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  • She's like a missing person.

  • Well, where is she?

  • That's that's the question.

  • You know, this is a chef of messed up feet, and Marin is a designer.

  • That broke.

  • Wow, This is Dori.

  • She's my friend from college.

  • I'm gonna find her, but I gave you guys help.

  • Who?

  • You?

  • What does she tell have to do with you?

  • I'm just tired of things that don't matter.

  • It's gonna be, like, 30 other options.

  • You know, I chose this.

  • I think you've decided to this matters to you because you have nothing else.

  • Dori, please.

  • Can we not do this? 00:00:58.960 --> 00:01:1.310 Thing is our only option way have to do. 00:01:1.310 --> 00:01:2.250 This is their destiny. 00:01:2.260 --> 00:01:2.700 Sorry. 00:01:6.610 --> 00:01:13.770 5678 He's a man following me.

  • She doesn't know where to draw the line thing.

  • Stuff scares.

  • I'm confused.

  • About what?

  • I'm supposed to tweet right now.

  • She's out.

  • Could you help me focus on this right now?

  • Oh, my God.

  • Do you know my friend dropped on and he was like him.

  • We're since you've been gone.

  • She's flat. 00:01:51.650 --> 00:02:3.440 Sure, Theo, Thanks so much for being here. 00:02:3.450 --> 00:02:7.350 Thinks you're I was just telling you back there, you're having a pretty incredible year. 00:02:7.350 --> 00:02:8.640 You've got two great movies. 00:02:8.640 --> 00:02:11.280 You've got green work wise emotionally, emotionally.

  • No one is having a beer, but for you guys think looking good.

  • Yeah.

  • Anyway, um, yeah, you had this fantastic movie.

  • One of my favorite movies of the air Green Room come out earlier this year, and then you have another one coming out later.

  • 20th century women, which is another one of my favorite movies of the year.

  • And you have the show, which is absolutely fantastic.

  • It is.

  • How did you How did you How did you become a part of this?

  • This incredible comedy, which is really nothing like nothing else on television.

  • Um, well, thank you.

  • Um, Let's see, I got an email as most of us do, Um, on a week day.

  • And it was it was, like, from, ah, my manager about, uh, how Michael Showalter was show running this new show.

  • Um, and I've been a fan of Stella and Michael's work for, like, years and years, so show Walter is the showrunner of the Yeah, OK.

  • Showalter.

  • Showrunner? 00:02:59.570 --> 00:03:1.280 Yeah, that's what we call him on set. 00:03:1.290 --> 00:03:2.950 Hey, makes us calling that. 00:03:3.340 --> 00:03:7.640 Um, yeah, he and I've, like, loved all his, you know, stuff. 00:03:7.640 --> 00:03:8.660 I've been such a big fan of his. 00:03:8.660 --> 00:03:13.910 And then I saw Fort Tilden that s V and Charles, the creators of the show made.

  • And, uh, yeah, I really like their sensibility commenting on, like, hipster culture without it being like to pop culture reference.

  • He kind of stuff.

  • And then I really liked the script and we had lunch at a place called Little Dumps.

  • And we just, like, hit it off.

  • Really well, they're really good at a kind of, ah, scathing portrait.

  • Scathingly hilarious portrait of narcissism.

  • Yeah.

  • Was that something that you were attracted to?

  • Yeah, definitely. 00:03:39.450 --> 00:04:0.320 I mean, there's this, I think you know, as the show goes on when you see it that it's very unexpectedly, like, who is, like, the real narcissist, because I feel like, um the calling, someone narcissistic, Um Or, um, what's the other one when you have two personalities like people throw that term out like all the time, You know what I mean? 00:04:0.320 --> 00:04:9.260 Like, he's such a narcissist and and and when you actually realize, like what a narcissist is because I would like kind of fascinated by and like reading about. 00:04:9.260 --> 00:04:14.850 It's like people who really think the world revolves around them, but they're not necessarily people who are very like, ostentatious or loud.

