字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 who I love so much. with the newest resident in Bon Temps, Nathan Parsons. ( cheering, applause ) And then the beautiful Jessica, Deborah Ann Woll. ( cheering, applause ) Lafayette himself, Nelsan Ellis. ( cheering, applause ) ( woman shouts ) Thank you. Miss Arlene, Carrie Preston. ( cheering, applause ) And his first time at Comic-Con, Chris Bauer, Andy Bellefleur. ( cheering, applause ) And the now Buddhist Sarah Newlin, Anna Camp. ( cheering, applause ) ( laughs ) Executive producer Brian Buckner. ( cheering, applause ) Bauer: Dead man walkin'. Pam, Kristin Bauer van Straten. ( cheering, applause ) Man: I love you, Pam! - ( Stack chuckles ) - ( cheering, applause ) The dearly departed Tara Thornton, Rutina Wesley. ( cheering, applause ) Stack: Look at that jacket! That's such a cool-- I love that jacket. Sam Merlotte, Sam Trammell. ( cheering, applause ) Mr. Bill Compton, Stephen Moyer. ( cheering, applause ) And the lady who without this show wouldn't exist, Sookie Stackhouse, Anna Paquin. ( cheering, applause ) - Audience members: Go, season eight! - Okay. - ( laughs ) Season eight. - Season eight. This is crazy. Well, you guys, let's go back-- since this is maybe one of the last times you'll all be together onstage, what do you all remember from shooting the pilot? Did you immediately think, "This is something special"? Did you think, like, "I can't believe this-- I don't know if this is gonna go"? What did you guys think? What are your memories of that pilot? - Moyer: Can anybody remember seven years ago? - ( laughter ) There was that little lot-- I just remember that "The Suite Life of Zack & Cody" was shooting right next door and we had all these naked bloody people walking around. That's my memory. What about the rest of you guys? You have any memories? Anna, Stephen? - No? - I mean, yeah, but somebody else go first. - Stack: Okay. - I remember Merlotte's. - Stack: Yeah. - One of the only sets that was actually built at the time was his bar, and I remember walking around and looking at every single detail, every beautiful little-- there's loads of posters that you won't have seen of the Louisiana peach-eating competition or the best peach in Louisiana. - Paquin: I think it's Peach Festival. - Peach Festival. And all of these little posters up that were brought in by Ron and Suzuki Ingerslev and just thinking, "Wow, this is amazing, this-- the world that they're setting up." Trammell: Yeah, they literally have, like, cards for carpenters and plumbers from Louisiana, like real people tacked on the back of the bar. It's really detailed. It's pretty amazing. Rutina, do you have any memories? I love when Tara yells at that lady in the store. That's, like, my favorite-- I love that. Wesley: I think that's one of my favorite scenes of the whole series. I remember from the pilot for me just being terrified because it was my first job-- almost my first job out of school, and I was like, "Oh, my God, just please don't fire me. Please don't fire me." But I remember just having a lot of fun, learning a lot really quickly. And all these guys, of course, were so welcoming, so it was a lot of fun. And Nelsan, Lafayette was supposed to die originally and you-- I think Stephen told me the story that you-- I think you were, like, with Alan. You guys were, like, "We can't kill this guy off. He's too good." Woman: Yeah, he is! ( laughter, cheering ) Well, I'm glad he kept me with a job. ( laughing ) It's funny because what I remember most is I was like, "Do my shirts have to be this tight? Jesus, okay." Do you guys have-- over the course-- over seven years now, do you guys have favorite sort of, like, what-the-eff moments? Sort of fave-- I always think about the meat tree. I love the meat tree. I think the meat tree is just-- I like the idea of it. But, like, Stephen, do you-- the Lorena sex where you-- I'm just gonna go back to something 'cause you just made me think of it, Nelsan. There was a moment in the pilot that we talked about before, Tim-- there was a moment in the pilot where Nelsan is cooking grits or something. Was it, Nelsan? What were you cooking? Ellis: I think I was cooking burgers. Paquin: When you started humping the thing-- And he starts basically doing this... Ellis: Oh, six gear. That was my six gears. - What was it? - That was my six gears. ( Buckner laughs ) It's your six gears. And at which point he turns around and says, "Everybody love the pussy. John, even you. You scared of the pussy, right?" And there was this guy, this extra that was there just for the day that was Big John, as he became known, and because of that moment when Nelsan turned around and said, "Even Big John's scared of the pussy," even at that moment, Big John has been in every single one of our episodes ever since. - Because of him. - Stack: Oh. Because of Nelsan. I like that, I like that. Brian, there's been a lot more flashbacks, I think, this season, especially with Bill and Pam and Eric. Is that a conscious decision to show-- I mean, do you guys want to bring things full circle? Because it started with Bill and the Civil War stuff. Well, with Bill-- we've got a character who we turned into a vampire god. And he wasn't that nice when he was a vampire god, so, honestly, the thinking there was, as Bill tries to find his way back to himself, let's give him a little help by flashing back to his human life. And that's kind of the case across the boards with a lot of the flashbacks-- to give a little bit more context, you know. How Pam and Eric came to Shreveport in the first place. Just filling in holes that were out there and learning something else about these characters who we've already spent a lot of episodes with. So, yeah, for sure conscious, but we've always done flashbacks. There's just some purpose to them. - Stack: Right. - Yeah. I love-- my favorite flashback so far this year was the fact that Pam and Eric owned a video store franchise. Mm-hmm. Who came up with-- where'd that come from? Was that your idea? How did that even come to be? We wanted to do a flashback to how they came to Shreveport. There was, um-- we're like, it needs to be the worst punishment imaginable. Like, the worst punishment imaginable. And it was one of our writers, Craig Chester, who actually said, "A video store." And, yeah, so that's how we came to that. And, Kristin, how-- those must've been so fun to shoot. I mean, the '80s clothes-- I know you love your costumes as Pam, but those were, like, another level, I think. Was that a blast to shoot? Yeah, the '80s was another level and it was really fun to go back there and have even more hair, and it really is so brilliant that we end up