

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Lindsey’s daughter, Tatiana Banks, who was born six months after he tragically died, has also spoken out about the series. “Honestly ever since that show’s been on I haven’t been able to sleep,” she toldInsider, adding that she has had nightmares for weeks. “I see Jeffrey Dahmer in my sleep.”

She also seconded others' assertions about not being consulted about the show. “I feel like they should have reached out because it’s people who are actually still grieving from that situation,” Banks said. “That chapter of my life was closed and they reopened it, basically.”

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Ryan Murphy

Despite the complaints, Murphy — who co-created the show with Ian Brennan — toldTHRthat the Netflix series was about humanizing the victims in the eyes of viewers.

“Something that we talked a lot in the making of it is we weren’t so much interested in Jeffrey Dahmer, the person, but what made him the monster that he became,” Murphy said. “We talked a lot about that…and we talked about it all the time. It’s really about white privilege. It’s about systemic racism. It’s about homophobia.”

“They weren’t just numbers. They weren’t just pictures on billboards and telephone poles. They were real people with loving families, breathing, living, hoping,” Barclay continued. “That’s what we wanted it to be about.”

All episodes ofDahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Storyare now streaming on Netflix.

source: people.com