Leighton on 'The Oranges' & the end of GG

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chair_F.
view post Posted on 1/10/2012, 17:34




Leighton Meester on ‘The Oranges,’ & the End of ‘Gossip Girl’

For someone facing major career upheaval, Leighton Meester is cool, calm, and collected. To most, Meester is synonymous with Blair Waldorf, the almighty overlord of the Upper East Side on Gossip Girl. While fans have been emotionally preparing for the harsh reality of the show’s final season, Meester’s focus is squarely on her future. In her new film The Oranges Meester plays Nina, a globetrotting party girl from New Jersey who returns home and gets tangled up in a scandalous affair with her father’s best friend, played by Hugh Laurie. We recently sat down with Meester to talk about the film, life after Gossip Girl, and Blake Lively’s wedding, obviously.

The Oranges deals with finding happiness in unexpected ways and places. How do you relate to that and what does happiness mean to you?
I think happiness comes in many forms. I think this film explores that in a really interesting and approachable way. Sometimes catastrophic and seeminglyawful things have to happen before you can truly understand your growth and what happiness means. I think that a really good example is David is in a relationship that he’s not happy in, and Nina is traveling around and with all the wrong people doing all the wrong things to try to escape her home, and she had to go home to find what she truly wanted and he had to end a marriage that was comfortable in order to find happiness and things can’t always stay the same. Change is actually what brings happiness the most because if you’re staying the same and you want to find happiness in your situation and you’re not, you need a change.

Hugh Laurie is obviously quite a few years older than you. Was it at all uncomfortable approaching those romantic scenes?
No. I can’t imagine anyone else being able to play that character because he is either this really funny British dude, or on House, he’s is this sarcastic, jaded, macho badass, and he’s not either of those things in this film. He is playing a completely different facet, I think, of his own personality, which is sensitive and open and a little dark, self-deprecating and charming. I think I understand him and I think I understand that facet of this personality now and I like it. And aside from the fact that he’s charming and amazing and handsome and all these things, it made it very easy to understand why you would fall in love with him and to be able to portray that in a non-creepy way is great. I think that from my point of view I root for that love, and it’s not a love that you go, Oh, this is some older guy and some younger girl. I like that. They have a familiarity, they have a friendship. It’s completely understandable why they would seek each other out and why they would be with each other.

West Orange, New Jersey plays a pretty large role itself in this movie just as New York plays a massive role in Gossip Girl. How did working off these two locations inform your role and how were these experiences different?
I’m from Florida, so I think I understand suburban life. I’m from a small island where the streets are really small and clean, and it sort of represents the American Dream, which is you go and you live in a perfect little house on a perfect little street with your perfect little family and you live happily ever after, and that’s not really what it is. I think everyone can relate to that. Even if you live in a big mansion you’re not going to have the happiness that you expect. So I think that’s kind of what it means to live in West Orange. That’s why this movie is set there. It’s these perfect little houses where you live across the street from your best friends, and it seems like it would be your dream to live that way forever, but they’re not happy. As for Manhattan, it’s a beautiful backdrop. I didn’t grow up in New York and I didn’t grow up in the New York that they grew up in.

Few people did.
I know that there are some people who have though, and I don’t relate to that as much but I do understand it.

The last season of Gossip Girl is coming up. Have you filmed the final episode yet?
No, we’re filming the 8th episode on Tuesday and there are 10 episodes, so I have three more episodes.

That’s exciting. Do you feel any trepidation approaching the last episode?
No. I think at first when I started the season, I was like, Oh my god, this is going to be strange, but I think it’s going to be good. I’m happy and I feel like everyone who watches is probably going to be happy. And it’s just time. I think personally I’ve grown a lot. I started when I was 21, and I’m 26 now, so I’ve grown. It’s familiar and comfortable, but it’s time to change that. And creatively more than anything is where I’ve felt the need to expand. It’s going to be very strange. It’s funny how that’s been my destiny over the bulk of my 20s—to do that show in New York. I remember being 12 and being like, I’m going to go to New York and buy flowers to put in the basket of my bicycle and live in the West Village! That’s what I thought was going to happen.