  • Um, and so I think it's like it was an interesting character to be the one to tell the story who's like, on the surface very insecure and kind of lets people push her around.

  • But then you start to be like, But is she the biggest narcissist of them all?

  • You know, like what we think people owe us and we internalize and how we act because we think people will view us as a good person verse actually being just a good person.

  • So you had a lot of fun questions, uh, like therapy for me.

  • All of a sudden, I'm like and I don't know I had a dream last night, and we'll know Narcissism is fascinating in the sense that the word does get thrown around all the time.

  • No, we're consistently older.

  • People are consistently referencing millennials. 00:04:53.200 --> 00:05:0.180 It's narcissistic, but there's this idea that the people that you call narcissistic is your own fear of your own narcissism. 00:05:0.190 --> 00:05:4.790 At times there's a representational aspect of that person as well. 00:05:4.790 --> 00:05:7.590 You see something that you want from them that you're not getting. 00:05:7.710 --> 00:05:9.990 So you refer to them as narcissistic, right?

  • Exactly.

  • And also are willing to placate what they think, like doing what they think they want.

  • You know what I mean to, like, get it from them, like all dues.

  • A nice favor for them.

  • But really, it's just to get what you want shows a comedy by the light light fare like Great Fair, eh?

  • So you get any mail you you did you audition for?

  • Cause this is amazing.

  • This is the first show where you mean you're the lead.

  • You're the center of the show.

  • Um, was that stress?

  • I didn't audition for You did it?

  • I'm not saying I still audition all the time.

  • I have one right after this.

  • Actually, um I mean, I, uh, yeah, they had just, like, been, like seeing the show.

  • I mean, my work and stuff.

  • And I think we're fans of, like, arrested development and kind of, you know, they told me that they had, like, had me in mind for the character, which is so flattering. 00:05:56.390 --> 00:06:7.800 And ah, And also it was at a place where the way it was written and then when I sat down with them because we shot the pilot, not knowing if he was gonna go to Siri's, you know, we got to really create the character a lot together. 00:06:7.810 --> 00:06:15.620 So any character notes I had were kind of naturally implemented in the shooting instead of just kind of like, this is how it's written, like go for it.

  • It was like, really collaborative the whole time.

  • How often did you find that your character notes were, you know, about the story, but also about sort of where you are and what you wanted to play at this point in your life.

  • Like how it was written originally.

  • Evening.

  • Um, you know, it's like Dori is kind of like, Ah, uh, similar to me when I was, like, younger, I guess kind of when I was, like, 18 19.

  • Um, not that I'm not, you know, insecure now.

  • But just in deeper, darker ways now than when I was younger.

  • It was a lot more surfacing. 00:06:46.840 --> 00:07:5.200 Um, but yeah, just like that that kind of state in your life where you don't know what you want and all of a sudden you feel like time is like escaping before you or you're just like not only do I not know what I want, but I feel like I have to decide today, you know, instead of like, one step at a time. 00:07:5.700 --> 00:07:12.430 Um and I think that's what kind of forces air into this, like, you know, to take action and something that she shouldn't be involved in.

  • Nobody's asking her to be involved in, but that's what gives her, like legitimacy in it.

  • Oh, it is really fun to play because I've also, you know, played a lot of like, like precocious, you know, sassy girls where I just kind of have to like It's a different kind of detachment.

  • And when I was younger, I was actually feeling more like Dori playing confident girls.

  • And now I'm more like, confident as a woman, playing someone who's like doubting themselves.

  • Um, so it's fun, I guess.

  • Well, I think that kind of makes sense, though that you because when you are insecure, you do detach a little bit, and when you and that's probably easier for you.

  • It's not easier, but maybe maybe easier for you.

  • As an actress, you had to detach.

  • Sure, it's always fun to detach.