in this fluorescently lit video store and then also that the throne, which Alex and I had been imagining he was carrying around since his Viking days and treasuring that it was his father's, you know, was found by Ginger in an alley. ( laughter ) It was amazing, and to see Ginger, how we met her and the transformation, and Alex-- you know, the slo-mo walk where he was dressed basically as Jason Priestly when Ginger first sees him and gives up her college career. Alex sort of did the slo-mo walk. He didn't have to, but he kind of actually in person did it and it was really-- it was an amazing day. Yeah? And, now, you were telling me earlier, you want-- there's a piece of Merlotte's-- not of Merlotte's, of Fangtasia you specifically want to take. Can you explain what-- that piece you'd like to keep? Well, you know, it was my last day in Fangtasia, I think I was the only one who realized it, and then it was the end of a long day and everybody was busy and trying to get out of there and I was trying to stay out of the way, ( voice breaks ) but take a moment-- uh-oh, Stephen, it's happening. And he's counting how many times today. 96. And I really was too overwhelmed 'cause I'm thinking, "Do I want to cherish that weird little Aunt Jemima skeleton tchotchke for the rest of my life? I don't know what I want." I took nothing, and then I realized that there's three paintings. So it's our executive producer Gregg Fienberg as a vampire, Clinton as a vampire, and Bush as a vampire. And-- Clinton and Bush, I'm good with either, but after this last episode, Republi...can, I think it should be Bush. I love that, I love that. Speaking of last days-- so, you guys have wrapped, you're done. What were your individual last days like? - I mean, do you-- - Oh, boy. It must've been just so surreal because it's been seven years. It's been a huge journey. So many life changes. - I mean, what... - ( cheering, applause ) And I'm assuming you all wrapped on different days, so what were those days like for you all? ( panel laughing ) Um, I remember my last day was very-- it was weird. I did my last close-up for the night, you know, and then it was just kinda like-- it was over. And then I kind of walked to the side, and Adina just came running up to me, and she just, like, grabbed me and we just hugged for a good five, 10 minutes and just cried. It just kind of hit me all at once. I didn't think it would hit me like that, but it just kind of hit me, and it was just-- it was beautiful and sad and also, like, it's on to new things, you know? Let me jump in real quickly and say that people have not seen the last of Rutina yet. When she talks about her last day-- you haven't seen her last day yet. 'Cause I know a lot of people are worried about that. ( cheering, applause ) Woll: I would say, in true "True Blood" fashion, my last day-- I wrapped at 4:00 AM out in the woods somewhere. Um, but I don't know. I thought that was kind of fitting and it was nice because we actually did wrap a bunch of people all together earlier that night, so we had a moment where at least half the cast, if not more, were together and could kind of say good-bye, - and I was just a couple hours later. - Buckner: It was 17. - It was, like, 17 people in one scene. - 17 people wrapped at once. And it was a beautiful scene. - Buckner: Yeah. - It was a beautiful scene. The dressing-- I thought it was appropriate... - Preston: Yeah. - ...that we all-- well, a lot of us wrapped out of that scene that day. Preston: I think I was the first to crumble. I looked over at Chris and I just-- the waterworks started going and then everybody else just-- we all just, you know, were in each other's arms and mourning, you know? But celebrating, too. Celebrating, too. But... it's been a profound time. I mean, we started crying at the table read for that episode, you know? So we've been crying for, like, months, at this point. Bauer: I'm still waiting for that cry, actually. - It's coming, it's coming. - Preston: It's gonna happen today. Stack: Yeah. I'm gonna make you cry by the end of this panel. - Okay, thank you. - Stack: Damn it. Be alive. What about you guys? Do you remember your last day? Um, ahem, I-- again, as Deborah Ann just said, for me it was 5:00 in the morning and been there all day and, you know, you guys are as much part of this as we are, in a way, because you invest in it when you're watching it from the very beginning, and what you don't see is the same camera operator, the same focus pullers, the same costume guys, the same sound guys-- all those people have been with us since the very beginning, and I said this morning, it's kind of almost like you're doing a-- seven years is like doing a doctorate in vampirism, you know, and it's all with the same people. And that is just extraordinary to be able to spend that much time and get to know people and love them as we do. And so for me, that last moment was being hit by saying good-bye to all of those guys because I knew I was gonna see everyone here, but saying good-bye to that lot was really tough. And they wheeled out a big cake with my-- do you remember that bottle that had "Missing Bill Compton" from years and years ago, one of the posters? Paquin: I think it was when you proposed and then got kidnapped. There you go, it was when I got kidnapped. There was just this giant cake and it was lovely and-- - On the TV show, not in real life. - What was that? On the TV show, not in real life. Anyway, it was amazing and just, you know-- just so grateful to have worked with so many extraordinary people, and this is the last time we'll all be together in this guise, and so we're still mourning the end of that, you know. Stack: What about you, Miss Paquin? Well, my last day was-- I mean, the last real day of shooting properly-- I think they had some visual effects shots to pick up the next day and we were out an hour and a half outside of LA, so the second that we wrapped, everyone had to pack their shit up and get out of there as fast as possible, basically, 'cause we're not on any of our main locations. And through some, I don't know, complete-- I know it wasn't personal, but there was no power when I got back to my trailer, so I couldn't find my stuff to get dressed. Stack: Wow, they had flicked off the lights. "Paquin's done, bye." But you have to understand, the second they call wrap, when you're, like, really in the middle of-- those boys who drive work, like, 24-hour days. They get on it immediately, so they were switching generators over or something, but the upshot was the exact moment I walked into my trailer, it was like, "Oh, we really are done." Stack: It's over. No power left. "'Cause I can't even find my