Do you know how you want Blair to end up?
Ya, in a show people go, “I really like you romantically involved with that person” and it sort of influences how you see it and I think how the writers have been seeing it. People like Chuck and Blair together so they’re gonna be like, “We’re going to make them end up together.” I mean, I don’t know, I never get to know what’s happening and they’re keeping it a secret.

What do you think you’ll miss the most about being on set and being involved in that project?
The people. But I know I’ll be able to see them again because everyone is just going to get new jobs. Like when I did this movie I worked with a bunch of the same people, the sound people and stuff. I see those people more than my own family. I think I’m just really excited because it’s like the last six years of my life have been determined by the schedule of Gossip Girl. I get two weeks at Christmas because that’s how much time we have.

What are your post-Gossip Girl plans?
I mean, this was an amazing experience and if I can do movies where I feel this good from now on I would like to do that. Obviously I don’t want to play the same characters again, like a rich spoiled girl. I just want to be uncomfortable and in unfamiliar places.

I think that’s it, unless you want to talk about Blake Lively’s wedding.
Are you from Canada?

Yes! How did you know?
Your accent.

Can you comment at all on Blake’s wedding?
I think they don’t want to talk about it.

We’re not allowed. I had to ask!
I know, I know, everyone has to ask.



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•Sunshine S.
view post Posted on 2/10/2012, 13:01




Una cosa che mi salta all'occhio.. lei ha detto che sta registrando l'episodio 8 e gli mancano ancora 3 episodi?? dice anche che sono 10 alla fine saranno 11??
 
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chair_F.
view post Posted on 2/10/2012, 13:05




Credo che con 3 intendesse anche la retrospettiva, che sarebbe la 11.. oppure intendeva solo 8-9-10..
 
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•Sunshine S.
view post Posted on 2/10/2012, 13:06




Speriamo 11 retrospettiva XD
 
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chair_F.
view post Posted on 2/10/2012, 13:09




CITAZIONE
Leighton Meester reveals her latest love affair: with ‘The Oranges’ and the Big Apple

All of the rumors you may have heard about Leighton Meester are true.

The co-star of TV’s primetime soap opera “Gossip Girl” is a serious-minded young woman determined to keep her Louboutin-loving, lighter-than-air TV character from defining her.

Exhibit A: Her turn in the sensitive, sometimes uncomfortably satirical comedy “The Oranges,” opening Friday.

“It’s a complete 180-degree turn from anything I’ve ever done,” says Meester, 26, of her new role. “This fulfills something within myself that I could never find in my series.”

In “The Oranges,” Meester portrays Nina, a self-involved Jersey girl who comes home to her parents (Oliver Platt, Allison Janney) for the holidays after five years away. While there, Nina drops a bomb by beginning an affair with her family’s fiftyish neighbor David (Hugh Laurie). He and his wife, Paige (Catherine Keener), are best friends with Nina’s folks.

“The love that Hugh and I portray is not some sort of physical infatuation,” Meester says. “It really comes across as a relationship that has respect and a real rapport.

“And that was easy with Hugh. He’s someone I’ve known and I genuinely could fall in love with.”

Six years ago, Meester worked with Laurie on two episodes of his series, “House.” That led to a friendship and a level of comfort that clearly helped when time came to film “The Oranges.”

“It’s not like we’re doing ‘Lolita’ here,” says the 53-year-old Laurie. “The consequences of these characters’ actions are taken very seriously and respectfully. Having said that, having known Leighton from her experience on ‘House’ was an enormous help.”

Born in Fort Worth, Tex., Meester lived for awhile in Florida before moving to New York as a preteen. She had a famously tough upbringing. Both of her parents had dealt marijuana when they were younger, and Leighton was born in a halfway house while her mother served time in a federal prison for trafficking.

“From that, I’ve learned that you can never judge people, because they grow and evolve,” Meester says.