  • Um, yeah. 00:07:54.750 --> 00:08:4.090 I mean, it's a cool job and also you kind of when you have more awareness of something you've experienced to comment on it, you know, where is like if you're in something too much. 00:08:4.090 --> 00:08:6.330 I mean, actors all have different ways of doing it. 00:08:6.370 --> 00:08:10.850 But ah, I found also just being involved in the show like the writing and being on set.

  • It wasn't just about me showing up like, Okay, let's do this.

  • It was, like, really tryingto create.

  • Ah, like the most interesting shows, you know, like breaking bad orders like you see these characters fully change from where you know each episode.

  • It's like the slow evolution.

  • So by the end, even as an audience member feels like you know the character so well, you're like super surprise.

  • We're just like they've become a different person.

  • Um, and it's like it's a serialized comedy which you don't which we don't get a lot of actually, this network is doing, I think, more than anybody else for TBS, right?

  • T o Did this network appointed eyes doing Maur like with the vacation show that they have as well, Which is also a serious detour.

  • Excuse me, is also a serialized comedy.

  • So you do see your character grow.

  • And there is this central mystery that's happening throughout the whole the whole season.

  • Yeah, totally.

  • Um, the further the first episode features a, uh, possibly the most depressing sex scene may be funny, but also mostly depressing sex.

  • Have you ever seen rape scenes in movies?

  • Those are much more.

  • Well, those I wouldn't I wouldn't label those sex.

  • Oh, God.

  • Oh, myself.

  • What was it like shooting that scene?

  • Where did this?

  • Where did this come from?

  • What did you think when you saw it in the script?

  • Um, I thought it was very true to life When you've been in a relationship for, like, three years and almost on you start being like, Is this the last person I'm gonna have sex with, um, or like, am I gonna be okay with bad sex?

  • For how much longer?

  • You know, um, when we shot, it was, like, genuinely uncomfortable.

  • And but funny, like John Reynolds is like the greatest, But, um, he's really funny, and he's so funny in it.

  • Yet, um, he reminds her like a seventies like SNL comedian like he has this, like, very unique charm about him.

  • Ah, but I think I'll like the humor and stuff. 00:09:59.720 --> 00:10:1.780 I mean, it's it's funny to try toe label. 00:10:1.780 --> 00:10:4.790 What kind of humor something is, I think is you're either respond to No, you don't. 00:10:4.800 --> 00:10:11.940 But it's like it's realistic, um, with kind of extreme scenarios, but it feels very like Imagine if that happened right now.

  • This is what this is how we'd react, You know, there's nothing like over the top.

  • And even with something like that, like, it is really extreme.

  • Um, you know, he's like, jerking off next to me in a classic bad sex.

  • Um, and I just kind of like tap him on the back and I don't get any enjoyment out of it.

  • Um, I thought it was like, Yeah, I think it's just really funny.

  • And it creates that kind of like a place that the relationship is that it's kind of like Stasis of just like we're so comfortable with each other.

  • Like, why would we break up because, like, the alternative seems like worse, but maybe not that much worse. 00:10:50.440 --> 00:11:2.830 And is also like the setup for, like, what makes her engage in something outside of herself toe, like, do things that actually make her happy, you know, And the thing that she engages in for the to explain it to the audience that she started searching for. 00:11:2.830 --> 00:11:3.890 Ah, missing girl. 00:11:4.580 --> 00:11:5.350 Can you talk about that? 00:11:5.920 --> 00:11:6.360 Yeah. 00:11:6.400 --> 00:11:9.350 She's searching for herself and a girl. 00:11:9.930 --> 00:11:12.370 Um, girl represents herself.

  • Girls herself, Unlike hurt herself is also girls.

  • Um, yeah, it's ah, girl from college and she wasn't very close with that.

  • She sees like a missing poster for what?

  • She's gone missing.

  • And she kind of slowly but surely just kind of comes obsessed with this idea that someone is missing.