clothes," which is a problem I've had on "True Blood" rather a lot. Yeah, that's a problem you have a lot on "True Blood." - That's-- - "Where are my clothes? Whoops, I just walked out of the kitchen naked. I don't know what's happening." Nathan, you joined the show this year. - Mm-hmm. - What's this been like? I mean, you know-- - ( cheering, applause ) - It-- yeah. It's been incredible. It's been an incredible year. You know, I don't have the same history and the same memories that all these guys have, but day one I felt right at home. Everyone was really great welcoming me in, and I was just thrilled to be a part of this show. And as brief as my time was on it, it was so much fun, and I couldn't ask to work with a better group of people. This cast and crew were incredible. - Top-notch. - Buckner: Yeah. ( cheering, applause ) Thank you, guys. Woll: Just so you know, Nathan and I went to school together. - Yeah, we did. - So it was really exciting to have him come on. It was, like, such a nice thing. Nathan and I went to school together, too. ( laughter ) You took me to school on that one. I'm glad they put Deborah Ann between you guys. I feel like I'm in the middle of something. No, please, it's all right. You're all right. A love sandwich. Brian, what was the decision-- was James always-- earlier, I was calling him the bisexual vampire. He's bisexual. Does it sound Southern? Bisexual. Did you guys make the decision early-- was it last season you decided to make him-- did you know that he would become a love interest for Lafayette? No. I mean, no. We were sort of flying by the seat of our pants with the vamp camp and everything like that and we knew that we needed to reinvigorate the show with some more love complications. We hit on that one pretty early on in our preproduction this year, and I think it's messy and awesome and-- and, you know, it's not done changing, it's not done evolving, so it's a really fun, soapy way to take us out of the series. Anna Camp-- there's too many Annas on this panel. Anna Camp, what do you think about Sarah-- I mean, I thought we had seen the last of Sarah last season, but now she's back and Buddhist and, you know, rockin' some brown hair. Totally rocking the brown hair. Stack: Were you excited to come back? I was very excited to come back. As I was saying earlier, last season reading the script when Jason had the gun under my throat, I thought my head was gonna get blown off, and I thought I kind of deserved it, to be honest. But, no, I've been very happy to be back. I had no clue that I was gonna come back, and I hope people-- I think I get what I deserve. Stack: Oh, interesting. So, we'll see. We'll see. - We'll see. - I had to explain it to her boyfriend when he saw the punishment on the set. I was like, "She deserves this. You need to know, Skylar." This is not me just being mean to her. - Stack: Gosh. - Camp: He was not happy. Stack: Wow, okay, so that sounds pretty brutal. Brian, maybe this is too geeky, but we are at Comic-Con-- I thought the scene when Sarah is running through the Republican fundraiser, the scene when Alex stops her, was that a direct homage to "Terminator 2"? 'Cause it reminded me a lot of "Terminator 2." It was not a direct homage to "Terminator 2," unless you ask the director, who may or may not have seen "Terminator 2" and forgotten that he was doing something he'd seen. I'm not sure, but, no, not a direct homage. Stack: I didn't know. Did anyone else-- I felt that-- maybe-- all right. Anyways. Alone. Kristin, so you apparently-- I was reading Ted Cruz is not happy with you all, apparently. van Straten: I know. Isn't this great? Based on that-- and Sarah Palin, too, right? I know, why not? She'll weigh in on anything. I don't know why she-- yeah. - ( laughter, cheering ) - Right? Stack: I feel like you guys don't run in the same circles, so I feel like maybe you won't run into her... Yeah, you know, being an animal rights person, when I first knew of her, she was just the wolf killer lady from Alaska, so it's sweet many, many years later that I've made her angry. ( laughter ) Apparently. I didn't-- it's your fault. Buckner: Mmm. But I did have fun doing it. ( laughter, cheering ) Sam, what can you say about Sam and Nicole? Because in this last episode, Sam and Nicole seem kind of on the rocks. It does not seem like she's enjoying Bon Temps, which-- it's a little cray-cray in that town. What's gonna happen with them? Can you tease anything? Well, you know, Sam's story has always-- has been about family for the last few years. And I can't say too much, but she has really sort of a very objective outside view on this town and how insane it is. I actually haven't seen that episode. I've seen the first four. But, you know, I'm-- we'll see how committed I am to her and how committed she is to staying or whatever. I can't say too much, but, yeah. Chris, are you surprised by Andy's evolution? Because he's-- it's really quite the transformation, I'd say, from just the sheriff-- the cranky sheriff into a family man, kind of. Yeah, yeah, that's really weird 'cause I was just sitting here thinking, "I hope he asks me if I'm surprised about Andy's evolution." ( cast laughing ) - Um... - Stack: Sorry. But we had a connection before this started, - so I'm not surprised. - Stack: I know, we did. We chatted. Yeah, it's the most gratifying-- besides everything that you guys have already all heard and the experience of working with these people, the most gratifying thing-- kind of slowly, like water over a stone, working on a character, to look back over your shoulder and see how much this character has grown-- basically he's become as lovable as I am in real life. ( cast laughs ) But wasn't at the beginning. And, you know, I don't do that on my own. - That comes from writers. - Stack: Yeah. What was it like-- do you have-- I'll ask you this question, then. Do you have other moments where you-- it's such a wild show. Witnessing the multiple fairy births must be one of those moments where you're like, "This is kind of a fun job. This is a pretty-- this is not a typical-- I'm not an accountant or anything. It's a pretty goofy job." Yeah, it's a pretty great job. I kind of feel that every day because, like, I always say, I've never had to lift anything heavy one day of work. And then you throw on things like that-- watching babies be born on a pool table. - It's pretty fun. - Stack: Yeah. Carrie, is Arlene-- it seems like we're setting up Arlene to have a new, hot vampire man in her life. - Is that correct? - Maybe. ( scattered cheers ) I mean, like I was saying earlier to you, I don't think you introduce a hot vampire on "True Blood" without doing something with