She attended the professional Children’s School in New York, turning her modeling experiences into a career. She moved to L.A. at age 14 and began acting. She did guest spots on more than a dozen series, then nabbed recurring roles on a “Tarzan” re-do and the fourth season of “24” before landing “Gossip Girl” in 2007.

She’s now spent six seasons as the show’s icy, privileged Blair Waldorf — and the final season starts on Monday. But Meester says playing in “The Oranges” gave her a chance to explore where a character “came from and where she might go.”

“That is so satisfying,” Meester says. “I don’t get that with ‘Gossip Girl.’ It’s just episode after episode, for six years. Frankly, you grow out of it. Having said that, I am so grateful to have the show. It’s given me the opportunity to do this film and many others.”

The others include “Going the Distance” with Drew Barrymore, “Country Strong” with Gwyneth Paltrow and this past summer’s “That’s My Boy” with Adam Sandler and Andy Samberg.

“Country Strong” allowed Meester to showcase her passion for music. Since doing that 2010 film, she’s launched her own music career.

“The Oranges,” meanwhile, allowed Meester renew her passion for New York.

“The movie’s given me the chance to live in the city and be a part of this wonderful creative community,” she says. “It’s been great for me.”

Meester reveals that while filming the movie in Westchester, she lived with Laurie, Janney, Platt and co-star Adam Brody — all in one house.

“It was a wonderful experience,” Meester says. “We actually did become like a family. Hugh would be playing piano in the den downstairs, while I played my guitar. Oliver brought his kids in and really acted like my dad. We all had dinner together every night.

“I love being in New York. It’s where I’m at my most creative. There’s an energy here that I don’t find either back home in Florida or even in L.A. I use my time here to pursue music and movies. When ‘Gossip Girl’ ends, I’ll be willing to struggle to pursue my music career.

“When I’m not working, I’m walking my dog along the Hudson or watching a sunset on the Highline.”

Or, she admits, there is one more place she can be found: “Back at my one-room apartment to get some sleep.”


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chair_F.
view post Posted on 3/10/2012, 20:03




CITAZIONE
Kelly & Michael: Leighton Meester “The Oranges” and “Gossip Girl”

Gossip Girl actress Leighton Meester is a huge star, but who gets her star-struck? Stephen Colbert! Luckily, Leighton got meet Stephen backstage, and even snapped a pic in order to show her brother. On the flip side, there was a girl in the audience celebrating her sixteen-year-old birthday who was dying to meet Leighton. When Leighton wished her a happy birthday, Kelly bragged, “Who made that happen for you? Not Oprah– me!”

Leighton has starred as socialite Blair Waldorf for six seasons of Gossip Girl. However, the show will say goodbye for good at the end of this season. Leighton still has 16 days of work left to shoot, but she’s not yet feeling like the end is near. She explained that it feels like the end of any other season, and it hasn’t yet hit her that she won’t be coming back. Maybe in five years, when she’s flipping through channels and sees the show, she’ll really feel nostalgic. She called the whole experience of Gossip Girl “a dream.”

Kelly and Michael decided to play “Meester’s Minute of Truth” with Leighton, in which she had sixty seconds to answer as many questions about herself as possible. We learned that Leighton’s secret talent is making cupcakes, her favorite reality show is Chopped, her worst habit is not doing her laundry and if she could be any superhero, she would be Batman.

Leighton is starring in a new film called The Oranges which is in theaters Friday, October 5. The story follows two suburban families, who are all close friends, and the scandal that rocks their relationships. Leighton’s character, Nina, returns home and begins an affair with her parents’ best friend, played by Hugh Laurie.

Leighton loved working with Hugh, and said that he is very charming, and not jaded at all. Although, it was a little weird having him play her boyfriend. Leighton’s mom is played by Allison Janney, and the film’s cast also includes Oliver Platt, Catherine Keener and Adam Brody.

Leighton, Kelly, and Michael checked out a clip, and Michael was impressed. He even had a great pun to share: “The Oranges looks juicy!”


