I don't think I ever realized that the show wouldn't be a part of my life
anymore, because it it we filmed it over five years so it just I'm still like
when season four. Like I didn't, I never concluded it in my body.
To me it never ended.
Was there an episode where my character
had the most growth, or had an
"aha" moment.
So Elisabeth's character arc I feel like is
really interesting because you kind of see her from the very beginning going
through the emotions of being very stressed out I mean I think Elisabeth
for the most part was a very just like a very highly stressed her confidence was
always sort of low always questioning herself questioning her relationship
with Archibald. And so watching it again recently I
think I do think that Elisabeth grew unfortunately in a lot of ways I think
she went sort of downhill towards the end you know she ended up on pills at
one point because of her stress levels. And it's not really until the end the
very end of season 3 that you know she's sitting with Sophie and Vivian and she
seems like she's in a better place and they seemed to know that she's in a
better place. But I think it's also what I appreciate about Elisabeth's character
the truth in that she didn't have it all worked out and she was - up till the
very end still growing and still working on herself.
I'm on it.
She seems good now, right?
She's going out for the school play again.
No one else stands a chance.
How many places became Aunt Jodie's house?
Okay there was the house in Westchester. There was some kind of sketchy place in
New Jersey, across the George Washington Bridge. I like literally had to like get
off a bus like on the bridge kind of to get to that place and I screwed it up
and somebody had to come find me somewhere, oh my god.
If you wanted to
have a little fun go look through our episodes and pick out how many Aunt Jodie
episodes or you know Aunt Jodie locations there were, and I bet you have
somebody did a blueprint of the house it would absolutely make no sense.
Aunt Jodie's house was a bit of a wonderland because it was made up of I think
probably eight or nine different locations I mean not that many but it
felt like that. And one room was like super 70s modern the next room was like
1940s you know colonial like schizophrenic
home but it sort of added some interest like every time you're on set like 'oh so
this is the house now okay interesting'
Oh yeah Aunt Jodie's office was in this
like weird school it was really like a zombie apocalypse that school, like
there wasn't like nobody there was like like the rapture had happened and yet
there were like six of us at this empty school and we had to work pretty hard to
make this weird office into something that felt like an office in Aunt Jodie's
home. It was very sort of industria,l but art department pulled it off.
Aunt Jodie's house in White Plains was my favorite location as opposed to Aunt
Jodie's house in all the other places that Aunt Jodie's house was.
I've several favorite locations that we shot in one of my favorite locations
that we shot in because I didn't have to be in that scene was the hundred and
twenty-fifth Street subway station off the one
where every person and their cell phone and their dog and their mother
congregated just when we were filming and just decided to have all of the loud
conversations all at once and it was just it was Aster's phone call to Vivian
and and I think and I think that was one of like the four minutes where it was
extremely hot - it was like hot and it was noisy and it was crowded and nobody
cared that there was a camera or if they cared they were like 'hi we're here too' - it
was, there was a lot to contend with. That was one of my favorite ones because I
didn't have to actually try to act in it I just got to watch Nicole have to
contend with it.
Shouldn't you be on the train?
That depends?
On what? Aster: On what train
you're talking about?
The subway the one that takes you to school, remember school?
Well I'm bored with that particular ride there's this other train I
discovered it takes you further north.
Where are you?
I can be a commuter I
could hop on a train right now and be with you in 29 minutes.
Don't tempt me.
Why not?
Aster, go to school.
Boy you're bossy.
And you love it.
Yes I do.
And need it.
You know how close I was to being
on the 7:04?
I like thinking about it.
Aster: Yeah.
I'll talk to you later.
So I would say I miss three things about "Anyone But Me"
the most. I miss working consistently as consistently as we ever did we always
like are our shoots were kind of all over the place but I miss working with
the "Anyone But Me" family and that's in front of the camera and behind. We had
such a great crew and bond. And I yeah I miss working with everybody
consistently. I also specifically miss working with Rachael because Rachael and I
are somewhat of kindred spirits we're both like huge nerds and every time we
get together we have like so much fun and we giggle and talk nerdy things and
like we don't get to see each other that much in our normal lives and I miss being
around here on a consistent basis so there is that. And third, I miss I miss
playing Aster. It was the first role that I got to originate on a series and
someone who I got to follow through several years of her life and she is
like me in so many ways and and I admire her in a lot of ways that I wish I was
like I think. And I am I just I wonder what happened in her 20s and like where
she is now and I have like a whole fan fiction going in my head about that I'm
there there have been moments where I'm like I wonder if I could re-explore that?
I wonder if Susan and Tina would let me do like Aster spin off, but it would probably
mess up their storylines so I don't think I'm gonna do it. But no I, I
miss I miss playing her. She is a part of me you know and and I get nostalgic
for her, for sure.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét