Who plays todd in inventing anna

After garnering breakout attention for his role as Stewy Hosseini on creator Jesse Armstrong’s HBO drama, Succession, Arian Moayed has joined another high-profile series, Inventing Anna, creator Shonda Rhimes’ true-crime drama about Anna Delvey, the convicted fraudster popularly known as the Fake German Heiress. Moayed, the 41-year-old actor who was also recently seen in Love Life and Spider-Man: No Way Home, talks to ET about his scene-stealing performance as Delvey’s no-nonsense lawyer, Todd Spodek, and having to perform his big courtroom scenes in front of his real-life counterpart.

Initially hired when Delvey, portrayed here by Julia Garner, was first arrested for not paying for an outstanding hotel bill, Spodek is eventually tasked with defending her against multiple larceny charges related to her attempt to secure a $20 million loan for her elite club, the Anna Delvey Foundation (ADF), as well as sticking one of her friends with a $60,000 bill after failing to pay for their lavish trip to Morocco. 

Unlike members of New York society, the city’s high-end hotels and restaurants, or even the bank executives who fall under the guise of this German heiress, her lawyer was not enchanted by any of that. “Todd is the only one in the show who doesn’t give a f**k about the whole backstory of Anna Delvey,” Moayed says, noting that at one point he tells his client, “I’ve worked with a lot of f**king criminals and you are above average at best.”  

“So, Todd doesn’t really need to kiss her in any way. He needs to f**king win this thing,” the actor continues.

While audiences meet Spodek early on, after he’s deep into preparing for Delvey’s trial, it’s not until the final episode that they get to see him at work in the courtroom, where he’s determined to get his client off by portraying her as someone who never really had a chance at making it to the top. And this is when Moayed truly gets to shine. 

“I knew from the jump that basically the last episode would be the courtroom,” Moayed says, knowing that it would be the culmination of all this built-up tension surrounding Delvey, who no one has told off or put in her place up until this point. “No one was telling her off. No one was like, ‘Stop.’” 

The defense, not surprisingly, doesn’t align with Delvey’s allusions about herself and what she believes she’s achieved as a businesswoman. Yet, Spodek, knowing that it’s the only way to get her off, moves forward with it anyway. “At the end of the day, he was trying to make sure that he could get her out of there quickly,” Moayed says. 

In addition to some truly passionate, heart-to-heart moments shared between Moayed and Garner, the actor also gets to rip into some of the other characters, notably Rachel Williams (Katie Lowes), while they’re on the witness stand. And it was actually the day that Spodek was cross-examining Williams when Moayed’s real-life counterpart showed up for filming. 

“I was like, ‘Dude, you couldn’t come another f**king day?’” the actor recalls, explaining that the episode as a whole was so “Todd heavy, like every day was another massive scene.” But the lawyer showed up on that particular day and watched Moayed rip into Lowes. “In some of the takes that we see, he is sitting in the back pews.” 

In between takes, the actor went up to the lawyer, who also appears on-camera in the HBO docuseries Generation Hustle, to ask him what he thought of his performance. “His eyes bulged out of his head and you could tell that it was, like, eerily similar to what the vibe of it was,” Moayed recalls, while also noting the great lengths the series went to in order to accurately recreate the setting. “That room looked like that room. The guards looked like those guards.”

While Moayed got to meet Spodek during filming, the actor says he didn’t spend any time with him beforehand because his focus was on the courtroom transcripts provided to him by the Shondaland team ahead of time. “I didn’t even mean to, but I just started consuming the transcripts,” he says, explaining that’s where he gleaned much of the character.

“I started realizing how he objects, when he objects, when he interrupts, when he’s making jokes. I was just fascinated by the charisma of the actual Todd. So, that’s kind of the DNA of him,” he says. 

But the best part for Moayed, who instantly jumped at the chance to work with Rhimes, was the fun he had getting “to play with Shonda’s and the writing team’s magic.” While the actor latched on to some earlier moments that the character shared with his wife, played by Caitlin FitzGerald, or even Garner, he just loves how everything came together in the end.

“I’m so in love with that last episode, how it was written and edited together,” Moayed says. "I really am proud of that.”

Inventing Anna is now streaming on Netflix.

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Arian Moayed faced an exciting new challenge with his role in Netflix’s “Inventing Anna” — adapting to the specific rhythms of a Shonda Rhimes show. The actor plays Todd Spodek in the smash-hit limited series, the lawyer of notorious scammer Anna Delvey, a role that required pages and pages of dialogue. While some showrunners don’t mind a bit of deviation from the script, Rhimes prefers her actors to stick to the text. “You have to put on a different element to your brain,” says Moayed in an exclusive new interview for Gold Derby. “Almost Shakespearean, in a way.”

Moayed taking on the role happened to coincide with a play he was working on called “The Courtroom,” which reenacts courtroom transcripts. This helped him delve into those trial scenes in the final episode of “Inventing Anna,” allowing him to access Spodek’s specific flow. “I understood where Todd was doing an objection, I understood how he was objecting, explains Moayed. “I could also sense that he was the life of the room. He had a good charisma of the room and he cracked jokes sometimes and he also was tough and I thought he was just really good at what he did.” The actor also came to understand Spodek’s desire to be taken seriously. “Just like everyone in the show, he’s really trying to prove himself to everyone that he’s not a joke.”