him. - ( laughter, cheering ) - Um... I feel like this season I kind of arrived on "True Blood" because I got a vampire exploding in my crotch. So, that happened, and so I had blood all over me and I had to learn from all of these guys how to remove the blood from your body, which is shaving cream, b-t-dubs. I don't know if you guys know that, but, yeah. And then maybe there's some stuff coming up between Arlene and Keith that I've never had to do ever on camera before. - Stack: Oh, dear. - ( audience cheering ) And, Anna and Stephen, we talked about this before, but you guys have more scenes together this season. It feels like Bill and Sookie are sort of finding their way back to each other. Is that true? I don't know if we can say. - Buckner: Don't answer that. - Paquin: Bucky? I mean, is there hope for Bill and Sookie? Can they make it? They might. They're in each other's spheres for sure. I mean, yeah, it's better that I handle this one. They-- look... at the end of the day, it's a television show, right? This show started out and worked because of the chemistry they shared. They got married for us, for Christ's sake. - Stack: It's all for the show. - Moyer: As soon as this is over, boom. Meh. Camp: That's awesome. Buckner: Thanks for waiting. Paquin: We have a couple more hours. Don't worry. We have HFPA on Monday. We're not gonna-- But I certainly felt going into it that we had to come back to Bill and Sookie. How we're coming back to them, we're not telling you. But, um-- but... that's about it. That's about it. Yes, of course. Of course we've intentionally put these two back together onscreen. Stack: Have you guys liked playing opposite each other more? 'Cause I feel like there was a time where you guys-- especially when Bill was sort of crazy-Lilith-Bill, there was a lot of separation. Well, no, obviously I hate spending time with him. That's why I married him. Stack: Right, of course, it's terrible. 'Cause I want to torture myself. No, it's-- the way our show generally works, we're generally shooting two episodes almost at the same time for most of the time, so in seasons where Stephen and I have not had as many scenes, we're literally on, like, two different TV shows, like, not even-- maybe see each other briefly at work, so, yes, I actually really do enjoy getting to see my husband. Stack: What about you, Stephen? I feel incredibly lucky to have got to work with Anna at all, and so... getting to do any stuff is fantastic. And I have missed working with her, and as Anna said, sometimes we don't actually get to see each other at work, only at home. I mean, I-- I, as an actor on this show, have got to do most of my stuff with Anna and with Deborah Ann Woll, and that's an unbelievable embarrassment of riches. And this year, also, I've got to work with Chris Bauer, who I have enormous respect for, so I-- it's just incredible. We've got an unbelievable cast and I get to work with all these wonderful people. And thank you, Bucky, for giving me a couple of those scenes. Brian, when you-- like, for example, with Tara-- we've seen a lot of deaths this season on "True Blood" with Tara and Alcide. Is that a conversation-- do you wait and tell the actor that until the script is written? Or do you know that-- do you tell them at the beginning of the season? How do you sort of handle that? No, I think waiting at this point would be barbaric. Stack: Right, right. No, I mean, we had the conversation and, you know, we talked about why, and I think that it's hard to take the news, but, you know, we've had a show with this cast of many and we do a lot of teasing that there's gonna be consequences. And I think if a band of marauding, hungry vampires comes to town, something's gotta happen or you've kind of got no stakes in the world of your show. So, it's sad, I feel a bit like an executioner, but, you know-- but I think we handled it as best we could between us. I think it hurts. It's so funny-- this panel's a little bit sad, right? - Paquin: Last men standing. - Yeah. But, you know... there's loss for all of us, so it's, you know, bittersweet. Stack: Rutina, when you got the news, what did you think? Were you shocked? Were you prepared? Or were you kind of at peace with it? ( scoffs ) No, I wasn't prepared. I remember being like, "Oh, I'm the first. Okay." But I was okay with it. I was okay with it because I got a kick-ass fight. And I was really excited about that fight, so for me it was cool to see Tara go out fighting. I thought that was a good way to see her go out. So I was-- I mean, I was okay with it. I mean, after a while. I had to get over some stuff, but I was cool after a while. Buckner: And, again, her story wasn't over, you know. You get a certain amount of backlash going, "I can't believe they did it that way." But it's like, "Hold on, hold on. We may be telling a story you don't expect here." So, you know, it's hard to bite your tongue, but I bit it. How was the party-- in last week's episode they had that big celebration-- celebrating Alcide's life and Tara's. Was that fun to shoot? Because that was probably one of the first times you guys have all been in a room together for a while. You're always kind of separated. Was that a fun sequence? Paquin: Yes and absolutely not. It was the party that had little pieces of it in different locations on different days with different actors that actually ended up lasting for about three months. Stack: Oh, dear. Wait, why? Because of scheduling and who has to work when and where you're shooting things. Like, literally, we were still shooting pieces from the party probably a good month after we had started. - Stack: Oh, my gosh. - I mean, I was exaggerating with the three, but it was kind of weird to try to maintain-- Stack: Drunkenness. Or just, like, continuity. Bruckner: We can maintain drunkenness. Preston: But that was some of my favorite stuff. Some of my favorite stuff was in that episode 'cause I'm really partial to drunk Arlene. I love it when they give me stuff like that to do. And Anna and I-- before we would do the scene where we were doing shots, right at the beginning, we'd stand up and spin around and round and round and round and round so we can get really dizzy and stuff. And so you're doing that for, like, five hours, you start to feel really drunk. And then doing that scene with Keith and then having to go make tinkle and all that stuff. It was really fun. Who got the wildest at the wrap party? Who was the most fun at that party out of you guys? - Gregg Fienberg. - ( all laughing ) - van Straten: Was he? - Buckner: Yeah. van Straten: That's so cute. - Stack: Was he sloppy or was he-- - No, full of love. Kristin, you and Alex are very close. This must