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•Sunshine S.
view post Posted on 4/10/2012, 18:16




After six years of watching her fit into the finest of couture gowns on television's "Gossip Girl," we wouldn't have believed it ourselves if we hadn't witnessed it just before our interview. But, then again, Meester is on the cusp of a whole new chapter in her career, and that's exactly when surprises should be the norm, whether they be food choices or projects.

In her new comedy, "The Oranges," out in limited release on Friday, Meester is in great company – including Hugh Laurie, Allison Janney, Oliver Platt and Adam Brody – as Nina, a lost 20-something who returns home for Thanksgiving and hooks up with her father's best friend (Laurie). She's not conniving or devilish about it like we've seen her be on "Gossip Girl" and in "That's My Boy" and "The Roommate." In fact, she even makes you root for her unlikely romance as you laugh and even question the "rules" of relationships at any age.


So, after Meester finished her tasty treat, we quizzed her about those rules, hooking up with Dr. House and, of course, the end of the chapter in her life known as "Gossip Girl."

ATO Pictures
When you signed on for this film, was Hugh Laurie already attached or did that happen later? What did you think when you realized you'd be making out with House?
I would have signed on years and years prior because I met with Julian [Farino, the director], I would say in 2007 or 2008 … I don't even know who they were thinking for David’s character, but I told him, "I love this part, and I love this movie." And then he was like, "Well, you might be a little young for Nina," and then the movie didn't happen. So then, years later they came back and they were like, "Are you still interested in this movie?" I was like, "Yeah." And by then, they had signed Hugh and that made it even more interesting for me. I had worked with him before [on "House" in 2006]… He as that character is so much more dry and dark and jaded and really macho. This character is completely opposite.

In the film, it's pretty clear that his character is into because you're making him feel more alive and not because Nina is younger. In fact, she gives a great speech at one point when he's trying to break things off with her, saying that there are no rules when it comes to love. Did you agree with that sentiment?
I think the underlying theme of this movie is finding happiness however you can find it, and people find happiness doing weird stuff. I find happiness dancing around my living room; I find happiness sometimes cleaning. Who knows how you find happiness?

We call people selfish for wanting a certain kind of happiness, but if we prevent that then we are the selfish ones. So, at the end of the day, it's all about finding what makes you happy, and sometimes painful change is the only way to find it. You look back at a relationship or a painful breakup or a job you didn't like and say, "God, I am so glad that I went through that. Even if it was hard at the time, I am glad that it happened."

My character goes through a huge change in her outlook . She's sort of reckless in her flirtation and how she seeks validation from men and outside sources. Then she finds a true connection with David, but it might not necessarily be just about him. It's about her and finding a pathway back to her family and peace with them, and to stop running from anything – you need to stop and face your problems, face your fears.

The CW
Speaking of outlook, how are you feeling about the looming end of "Gossip Girl?"

I'm glad. The closer it gets, the more happy I get. It's funny because I think it was mostly just the fear of the unknown because I have been on the show my entire adult life – some of the most awkward growth periods of my life have taken place while shooting that. Now, I think I have grown up enough beyond what I am capable of doing on that show and I want to do something different. I think I had all that growth probably because I was on the show and I was capable of doing that because I had a steady work life, but personally I have grown. Creatively is where it gets tricky because you just sort of want to do something different. It's not necessarily the people you work with because I love the people I work with and there is the comfort and familiarity of being there – it's like being at home – but you just don't want to be comfortable anymore.

How would you like to see Blair's story end?
I don't know because I feel like every time there is that seemingly happy ending, it's not real. I feel like there should be a cliffhanger so everyone can know she has a life after.

You know if there's a cliff hanger, you're going to be stuck answering the "Gossip Girl" movie question for decades.
[Unlike a movie], in a show, the arc just continues and never really comes to a head during the six years you film it. Also, you have the influence of what fans like which is very strange. I think that has probably influenced the writing to some extent – who knows if it really would have gone down that road with Blair and Chuck so much if people hadn't responded to it so much… It's like you are acting with a knowledge that this is what people want and, when you do a movie, you just do it, and that's the movie.