  • M what happens when that, you know, like, who's who's actually gonna be involved?

  • Who's gonna help out?

  • Is it like, just your family?

  • Is it just close friends?

  • Is it like your community?

  • You know, she feels like because she knew her at all.

  • There's this, like, you know, she feels it's like deep empathy for her, just like, but like we have to care we have to help, like she's gone missing.

  • And eventually it's also the thing of like back to like being narcissistic of like So if I went missing, would anyone care? 00:11:59.190 --> 00:12:5.670 You know what anyone I like went to school with or someone that knew them would be like, Oh, should that girl went missing like nobody knows where Allie is on there. 00:12:5.670 --> 00:12:6.170 Like Tom. 00:12:6.170 --> 00:12:8.360 It's a shame she was cool Anyways. 00:12:8.600 --> 00:12:9.820 Do you want calamari? 00:12:9.830 --> 00:12:12.450 You know, it's like people, like move on from stuff like that.

  • And, uh, I think Dorrie just kind of can't get off of that.

  • Like if she becomes righteous about it and then at the same time, it's Ah, it's an exciting goal because it feels more important than anything else.

  • It's not about like doing something artistic or something like cool.

  • She's just like, No, this is more important.

  • It's about somebody's life, and that kind of like checks everything else in her life.

  • So it, like, overpowers it.

  • And there's no sense of.

  • I mean, it's not like doing something artistic, where the sense of failure is potentially there, right and anything else.

  • There's no real sort of risk or chance in searching for somebody because at the end of the day, if you don't turn them up, it's not your fault, right?

  • And you're not sharing a part of yourself.

  • The others No sacrifice.

  • There's no vulnerability, really.

  • It's just being really something to Dio.

  • Yeah, it's something to do.

  • And also there's an exciting element about it.

  • You know what I mean? 00:12:59.580 --> 00:13:4.820 Like your adrenaline goes up because it's the idea of like, Well, what if she's being held kidnapped? 00:13:4.820 --> 00:13:6.060 Like what if someone trying to kill her? 00:13:6.060 --> 00:13:10.150 Like so it just has this like excitement to it and feels legitimate.

  • Um, but yes, I think the reason why the show, in my opinion, is like creative success.

  • That was because you are you, even though the whole time you're people are still like Okay, why are you doing this?

  • You know, and she like, kind of answers, but never really fully does.

  • There's no great answer.

  • She's just like I just want to find her like I have to find her and I think it's It's well done in that way where it's kind of like we do things that were not always really aware of why we do them?

  • Um, maybe we'll never be aware of it.

  • But there's something instinctually if it's bad for you or write for you that you just like I have to do.

  • You're like something in my gut is making me do this for better or worse.

  • You know, you just have to Do you have that with performing?

  • Like I have to perform?

  • Um, I have him.

  • Yeah. 00:13:52.860 --> 00:14:1.670 I mean, it's where I have such a strange relationship with because a lot of it has to do with, like, um, there's something about making art that I feel like I have to do. 00:14:1.670 --> 00:14:2.740 Like expressing myself. 00:14:2.750 --> 00:14:7.350 But then there's certain parts of attention that sometimes I'm like, I could I might be a better human without it. 00:14:7.940 --> 00:14:12.560 Um, but at the same time, I'm not doing, like, a local theater and teaching kids.

  • You know what I mean?

  • I'm doing like a Oh, well, talks.

  • So, um, nothing wrong with that.

  • But I'm gonna say like I'm like, on the I wantto be.

  • There's a part that I want to share on a different level.

  • Like I want an audience.

  • You know what I mean?

  • Um, you made something promoting that you want you want to share, right?

  • But just in general, that kind of work as a different there's many different levels of making our you know what I mean.

  • Um, but yeah, I think I feel the urge.

  • Thio make stuff in general and also enacting when you keep working and, you know, you get to work with awesome people as it continues.