be-- I don't want you to get emotional, but this must be a very-- this must have been a really hard thing, to say good-bye. I remember Brian told me that your last scenes together are very intense, they're very emotional. Yeah, and I've been crying for, like, a year about when that day would come, and so as it got closer and closer, I started telling Alex, like-- and I had my last-- remember, we were having a scene and Stephen, at one point, said, "This is our last scene." And then I was like, "And with you and with you." There's so many lasts and they hit me at odd times, but with Alex-- that's the most significant relationship for me and for Pam and I thought he would be rock-solid Swede, but when I saw him crack-- and I kept telling him, "Let's just say, 'See you tomorrow,'" just like any other day. And I was like, "Oh, no, oh, no. See you tomorrow, see you tomorrow." And I just tried to get outta there. And you were there, and it was really sweet. And then there were many lasts and then I thought my last was the last and we didn't get part of it, and then there was another and, you know. So, on my last-last, because there are two crews running at the same time, almost everybody was on the lot and they orchestrated an incredibly sweet send-off. Man: Gonna miss you, Pam! - Thank you! - Audience members: We love you! - Thank you. - ( audience cheering ) Stack: I was wondering if you guys-- if you could play a different character on "True Blood," male or female, other than your own, who would you want to be? - Buckner: Sam? - Wesley: Sam, yeah. - Trammell: Me? Why me? - Buckner: Huh? Why would you want to be me? Why did I say your name? Yeah, why would you-- I'm just curious-- I was wondering if you wanted to do Alex for everybody. - Oh, no. No, no, no, no. - Camp: It's so good. - I thought you meant being me. - Moyer: Hang on a minute. - I thought Bucky wanted to be Sam. - Moyer: Ladies and gentlemen-- I'm not a character on "True Blood." Moyer: Ladies and gentlemen, every now and again - some people can't make it to a table read. - This-- Be quiet, you. Somebody can't make it to a table read and, inevitably, other actors end up playing those characters. And I'm gonna give you the back of this to read, Sam Trammell. - No, no, no. - Yes, I am. - Yes. - Yes, I am. It has to be Eric dialogue or it doesn't work. - I'm sick. - He's not very well. Come on. - I've got food poisoning. - He does-- he does Alex. Here's the deal. People make way bigger deal about this than it is, A. But I do end up reading Alex because, for some reason, he's not at the table reads sometimes. But also you guys don't have scenes together, so it doesn't-- - Oh, right, right. - Do you know what I mean? Would anybody like to hear Sam Trammell do Alexander Skarsgard? ( cheering, applause ) I really-- I'm not at all, um-- ( as Skarsgard ) "Please be aware that many members of your audience may be under the age of 18." ( normal voice ) I don't-- it's-- it's-- - ( clapping ) - Woll: He's so good. I'll do more later. I'll do more-- how about that? - I'm not prepared. - Moyer: I'm gonna give him something to study and then he'll do something for us later. He's in so much trouble right now. But I would-- but my answer would be Eric. - I would like to-- - Stack: You would like to be Eric. 'Cause I feel like I've been Eric a lot at table reads. I feel like you say "Pamela" like Alex. Like, that's one of the words at the table read where I'm like, "Oh!" ( as Skarsgard ) Pamela. Pamela-- that was it. You have the intonation. Stack: What about the rest of you guys? Who would you want to be? Is there another character you respond to? - Paquin: Russell Edgington. - Stack: Mmm, interesting. Amazing. Stack: Why Russell? I mean, do I need to explain? - Stack: I guess not. - Does that not speak for itself? And also while we're at it, can I please be Denis O'Hare? Stack: Okay, yeah, totally. Denis O'Hare, amazing. Bauer: I feel like it's really obvious that Andy Bellefleur wants to be Jason Stackhouse. ( audience cheering ) Who wouldn't? van Straten: I know. That's my pick. Stack: What about the rest of you guys? Nelsan? Is there anyone else you'd wanna be? - Pam. - Stack: Yeah. ( laughter ) van Straten: There is some crossover between our characters. Our eyelashes... Stack: The wardrobe wouldn't have to change that much. Right? - Stack: At least the accessories. - Yeah. Stack: What about-- Deborah Ann, what about you? Um, maybe Sarah Newlin. - It's such a fantastic character... - Camp: Thanks. but I feel like part of the reason I say that is 'cause Anna's so fantastic at it and I would not be as fantastic at it. Camp: Aw, thanks, Deb. - Yeah. - Thank you. You're, like, the only person who would wanna-- - What? - And I would be you. Yay, aw. We should do that. We should switch. Hey, spin-off, you know? - Hey, hey. - Stack: Oh, yeah. Oh, I'd love that. Rutina, what about you? Wesley: I would be Pam 'cause she has the best wardrobe, the best lines, the best everything. There's some good lines, I gotta say. I'd probably pick Pam, too. ( all laugh ) Thanks to this guy, these lines are amazing they hand me. Stack: Carrie, what about you? Would you want to be anyone else besides Arlene? Um, well, I pretty much love Arlene, but I wouldn't mind being Sam. I wouldn't mind being a shape-shifter. - Stack: Yeah? - Yeah. Stack: You'd have to be naked a lot, though. - Huh? - Stack: You'd have to be naked a lot. True, can I change my answer? - Yes. - Okay. Um, Lafayette, yeah. - ( cheering, applause ) - Yeah. ( laughter ) van Straten: He did that thing. I flicked my hair. My imaginary hair. - Stack: Nathan, what about you? - I'd say Lafayette, too. - Yeah? Wow. - He's the best. He's-- there we go. There it is. I just wanted to see that again. Can you do it? I can't do it as well. I can't. You know, there's been all this talk online about a "True Blood" musical potentially happening. Would you all ever want to do that? - van Straten: Oh, boy. - Camp: Yes. Anna would, yes. I feel like Sarah Newlin could have, like, an amazing gospel religious number at the end of Act One and then she gets attacked, and then we wouldn't know until we came back for Act Two what happened to her. Stack: I would like a choreographed Sarah Newlin stabbing them with a shoe, maybe some kind of chase sequence. Oh, I'd do that. Awesome. Paquin: Can we just get Anna to do that for real for us, - like all the time? - Stack: Oh, my gosh. I know. - Just have an Anna show? - Let me know. Can you improv, like, a Sarah Newlin gospel song? Oh. Wesley: Oh, come on, girl. ♪ Mi, mi, mi, mi, mi. ♪ No, I don't think so. - Stack: I love that. - Thank you. Stack: What about the rest of you guys? Would you want to do a