One of Moayed’s biggest standout scenes comes in that final episode, where Spodek and Delvey get into an argument and he unleashes all frustrations on her. The scene was nine pages long in the script, with Moayed and Julia Garner, who plays Delvey, playing out the whole scene from beginning to end. “Every take, we did the entirety of the nine pages, just so we would get the flow of that,” reveals Moayed, heaping praise on Garner for the specific energy she brought to the role. “She’s a monster. She’s amazing at what she does.”

This TV season, Moayed also returned for the third season of “Succession” as his fan-favorite character Stewy. The actor admits that he never really knows what to expect heading into a season of the Emmy-winning HBO drama, which has drawn its own comparisons to Shakespeare. Despite that, Moayed has a firm grasp on his recurring character, who has only grown more powerful with each season. “If I’m gonna win by this much,” states Moayed, of Stewy’s mindset. “I’m gonna pick that side, always.”

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Julia Garner stars in Shonda Rhimes’ series about real-life fraudster Anna Delvey

Whether you know her as Anna Delvey or Anna Sorokin, chances are you’ve heard the story about the young woman who deployed her fake identity as a wealthy heiress to cheat New York socialites out of their money.

If you haven’t, that’s about to change thanks to Shonda Rhimes, the mega-producer behind hits like “Scandal,” “Bridgerton” and “Grey’s Anatomy.” Her latest show, “Inventing Anna,” stars Julia Garner as Delvey and Anna Chlumsky as the journalist writing about her story.

The nine-episode series, is now streaming on Netflix, is chock full of characters, many of whom are played by Shondaland regulars. Here’s a guide to the most important faces to keep track of as you watch.

Julia Garner as Anna Delvey

Starring as Anna Delvey/Anna Sorokin, Julia Garner is “Inventing Anna.” The “Ozark” actress plays the “fake heiress” who became famous for swindling the upper echelons of New York society out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. The series begins in the months leading up to her 2019 trial, during which journalist Vivian (Anna Chlumsky) takes an interest in her case. Anna uses her wit, breezy confidence and mysterious European accent to manipulate others to give her exactly what she wants.

Anna Chlumsky as Vivian

“Veep” alum Anna Chlumsky plays Vivian Kent, loosely based on New York Magazine journalist Jessica Pressler, whose article is the basis for “Inventing Anna.” At Manhattan magazine, Vivian is literally and figuratively backed into a corner thanks to her combative relationship with her editor and a professional scandal that’s still haunting her. Pregnant and desperate for a comeback, Vivian sees Anna’s story as her chance for redemption – and is willing to bend and break some rules to get the story.

Arian Moayed as Todd

Arian Moayed, recently seen in “Succession” and “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” plays Anna’s attorney Todd. Like Vivian, he’s looking to make a name for himself with Anna’s case. As a small-time lawyer, he’s the David to Assistant District Attorney Catherine McCaw’s (Rebecca Henderson) Goliath.

Anders Holm as Jack 

Anders Holm of “Workaholics” and “The Mindy Project” fame fills the role of Vivian’s husband Jack. Throughout the series, he tries to temper Vivian’s workaholic tendencies while preparing to welcome their first child. At the end of the day, he’s always there to support her, even accompanying her on a work trip to the Hamptons.

Laverne Cox as Kacey Duke 

Laverne Cox, who rose to fame as Sophia Burset in “Orange Is The New Black” and has consistently appeared in series and films since, co-stars as fitness mogul Kacey Duke. A former member of Anna’s inner circle, Kacey later realizes she wasn’t who she pretended to be.

Alexis Floyd as Neff

After Anna’s lies catch up to her, Neff is the only friend who comes to her defense and tries to get others to do the same. When Vivian first comes to the swanky hotel where she works, Neff lies about her relationship with Anna in order to protect her.

Katie Lowes as Rachel


One of many frequent Shonda Rhimes collaborators in the cast, “Scandal”s Katie Lowes plays Rachel, a Vanity Fair photo editor who Anna conned out of $60,000 on a vacation to Morocco. (The real Rachel DeLoache Williams wrote a book called “My Friend Anna” on the ordeal; you can read an excerpt detailing her thoughts on “Inventing Anna” here.)

Saamer Usmani as Chase Sikorski

Aspiring tech tycoon Chase features in the series early on, mostly appearing in flashbacks generated by Anna’s former stylist friend Val (James Cusati-Moyer). His tumultuous romantic relationship with Anna puts him on both sides of the scam, as Vivian suspects he may be part of it. Ultimately, he’s just another casualty in Anna’s ruthless climb to the top. He’s played by Saamer Usmani, recently seen in “Succession,” “What/If” and “Katy Keene.”

​​Marika Domińczyk


Played by Marika Domińczyk, Talia Mallay is a lifestyle guru and entrepreneur who is Vivian’s entry way into Anna’s world. She invites Vivian and her husband to stay at her beachfront mansion in the Hamptons while she recounts stories about traveling the world with Anna.

Kate Burton as Nora Radford 

“Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal” alum Kate Burton appears in a number of episodes of “Inventing Anna.” In it, she plays Nora Radford, a wealthy Manhattanite who invites Anna to live with her for a time and ultimately ends up as another one of her fraud victims.

Rebecca Henderson as Catherine McCaw

"Russian Doll" actress Rebecca Henderson plays Catherine McCaw, the assistant district attorney who is prosecuting Anna's case.

James Cusati-Moyer as Val


Actor James Cusati-Moyer plays Val, a friend of Nora's who becomes fast friends with Anna but learns the hard way that Anna's friendships come and go with the drop of a hat.