I guess everyone else's happy ending would probably be that she ends up marrying Chuck. But I don't know the answer.

"The Oranges" definitely seems like the first page of a new chapter for you. What's an ideal role or direction you'd like to see your career go?
Absolutely, yeah … It's just funny that it would be coming out at the end of my show. I think it's perfect for me, because, if nothing else, it's sort of a confirmation to myself that this is more down the track of what I want to do, characters that are just very different.

I have actually read quite a few good scripts lately, which is rare. I would like to continue doing movies and that's pretty much all I can say. I don't have an ideal role because my ideal is doing a different role every time I work. I just want to be challenged – so probably not play a rich girl for a while.

X
 
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chair_F.
view post Posted on 4/10/2012, 19:49




CITAZIONE
who knows if it really would have gone down that road with Blair and Chuck so much if people hadn't responded to it so much

Lo penso anche io.. u.u CB sono merito nostro in parte, ma sicuramente è grazie a EL se hanno avuto un così forte riscontro sul fandom.
 
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annaritaps89
view post Posted on 4/10/2012, 19:58




CITAZIONE (chair_F. @ 4/10/2012, 20:49) 
CITAZIONE
who knows if it really would have gone down that road with Blair and Chuck so much if people hadn't responded to it so much

Lo penso anche io.. u.u CB sono merito nostro in parte, ma sicuramente è grazie a EL se hanno avuto un così forte riscontro sul fandom.

Quoto.
Se CB non avessero avuto così tanto riscontro di pubblico magari oggi sarebbero già over.


 
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rosanna15882
view post Posted on 5/10/2012, 22:01




CITAZIONE
Leighton Meester Talks Gossip Girl's Finale, Making Music and Playing Hugh Laurie's Love Interest

In Julian Farino's indie dramedy The Oranges, Leighton Meester plays devil-may-care twentysomething Nina Ostroff, a girl who cuts her world travels shorts and returns home to New Jersey after a dramatic breakup. Once back in the ho-hum suburbs, Nina starts an affair with her father's best friend David (House's Hugh Laurie), who also happens to be her BFF's dad. At the same time, her mother (Allison Janney) is trying to set her up with David's sweet-natured son (Adam Brody). Sound complicated? It is—and those convoluted family dynamics are exactly what attracted Leighton to the role. I sat down with the actress to discuss playing a "bad girl," the end of the Gossip Girl era and what's next for her music career. Hint: don't expect any sugarcoated pop ditties.

Lucky: Your character in The Oranges, Nina, is somewhat of a troublemaker—as is Gossip Girl's Blair Waldorf, obviously. Are you instinctively drawn to characters who are drawn into these dramatic situations and aren't necessarily the most likable?
Leighton Meester: I think it's not necessarily that they're written that way—for me, it's more about finding common ground with your character, embodying something within them that you yourself understand. Nina starts off as a rebellious, selfish and free-spirited girl—and I think that most people, if they're not like that, then they'd want to be like that. She's traveled, she's fallen in love, she's partied and done drugs and had this bohemian lifestyle. And I can understand that, having been lucky enough to travel the world for my job—but at the same time, there's an emptiness in that. And also, I can understand and relate to Nina—though not on the same level—in that she sometimes looks to men for validation and wants her parents not to be overbearing or judge her. She just wants them to accept her. And all those things lead her to have that relationship with David. But yes, I always want to play characters where I can find something I love and understand in them—and try to connect in ways that I don't, too. For instance, I'd never have a relationship with a 53-year-old man who's my best friend's father! But she would—and I had to find some sort of common ground. Luckily, that's not difficult when you're working with Hugh Laurie, who's just incredible.

I found it funny that both Gossip Girl and The O.C. are seen as these sort of generation-defining series—and in this movie, you're set up opposite Adam Brody! What was it like working with him?
He's really funny, and his character sort of is the perfect person for Nina—and I think he's who she really wants, in a weird way. He brings a sensitivity to the movie—and you can totally believe that he'd be Hugh Laurie's son. Like, Nina's been around the world—and so has he, but because he's an overachiever who's traveled for his job, and he can't handle his liquor. She's clearly used to guys who, like, take rips off the bong and drive motorcycles.