musical ever? I'd need a lot of lessons and a couple things. - ( laughter ) - Camp: "A couple of things." Singing and dancing, first of all. Preston: Yeah, I picture Arlene as some Reba McEntire something, or like Flo from "Alice," you know? ♪ Standin' at the bar... ♪ You know, like, doing, like, something-- ♪ What can I get you? ♪ You know. ( laughter ) ♪ Y'all hush up now. ♪ van Straten: Rutina, you would rock it. There is a video on someone's iPhone somewhere of you and I performing all of "Grease" one night in Fangtasia. - Yeah. - You would rock. "Summer Lovin'," right? Is that what we were singing? - Yeah. - "Summer Lovin'." Stack: Rutina, would you do a musical? Yeah, I would definitely. I love to dance and sing. Musicals are actually some of my favorite things to do, so I would definitely do it. I think it'd be a lot of fun, yeah. Stack: And, Stephen, we know you can sing, so would you want to revisit Bill Compton musically? Um, I-- I... ( laughs ) Uh, Nathan Barr, who does our amazing music on our show, came to me about two years ago with this idea, and so I went to his house and basically laid down a couple of tracks playing Bill... and we recorded the songs for him to give to Charlaine and Alan, and-- Is this a toad offense that's happening with the phone? - Say that again? - Is this a toad? Oh, a toad-worthy offense? - Just out of curiosity. - Is somebody's phone going off? Do we have the toad of shame here? There is no toad of shame here. Sorry, sorry. Continue. Stack: We'll explain what "toad of shame" is after this. - Okay. - So, anyway, we recorded this stuff and it was for Nathan to take to Alan and Charlaine and see if it would be something that they would be interested in doing and they signed off on it, but that was the only thing that I was ever going to do for it because the idea of-- I love Bill, but I'm really excited about moving on and maybe singing something else. Stack: Anna, you mentioned the toad of shame, which is a thing on set. What is that? Explain that. Okay, so, a couple years ago-- who was it that found the toad? - Manuel. - Okay. ...found a-- I kid you not-- dead, completely pressed, flattened toad on the ground where we shoot all of our exteriors up in Malibu. And so they did what any rational and normal person would do-- they laminated it and made it into a necklace. ( laughter ) Which became the toad of shame, and the toad of shame is awarded for lateness, phones going off, breaking other people's shit, you know, or just generally if we kind of gang up on you. But the cell phones going off in the middle of takes is kind of a big one. So, I just feel compelled to want to award a toad to anyone whose phone goes off ever now. Except if I started yelling, "Toad, toad, toad," in public, people are gonna think I'm insane. Well, sorry, more insane. Stack: Who got the toad the most in this group? Who was awarded it the most? - Trammell: I only got it once. - Camp: I never got the toad. I got the toad twice in my last week. But I never had it the rest of the seven years. I forgot. Like, I put my alarm on my phone to bid on some plates on eBay - and... - ( laughter ) ...and I was in the middle of my close-up, it went off, and then I got up, ran, bid, got them, went back, wore the toad, and then continued with my job. Has anyone else gotten the toad? Paquin: Deborah asked for the toad. Woll: I had to request the toad. They weren't gonna give it to me, but I totally did a toad-worthy offense, so I had to beg them to give it to me. Stack: What was it? What was your toad-worthy offense? I knocked over a prop beer bottle and got, like, sticky stuff all over the floor. And everyone was like, "Oh, it's okay. Don't worry." And I was like, "I'm not made of glass. - Give me the fuckin' toad." - ( laughter ) Sorry, sorry, ladies and gentlemen at home. I'll take the toad for that as well. Moyer: Yeah, that's a toad-worthy offense. There is a wall-- the wall of shame at work, and there's probably about 250 pictures, because every time that you had to put the toad on... - They take a picture of you. - ...they take a picture of you wearing the toad. And then you have to wear the toad until the next person does something toad-worthy. And there is a wall of about 250 pictures. And I think-- I think Weezie was the winner. - Woll: No, Lenny. - Lenny. - Oh, yeah, Lenny. - Lenny, our second team. Was it Lenny? Woll: Manuel dressed up like a toad, in a giant toad outfit and presented it to him out at Greer. - van Straten: Oh, my gosh! - There was a statue and everything. - It was beautiful. - Moyer: Fantastic. - I was jealous. - van Straten: This is what we'll miss. Stack: So, if you guys have questions-- we're gonna start taking questions from the audience in about five minutes, so start lining up if you wanna ask a question. You guys have been a Comic-Con mainstay now for seven years. Do you have specific memories of Comic-Con? Are there things that stick out in your mind of this experience? 'Cause you guys are like rock stars here, so do you remember one moment in particular that stands out? - Man: I love you, Anna! - Paquin: Thanks. Preston: Well, I'm a virgin. This is my first time here, so this is my favorite moment right here. ( cheering, applause ) Paquin: I gotta say, before the show had even aired for the first season, we did a panel here at Comic-Con, and I didn't know that anybody knew we existed, but Charlaine has a very, very loyal following, and Alan Ball has a very loyal following, and we packed a giant room. I was like, "Who-- how do people even know what this is?" I found that to be kind of amazing. And they were just as warm and enthusiastic as once we actually had the show out on the air and people could even watch it. So I found that kind of amazing. Stack: What about the rest of you guys? Stephen, do you have a memory of Comic-Con? A particular one? Um, I actually-- I mean, that one as well-- the same as Anna's was realizing that we were onto something kind of-- that this could be gigantic when the hall was already full before we had aired, but one of my favorites is running into Deborah-- - Deborah Ann dressed as... - Hit Girl. - Woll: Axe Cop. - Hit Girl-- no, it was Hit Girl, wasn't it? - ( Woll laughs ) - Who is it from "Kick Ass"? Oh, Hit Girl, yeah. That was a few years ago. She was dressed-- she walks the floor in costume because she loves this stuff. - Stack: Oh, wow. - ( cheering, applause ) And I love waiting to see what she's gonna be wearing each year. - Paquin: She didn't do it this year. - I don't have time this year. I was gonna come as Crow from "Mystery Science Theater," but I couldn't finish my costume. Wait, Deborah Ann, are you a fangirl? Do you have obsessions-- like, are you a "Game of Thrones" person-- Yeah, I play Dungeons and Dragons. ( audience cheering ) Yeah, I'm a big "Mystery Science Theater" fan and I read comic books, and, yeah. van Straten: She owns a glue gun. Paquin: What? - Moyer: A what? - A glue gun. She makes her own costumes. Last year she came, we were like, "Where's your costume?" She was like, "My glue gun broke." Woll: I couldn't find my glue gun. Like, that's for real. Moyer: Deborah Ann actually made an entire wall of shelves for her comic book collection. Well, for my boyfriend's comic book collection. - Moyer: There you go. - But I did, I made him shelves. van Straten: She's awesome. Not with glue. With, like, screws and things. Stack: This is very surprising. I feel like-- Paquin: I just want to know, where did you get the Cousin It costume? 