Continuing with the exploration of social theatre, Episode 3 focuses on family drama: the matriarch's birthday celebration.
The episode begins with a flashback of Simon being examined by a pediatrician. He has survived a kitchen fire completely unscathed. When questioned, his Mother overacts her relief -- clearly she knows Simon has powers, but keeps it hidden from the doctor, claiming a miracle. Simon also appears to lie about the cause being his fault for improperly operating a stove. His powers are an internal affair, for good reason.
Back to the present, we get an unsavory reflection of the US prison system and the budgetary philosophy that if there's a prison, it must be filled. This pretension (also pre-tension) sets the motivation for the DoDC's pursuit of Simon Williams with the presumption of guilt predicating the search for evidence to convict him.
Under threat of being returned to prison himself, Trevor sets up for his latest "act" with Simon by putting on the DoDC's wire. We see him rehearsing his opening "line" -- gratitude for being invited to the party -- in front of a mirror. Armed with foreknowledge, Trevor feigns surprise when Simon announces he needs to go to Pocoima for his mother's birthday, and gets a reluctant invitation to tag along -- as Simon's buffer.
Once again, the most sincere conversation between the two is when they quote lines of classic plays to each other. Simon talks about his ambition to be "everywhere", while Trevor affirms Simon's talent and that he has what it takes to succeed. Simon also agrees that he should stop seeking permission to be, instead of waiting on someone else's approval -- something he realizes he has been doing all his life.
Simon's new resolve is immediately undermined the moment he arrives at his mother's. Competing for Mummi's approval, Simon's more successful brother has made himself the head of the household. While he disparages Simon's career in acting, Eric is quite the performer with his big gestures, loud proclamations, and scripted lines everybody can repeat as an expected crowd participation refrain. He makes a dramatic flourish, revealing the hidden chopping board in the kitchen island he built to a pair of impressed guests. Simon, on the other hand, is not competing, and not acting when it comes to his relationship with Mummi.
Simon gets a further taste of disapproval from his peers as they chat about his job as an actor. They snigger about how three auditions and an acting class constitutes a whole working week for him, while commenting in Creole how shabby his clothes look, as if he doesn't understand the language he grew up with.
Trevor, plays his role striking conversations with the party guests. While he can't get much information from anyone, he completely breaks character when one auntie absolutely refuses to go according to script, preferring to talk about Eric over Simon. Although there's no subtitle, I assume she comments under her breath in Creole that Trevor is such a fake.
The party comes to a close with everyone singing the birthday song, a real-life ritual that is in fact an elaborate musical number with the celebrant taking centrestage for a camera/audience that is sometimes present, and sometimes invisible. Simon is part of the pageantry, but his expression shows that he knows how much of an act it all is.
Alone in the kitchen at last, Trevor gets to see what Simon's family is really like. Nice guy mask off, Eric forces Simon to confess that he lost the American Horror Story part Mummi was so proud of. Eric continues to undermine Simon in front of Mummi by reminding everyone that Simon's gift, and really his general upkeep were paid for by Eric. When Simon mentions his potential callback for the Wonder Man movie, Eric likens it to getting a second interview for a job he might not get. Trevor's comment that the value of an actor is not measured in money gets no response.
Trevor gets the irrefutable evidence the DoDC is looking for when the pressure gets too much for Simon. In his rage, Simon shatters the kitchen island Eric is so proud of, though he causes no harm to the people around him. It is still sufficient evidence to classify him as a danger to society and justification for locking him up.
On the drive back to LA, Simon is on the verge of giving up. At an improvised rest stop, Trevor drops the curtain on his act with Simon. Excusing himself with the need to pee, Trevor removes his wire and breaks it. I imagine the audio is not stored on the wire but recorded somewhere else, but this is Trevor saying I'm done -- damn the consequences. Time to get real.
Upon Trevor's return to the car, Simon has news: they both got callbacks. The episode closes on Simon's vindication.