I know you've been singing for years—and you're working on an album now, right?
Yeah—slowly but surely. I've written everything, and now I'm just trying to figure out if I want a producer to work on it. I had a deal with a record label when I was doing pop music before…but luckily, I'm not doing that anymore. It's very freeing. I actually started writing the music when I was doing this film. It was a period in my life where I was having a lot of growth—mostly good, but I was going through a breakup too. [The music] is what really helped me get over it, but it was funny that it would happen during this film where I have a sad breakup with a guy. I was like, "This just happened to me!"

Breakups are the absolute best time for songwriting, though, I'm guessing. What's the sound you're working with?
It's acoustic, and I write everything on my guitar. It's very singer-songwriter style.

Who are some of your musical inspirations?
I wouldn't necessarily say my music sounds like theirs, but I love Joni Mitchell...and I love Carole King, Alison Krauss, Neil Young, Tom Petty.

You must've gotten really into country while filming Country Strong, I'm guessing...
Well, that music was way more "pop country," but that's actually how I got my first guitar! Tim [McGraw] gave it to me at the end of filming, and I traveled around with it and was eventually like, "I really wanna learn this thing!"

Let's talk fashion—who are some of your current favorite designers, either to wear or just admire?
I love Emilio de la Morena—he's really cool. I always like what Proenza Schouler does. Whenever I go to their show, I'm like, "This is a fashion show." I've been working with Vera Wang for a couple of years, and I love her—she's so amazing. And I always like wearing Louis Vuitton and Marc Jacobs. I like his bags, too.

You wear some pretty put-together looks on your TV show—but I'm guessing that's not really how you dress day-to-day.
I like to be comfortable. I think that fashion is a really good way to express yourself but in my daily life, it's really hard to do that. That was actually one of the nice things about this character—she dresses normal! And I think that clothes, whether they're "outfit-y" or not, are very defining of a character.

Finally, I have to ask: anything you can divulge about Gossip Girl's final season, and the series finale in particular?
They're all going to die in a car accident! Haha, no—I think the audience will probably be very happy. We never know what's coming, and they've said that they want to surprise us. I assume there'll be some kind of happy ending. I've heard that there's going to be a gigantic cliffhanger with Chuck's dad, Blair and Chuck in the second-to-last episode that's resolved in the finale. But hopefully she finds love and resolution.

What's the general attitude been like on set, with the show finally winding down?
I think everyone's ready. And the closer it gets, the happier I am. I mean, it'll be strange—but I'm ready and I think everyone else is too. Personally, I feel like I've grown a lot—you grow, from 20 to 26!—but at the same time, I think it's been a creative growth period that's been good for me. And returning to the same thing over and over can be a little tedious. That being said, I have everything I have now because of Gossip Girl.

x

Edited by chair_F. - 5/10/2012, 23:09
 
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A l b a;
view post Posted on 6/10/2012, 09:33




Cosa dice più o meno?
 
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rosanna15882
view post Posted on 6/10/2012, 15:59




Leighton Meester on The Oranges, Romancing Hugh Laurie, and the End of Gossip Girl
CITAZIONE
Forget about Gossip Girl and Blair Waldorf for a second. For the past several years, Leighton Meester has been the best thing in a number of movies, even if the movies themselves — Monte Carlo, The Roommate, Country Strong — weren't the best. Now she is finally in a film that seems to be worth it, the comedy-drama The Oranges. She plays a whip-smart, twentysomething girl who strikes up a relationship with the married older man (Hugh Laurie) across the street — a man who also happens to be her dad’s best friend. Vulture spoke with Meester about her new role, romancing Laurie, and why it's time for Gossip Girl to end.