'Cause that was pretty badass. - van Straten: Yeah, she won-- - I was on Forbes' "Best Costumes at Comic-Con." They had no idea it was me. It was so cool. When I was Cousin It. I was happier than I've ever been in my life. Stack: My God, I love this. I feel like you're coming out at Comic-Con as a comic book fan. This is very emotional. It's really wonderful. So, there's only about five episodes left of this final season. Brian, what can you-- can you tease, can you say to people what we'll see? Any kind of tease? They'll see the tease, right? Stack: Oh, they will see a tease. Yes, yes, yes. - Well, I was just gonna-- you know. - Yeah. - Stack: Okay, all right. - Yeah. I mean, it's not done changing. It's not gonna slow down any. It's just-- there's a bit more of a focus on romance. We put the last season's issue to rest early on purpose. And it's really emotional and satisfying. I think you guys love these characters, and we felt like we had to land them in places where you were gonna be okay with not getting them anymore. So that's the sort of focus. All right, cool. Let's take questions from the audience. Let's go to this zombie lady. van Straten: Wow, that's awesome. Thank you. I just want to say I'm very sad to see you guys go, but thank you, all of you, for taking the characters and embracing them and making them amazing and making us love you guys. - van Straten: Thank you. - Trammell: Thank you. ( cheering, applause ) I would like to know, is there anything-- fan fiction or from the fans-- that you guys took and made a part of your characters? Ellis: I did, yes. Fans were giving me scarves, which I took them and wore them on the show. I gave them to the costume designer and she incorporated them in my costumes. - van Straten: Oh, yeah. - ( cheering, applause ) van Straten: I got-- I got given jewelry that ended up on Pam, I think maybe here. Some amazing billion-cross necklace that I wore. Oh, cool. All right, next question. Hi, my name is Cici Cama and my question's for all of you. Being it's the final season, is there anything from the set or maybe wardrobe or maybe the toad some of you have taken home for a personal token? Camp: I got to take my wig. So I've got my brown hair in case I ever need it. But it's kind of sad. It's kind of a sad wig. Stack: It's a sad wig. Buckner: I took Sookie's porch swing. The one that hangs in that tree opposite, you know, the house. We didn't do a ton of scenes in them, but for me it was always a place I would come and sit between takes and stuff like that. - That was-- yeah. - Stack: That's pretty cool. van Straten: Yeah, that's neat. Moyer: I-- in Merlotte's there's two dead deer feet... that have been there since the beginning, and then during the Mardi Gras-- I think it was season four or five? During Mardi Gras that would have been happening in New Orleans, they suddenly got all the Mardi Gras beads around them, wrapped around these deer feet, and I managed to snag those from Merlotte's. And I strongly suspect they're gonna end up in our house. ( laughter ) Ellis: HBO should probably sue me 'cause I've been stealing from them for seven years. ( laughter ) I've been-- I would go home and forget that I have Lafayette necklace on, rings, underwear, his socks, his T-shirts, and then for some reason, I just never brought it back. ( laughter ) - Stack: Anyone else take anything? - Parsons: I took my fangs. - Woll: Fangs. - Moyer: All the vampires have got their fangs, right? Yeah. And they wouldn't fit anyone else. - Moyer: Yep. - van Straten: Yeah. Rutina, did you take anything? I took some fangs and a couple of human clothes-- human Tara clothes. Like those cutoff jean shorts that I wore all first season. I'm gonna put them in a little shadow box in my woman cave. Sam, did you take anything? Well, I have a couple boxes of Merlotte's matches. That and, you know, my boots. I took those. Here's what I really want, you guys, and maybe you can help me. I really want the big wooden menu over Merlotte's and Warner Bros took it. I'm looking at you, Brian. I don't know why. But that's what I-- I really want that, but they're not gonna give it to me. I think they're actually archiving-- Paquin: A lot of the stuff. Yeah, they're gonna archive Merlotte's and Fangtasia. - van Straten: Mm-hmm. - Yeah. All right, next question. Hi, thank you so much for making such a great show. You're all amazing. My question's for the cast. Was there a scene that when you first read it was particularly moving or exciting, and what was it like to record that scene? Parsons: Well, for me, it was my very first day. The scene that Nelsan and I had in the first episode. It was a great story, this great monologue. Like I said, that was my very first day on set ever and I got to work with that man right there, and Steve was directing, and that was really, really awesome. I think that turned out well. There's a scene last year, I think, right after Jessica had killed the fairy girls, and I remember being really scared about that and scared of going there, but I get all high on the fairy blood and I run over to Jason's, and I remember reading through that scene there and there's one moment where she's-- I'm feeling so low-- like, how could anyone ever love me? And I look at him and I ask him, "Did you ever love me?" And he said, "Yes." And I said, "What?" You know, "What could you possibly love about me?" And he says, "I guess everything." And I remember, like, breaking down into tears reading that and thinking, "This is great. This is the kind of love that I think should be told." That kind of thing, and I want to give a shout-out to Ryan 'cause he's not here, and he's just one of the most exceptional actors to work with. ( cheering, applause ) And just every day working with him was a pleasure, and so shooting it was as moving as it was to read it. I think every scene I worked with Deborah