  • You know what I mean?

  • Like bigger scale people you've been fans of, And then you realize you're like minded, and that's like an amazing feeling.

  • I want to know about Green Room for a second because I love that film.

  • So much for those that you don't know. 00:14:56.590 --> 00:15:2.030 It's the story of a hardcore band that gets sort of held hostage by a group of neo Nazis. 00:15:2.300 --> 00:15:4.070 Kind of like half of America right now. 00:15:4.850 --> 00:15:5.780 Also a comedy. 00:15:6.940 --> 00:15:10.740 What was what was making that movie like It's show tense.

  • It is maybe one of the most tense films I've ever seen.

  • The director does an amazing job of carrying that tension out.

  • Yeah, it was written so, um detailed and like, the action, even if it was just us in the van, like everything was very like The physicality is we're very written out and the same thing.

  • When we got there, it was like, Ah, we got we get trapped in this green room in the back stage of this like, yeah, neo Nazi club.

  • And it was, like insane long rehearsals and all the beats were very important.

  • Like you're in this corner.

  • This is your weapon.

  • And then this, like everything was like, this kind of play and then broken down to, like, all these different shots of how to do it is just very well organized. 00:15:53.540 --> 00:16:0.950 And the kind of, um, Jeremy was a specific kind of director where he would just, like, tell us what we needed to know. 00:16:0.950 --> 00:16:2.530 He wasn't placating us at all. 00:16:2.530 --> 00:16:3.580 He wasn't, like, great job. 00:16:3.580 --> 00:16:4.210 That was so good. 00:16:4.210 --> 00:16:5.040 You were so scared. 00:16:5.040 --> 00:16:9.140 You know, he was just, like, not talk to us and then be like more of this. 00:16:9.150 --> 00:16:9.970 Don't do that.

  • Don't lift your hand here.

  • Like it was very like he just told us what we needed to know.

  • And we were all like, we became really close on us.

  • We're all good friends, but we're like jumping up and down in the corners like hyperventilating and looking at each other like this is the weirdest job.

  • Like trying to cry and be, like, out of breath and panicked all day long, you know?

  • But, um, but it's super fun.

  • We got to, like, really be a band.

  • We learned all these like punk rock songs, and we, like, played at the wrap party and stuff.

  • And so you did you play an instrument before?

  • I've played piano?

  • But I got to learn, like, electric guitar.

  • Which is What's your What's your favorite punk song to play?

  • Because you guys actually do play.

  • We play like originals.

  • Yeah, Nazi punks.

  • Fuck off.

  • Um, actually, a shirt that says Nazi Trump's fuck up.

  • Oh, really?

  • Did you make it?

  • It might wear it on Inauguration Day.

  • Sorry.

  • Hopefully, we won't get that far, maybe. 00:16:58.640 --> 00:17:2.250 Um, but yeah, it was fun playing that song. 00:17:2.250 --> 00:17:3.880 We like road our own songs. 00:17:3.960 --> 00:17:9.010 Um, I'm not a great guitar player, but it's cool for a job to learn an instrument. 00:17:9.020 --> 00:17:18.930 You know, um, you know, I've seen all the episodes, and I think everything that could be asked of the show has been asked, but when there is a cast member from arrested development on the stage.

  • Your not doing your job.

  • I think if you don't, if you don't ask about it the guy walked up where, uh, where it's going and where it is right now on anything that that you've heard from from the team behind it.

  • But you're not a lot.

  • It's like, so vague.

  • I mean, when we did the Netflix, um, Siri's, it was, like talked about.

  • And then we all got like, a group email from Mitch.

  • That was like, It's happening, we just don't know when.

  • And I was literally out of the country and I got a phone call from the wardrobe.

  • Katie Sparks, who have known since I was like, 14 and she was like, so your fittings tomorrow and I was like, I'm in Jordan.

  • I was, like, in the Middle East.