You did a couple of episodes of House, in which you played a girl with a crush on Dr. House. And now this.
I think the only word to describe this turn of events, the fact that I did that show with [Hugh] when I was 20 and then now got to do this film with him, is cosmic. I've always admired him and thought he was really brilliant, but when I was 20, I think I was a little intimidated: I was on his territory, and it was his show, and he plays this kind of jaded, sardonic, macho, know-it-all doctor who always has funny one-liners. Then, with this character in The Oranges, I think he’s playing another facet of his personality that probably no one has seen: He's very open and sensitive and self-deprecating, and he has a dark side that is really intriguing and beautiful. He's not like a typical dad-type, you know? So it was very easy to understand why my character would fall in love with him.

The film takes place over a fairly long period of time, and you guys are in that relationship for a while. I liked watching how you gradually became so comfortable in it. How did you develop that kind of familiarity?
Before we shot the movie, we all were put in a hotel room together for two days. At first, we were going through a table read, doing some rehearsals, but then the director said, “I just want you guys to get to know each other.” So he basically pushed us in the room, and we stuck around for a couple days. And Catherine [Keener] was like, "Bloody Marys, anyone?" [Laughs.] So we all got to know each other that way. Then, during filming, we were in a house together down the street from where we filmed. So, you know, you can hear Hugh downstairs playing the piano, and I’m upstairs, playing the guitar and singing. And we would all have dinners around the table. It was just really very much like a familiar home environment. As for the relationship specifically, both of us really went into it with the point of view that this is not a relationship that’s meant to be lusty and inappropriate. It is a connection that the two of them have felt probably for some time; they've just never acted on it. He brings out the adult, grown, mature, developed side of her, and she brings out the free-spirited, happy-go-lucky kid in him.

How does doing a film differ from TV for you?
I’ve been doing Gossip Girl for six years, and the arc is ongoing — there’s never really a moment of release. It’s always just tension, tension, tension. Which can be good. But for me, creatively, it starts to get exhausting and sort of tedious. Whereas, doing a film, you do it, and then you’re done, and you can look back at it. With TV, though, I’ve gotten to experience being part of a show where the audience plays a huge part in what’s going to happen. The characters’ relationships are often determined by the audience and what they like. I think the writers are influenced by the audience.

When you’re a young actor, do you find that people constantly give you advice?
I wish they would give me advice more! [Laughs.] That’s the beauty of working with somebody who’s truly talented. A really good example is Allison Janney [who is in The Oranges]. She is completely humble and doesn’t seem to think that she’s got advice worth listening to. But I’m fascinated by her. I think she’s incredible. She’s in touch with her inner child, and isn’t boastful or jaded. She’ll do something so incredible and funny and explosive and fascinating onscreen, and then she’ll be like, “Was that good?” And you’re like, “Are you kidding me? That was inspiring.” But I don’t know what I would say if someone asked me for advice. Every time I think I want to change my approach to acting, I’m proven wrong.

How so?
If I have an audition and I do a scene — or if I’m, you know, acting and I’m doing a scene — and I do something different than what my instinct tells me, it’s wrong. And I always have just acted with my instinct. I don’t believe in spending a lot of time preparing a scene and doing it exactly the same way every time. I started acting at a very young age. But I feel like I’ve done the same thing for a long time, and I’m really excited and ready to do something new. You know, being comfortable doing a show is not really what I want to do for a long period of time. There is something very nice and easy and freeing about having a schedule and having a character that you understand and you never really have to think about it, but I don’t want to do that.

Is that one of the reasons why you think Gossip Girl is ending?
I think it’s ending at a beautiful, perfect time. But it’s because our contracts are up. I don’t think anyone wants to stay after their contracts. It’s been an amazing tool to learn from, and I owe pretty much everything — even this film — to Gossip Girl. But I could say, somewhat, [that] it’s my personal growth that has made me want to move beyond it. I was 20 when I started, and I’m 26 now, so you don’t want to be doing the same thing over a period that long. This has been one of the most awkward and great growth periods of my life. I’ve experienced a lot of different things, and it’s just time to do something else.


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Edited by chair_F. - 6/10/2012, 23:00
 
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