and Nathan was particularly moving for me this season. It was one of the first times that I got to work with the dynamic Miss D over here, and she's a marvelous actress. And, Nathan, well, y'all see his work. I think, for me, the scene last season when Terry gets killed was really powerful on the page, even in the table read when we were just reading through it. It was very emotional for me and for everyone in the room because we were all so attached to Todd Lowe, the amazing Todd Lowe, who played Terry. - Yeah, give it up. Give it up. - ( cheering, applause ) And so, you know, to then go and shoot that scene and live in the skin of Arlene at that moment, that profound moment, was just one of those magical, scary, sad, messy, beautiful days that you love to have as an actor. And, you know, holding him in my arms, it really did feel like someone was dying, and it was, you know, that character. It was so fun for me when he got to come back this season and we got to have that scene together. I just-- you know, one of the things that happens in this job is you get to do stuff that sometimes parallels what's happened to you or didn't happen to you, but means a lot, so this year when I got to propose to Holly, I told my real wife, who I've been married to for almost 20 years, I said, "Sweetheart, you know that pathetic proposal that I"-- when I proposed to my real wife, it made Woody Allen look like Sylvester Stallone. It was unconfident. So I told her, "I'm gonna shoot this scene and let's watch it together, and you pretend like you're that person on TV who I'm talking to and we'll be all good." And, you know, she bought it. So, thank you. I don't know if I actually have had many real moving scenes because Sarah Newlin lives in such a weird part of the world. But I think that my final scene that I shot this season definitely pushed me to a place. She's at her lowest, so that was a hard one for me. So, we'll see. I wasn't in any scenes. Yes, you were. All of them. Um, the most moving are the most recent that we haven't seen yet and some that we've seen, but in past years when I read the scene where Eric releases Pam, ( voice breaks ) I just-- no. - And then I started, of course, crying. - Crying. ( laughter ) Paquin: Why don't we give her tissues every Comic-Con now? - We should know by now. - Here, here, here. You're good? And then when we were at the table read and then in rehearsal, and then when the camera's on my back. And they kept saying, "Save it." I'm like, "I can't." Yeah, that was very moving for me and Pam. For me, I would have to say when I was shot in the head at the end of the fourth season. That was an incredibly moving scene, and I remember just being there with Anna and Nelsan. Like, for me, I had a hard time. I was like, "I have to keep it together," because just how they were in the scene, they were so amazingly beautiful that I just-- I just thought it was great. So that's-- yeah. Sorry. You know, for me it's-- I mean, really, by far-- the scene that I was really most moved in is one that you haven't seen yet, that I did with Carrie Preston at our bar. It was very emotional, and Carrie is such a great actress and I don't get to work with her all that often. Every once in a while. But it was great to have a scene with her that was really just two people talking, and we just got deep. So, sorry, you haven't seen it yet. But that one is the one for me. I've got a kind of similar answer, in a way. I've got some stuff coming in a similar vein, but if I was to pick-- I've had so many deep emotional roots that he's gone through, but I do remember when Bill returns as a vampire to his human house and finds his son has died of smallpox and his wife is there, and my son was probably 10 at the time, which was kind of the same age as the kid. And he was in London and I was doing that scene. And Brigette, our makeup artist who's been with us since the beginning, her son Strider was in the box. And I'm pretty close to Strider, and so that was really intense. And then Lorena makes Bill tell his wife to forget him. So he glamors her into forgetting him and what existed between them, and Bill's had to do that a couple of times, and those glamoring sequences with Anna as well, they're really intense because you're basically forgiving somebody-- you're letting them go, but you're also letting go a part of yourself. You're telling that person that you didn't exist, in a way. And they're really emotional to play. Rutina having her head blown off was definitely pretty high up on my list, too. I think one of the, I guess, convenient things about really loving your coworkers on a show where people die a lot is that when they kill off people you love, it's not very hard to feel actual grief and pain, and having someone who I love as dearly as I love Rutina bleeding out in my lap was... pretty damn emotional. And, you know, obviously-- 'cause that's where the season ends and we don't know at that point exactly how it's gonna turn out. No, that was a pretty big one. Stack: Next question? My question is for the entire cast. First of all, I want to say you guys have been my summer family. And you guys-- thank you for all the amazing acting for all these seasons. You guys are all just so great. But my question is what all is your favorite season? Hmm. Favorite season for me is this one. ( laughter ) To be on it. Um... I don't know. That's really hard to answer. I've loved so much of what Jessica's done. Um, maybe four or six. I think those were the hardest seasons for Jessica. She went through so much, so that's the most fun for me. So, yeah, four or six. This is my favorite season. That's so hard. I guess-- I have a real fondness for season one just because we were all so new, the world was new, we were all exploring it and finding it and discovering it. So I'm fond of that one. But I guess six, probably, was my favorite as an actor, I think. This season for me, for sure. It's a close tie between this season and last season because I got to kill a woman with a high heel last season and that was so much fun to do. This was for the actors. I'm not doing this. ( laughs ) Camera nervously moved on. This season has been really amazing, and just as a side note or a close second, the rotting face was really fun and it was really amazing for me-- it was the first time I got my own storyline, but this season is right here, still. For me that would be season five when I was turned into a vampire and got to work with the fabulous Kristin. - That was amazing. - That was a lot of fun. - Yeah? - Yeah.
A2 初級 真血》第七季:漫威影業專題討論會(HBO (True Blood Season 7: Comic-Con Panel (HBO)) 464 6 lily 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字