  • I was like, What are you talking about doing there? 00:17:57.970 --> 00:18:1.110 I was like, an independent film and then was planning on doing some traveling. 00:18:1.640 --> 00:18:4.670 Um, and she was like, Oh, no, you're gonna get a phone call soon. 00:18:5.000 --> 00:18:5.670 I was like, huh? 00:18:5.670 --> 00:18:8.150 I like, hung up, got an email on there like your flights tomorrow. 00:18:8.370 --> 00:18:10.250 So everything is truly that last minute.

  • Um, I think they've talked about it more like officially for another one, but I don't believe anything until I get the like family email from Bitch.

  • That's like, Hey, everybody remember us, you know?

  • Then, like everyone's in.

  • One of the things about the the the season that was on Netflix was that people were very open about.

  • It was it was very difficult to get everybody together consistently for the show.

  • Did it feel like that on set as well?

  • Were there moments where you were like Okay, talk to this tennis ball like it's Jason Bateman.

  • There wasn't any tennis ball moments, even though I heard there was for other actors.

  • Uh, but I have a fear of tennis balls.

  • So they avoided that for me.

  • Um, no, I there were only, like, a couple of days where we were all together, which was kind of a bummer, like those days were really fun.

  • And, you know, Mitch said, like a speech like we were all back together. 00:18:57.850 --> 00:19:0.260 And when we did the show originally we were together all the time. 00:19:0.840 --> 00:19:5.890 Um, the storytelling was obviously a different format of following the characters, and I think it was like, super interesting. 00:19:5.890 --> 00:19:22.020 But at the end of the day, I think maybe people were like, Oh, I want to see all the cast all together all the time So that part was kind of a bummer, but it was also, like, just so strange to do a job you haven't done in almost a decade and it comes back and you're playing the same character like it was still pretty phone they gave us.

  • You kill a lease as a gift.

  • That was one, um, arrested development being, you know, kind of your one of your first major gigs, right where it's this great show.

  • It's incredibly well written.

  • Um, it's really an outlier in regards to anything that's ever been on television.

  • Did it make you even as a young actress, like, fairly picky afterwards in terms of what you wanted to do?

  • I mean, when you go over your imdb credits, it's fairly smart stuff.

  • It isn't like you're a part of, like, you know, massive blockbusters, or like a lifetime.

  • I wasn't rebounding, and I did do a lifetime movie way. 00:19:57.450 --> 00:20:0.980 Just hide those Yeah, What was your lifetime movie? 00:20:0.980 --> 00:20:1.770 It was called. 00:20:2.110 --> 00:20:3.980 Not like everybody else. 00:20:5.110 --> 00:20:6.500 The brandy black bear story. 00:20:6.920 --> 00:20:10.950 Um, I never fully saw it.

  • I'm not saying I'm ashamed of it.

  • Probably got paid the most on that.

  • Then I have, like, any job, but, uh, yeah, it was like a you know, a girl who was, like, in tow, Wicca and witchcraft.

  • And, like, grew up in, like, a small town.

  • And she was half native American, and, ah, they kind of kicked her out, you know, like the kids bullied her and that kind of stuff.

  • And then she, like, went to court about it.

  • Unlike I had to wear like, a like a light blond wig and be like, you should treat everyone the same stuff like that.

  • Uh, anyways, you have the smart choices.

  • Let's start on that.

  • Um, no, but that sounds pretty.

  • No.

  • Randy Blackburn story bear.

  • She's out there somewhere.

  • Hybrid.

  • I remember.

  • Own said she came to set.

  • It was like towards the end of shooting. 00:20:55.620 --> 00:21:0.760 And, um, you know, she actually went through this like, you know, hard time in her life. 00:21:0.990 --> 00:21:5.290 And I met her and I was, like, felt so like an actress who had, like, dark long hair and eye liner. 00:21:5.290 --> 00:21:6.780 And I was like, I'm Aliyah like I'm playing. 00:21:6.780 --> 00:21:7.950 You must be so strange. 00:21:7.950 --> 00:21:12.710 You know, she was just like, yeah, like, get me out of here like she didn't want to pick on the set.

  • And I was like, Oh, I'm not playing this red at all.

  • Um, but there was a stage when I was like, Ah, after, like, 16 set are like 18.

  • I guess when I wrapped, the rest of them had done some projects that I was like, Yeah, if I get hired, I say yes, you know, it's a job like I've never you know, I've been lucky when I was younger to get, you know, audition for really good parts.

  • And then I had, like, a bad experience on the shoot, and I was like, Oh, nobody cares about this movie.

  • No one's like, excited to be here.

  • Everyone's kind of like it was like a big budget, like, you know, Christmas movie and like no one cared.

  • And everyone was kind of like, depressed on the set and like, I was like, Oh, I'm not you gonna waste time doing this shit like this is just not what I want to do.

  • Um, so I I think I didn't really work for like a year and went on tour was like my boyfriend at the time and just, like, start painting and doing other shit and then had to kind of like, reclaim, like, Why I wanted to be What kind of work I wanted to do so is like a lot of independent films stuff.

  • But it was It was more about like, you find the people you want to work with, and I think that kind of works in any job, Um, go towards the people that make you feel good, not necessarily the ones on paper or anything.

  • Fiscally, it's It's hard if, you know, I was lucky enough to be able to make those choices, but because I was working as a kid, so I had some money saved up, but I was like, I think it's just important to you want to surround yourself with good people in the environment, and eventually it'll pay off because you'll end up doing what you want and like, Yeah, I don't think Michael Sara says the same exact thing who was kind of your counterpart in the show that, like the because of arrested development as an actor following that is a young actor.

  • He was able to kind of sort of pick and choose and sort of pick.

  • Well, really.

  • Just pick and choose who he wanted to work with, right?

  • Totally.

  • I mean, I remember Michael someone I definitely like, emulate the way he makes his like choices and stuff. 00:22:57.940 --> 00:23:5.860 But, you know, he did like Juno and Superbad, and that's when I was, like, in New York and like, not having any idea what I wanted to do. 00:23:5.860 --> 00:23:12.040 And I was like, It's strange how there is such a wave of this kind of like industry or whatever.

  • And, um, you know, someone gets attention, and then sometimes you don't and that doesn't, ah, define success at all.

  • It's about like, Oh, I'm gonna work on a project that you know, anything like not to get too heady.

  • But like anything creative starts as just like a simple idea.

  • You think of any amazing person that you're like, Oh, they're like the greatest you think about these huge directors who have made things that have like, you know, are carved into pop culture forever and all started just like an idea that someone had I believed enough to keep doing it.

  • So it's kind of like, just like trying to focus on that state where nothing is too precious things past things air like, really successful.

  • Then they're over.

  • You know, you kind of just have toe maintained, like enjoy while it's happening and then, like, let it move on.

  • Absolutely. 00:23:57.990 --> 00:24:0.640 I'm gonna open it up to the audience for questions to people in the front. 00:24:0.640 --> 00:24:1.630 Here have microphones. 00:24:1.640 --> 00:24:2.460 One of you go for it. 00:24:3.640 --> 00:24:5.060 Hey, I love the show. 00:24:5.060 --> 00:24:10.940 I watched the first episode on demand, and I want to ask if you guys filmed it around here cause it looked like New York City.

  • Yes, we did.

  • It would be great if I was like China, actually, everything in China they have a small New York city.

  • Their New York City in China.

  • Exactly.

  • It's actually bigger than Manhattan, which Williamsburg back a lot, actually.

  • Yeah, we shot it all in Brooklyn a little bit in the city, but mainly in Brooklyn, which was, like, super red.

  • We'd wrap, and then I just feel like I just gonna keep living just like go on, huh?

  • Next week, Alia.

  • So, uh, did you draw your character from any of the other roles that you've had in the past?

  • I decided I draw my character.

  • Yeah.

  • Like, um, did you use any, um, like, was your character inspired by any of your previous week?

  • Oh, I say we're, um I mean, I guess each character's kind of different. 00:24:57.980 --> 00:25:1.450 I'm definitely not one of those actors whom, like Dori, is a transformation. 00:25:1.450 --> 00:25:3.190 Like it's like it's kind of made, you know what I mean? 00:25:3.190 --> 00:25:21.770 It's like, let's call it as it is, But, you know, I am Sammy that I should actually come in and have, like, a British accent, like a weird gate to be like, This is difficult for me to do, but yeah, well, I mean, I pulled from like, references of, like, more like people.

  • I knew in a version of myself when I was younger, as I was saying, but it's also definitely just pieces of myself.

  • Um, like different emotions are like thoughts in like, you kind of just like focus on those parts.

  • So not necessarily other characters, but you know myself growing as a human.

  • Next.

  • Hi.

  • Um, I was wondering how easy and or hard it was to get back into maybes character after the 10 year gap.

  • Yet it was it was a little tricky.

  • I mean, it's so well written the show. 00:25:55.890 --> 00:26:0.550 And it's so like, absurd that I just kind of was able to be like, Oh, yeah, I just do this and it's like, hilarious. 00:26:1.040 --> 00:26:9.110 Um, but I mean, I've said this before, but it was the weirder thing was like having been a kid on the show before. 00:26:9.110 --> 00:26:12.820 Me and Michael like having to hang out in, you know, the school room.

  • And then we have to go acts.

  • It was, like, very separated from the rest of the cast.

  • And now we were adults, and I felt this urge like a weird high schooler union with adults on over there.

  • I wanted to be like I'm an adult to guys like I'm here now and I'm fascinating and like, really, I kind of wanted to prove myself a little too much.

  • I think, um, like I respond to that.

  • No, of course not.

  • They didn't notice.

  • They were just like you're cool.

  • Like whatever.

  • You know, Um, but I think I just wanted to, like, I was so excited to be like, now I get to hang and me Michael noticed that, like, it was fun to get to hang out with all the cast members.

  • Like in between takes, which is, you know, when I was younger is like, it's very separated.

  • You're in school room, and then you get tapped on the shoulder.

  • Then you leave.

  • But, like, we were finally, like, hanging out, like, literally eating trips and having soda, and you're like, this is the best thing ever. 00:27:0.040 --> 00:27:2.790 Um, but that was more of the transition, I guess. 00:27:2.900 --> 00:27:4.290 Then the actual role. 00:27:4.740 --> 00:27:7.520 Um, how old were you when you first started doing arrested? 00:27:7.700 --> 00:27:11.950 I did the pilot when I was 14 and we wrapped when I just turned 18.

  • So it was also, like, very formative years of being like a teenager and, like, Insecure was like a very specific I have only positive memories of it, but it was like a very different state.

  • And I wasn't as confident as like an actor, and you know, all different kinds of things.

  • Yeah, I think that's it.

  • for the Westons search party.

  • When can people see it?

  • How you like a binge?

  • Yeah, due on November 21st they're gonna show, like, two episodes a night, Like during the Thanksgiving break.

  • And then I guess it's all online.

  • I don't really know where, but you kids could figure it out.

  • TBs TBs dot com e Oh, I'm sure that's a thing.

  • Search party.

  • TBs dot com Backslash.

  • Excellent.

  • Thank you so much for being here.

  • Congratulations on the show.

  • It's so funny.

  • Thank you.

  • Thanks.

She's like a missing person.

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阿麗亞-肖卡特討論TBS系列,"搜索黨"|BUILD系列。 (Alia Shawkat Discusses The TBS Series, "Search Party" | BUILD Series)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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