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How did you get involved with Nip/Tuck?
Gina
was going to be a two-episode arc [character] on the show. She was going
to be this girl who came in and had her first encounter with Dr.
Christian Troy and ended up sleeping with him. Then, she was going to be
a red herring for who was vandalizing his property. Ryan Murphy, the
creator, who is a genius, liked the character so much he asked if I
would continue working on the show. Of course, I’m not an idiot, so I
said I’d like to, and they just kept writing for Gina. It’s been a very
unexpected dream, such a great experience.
Your character,
Gina, is a member of Sexaholics Anonymous. How did you research
something like that? I did some research like any actor would. I actually had a
friend who was a sexaholic. It’s so complicated. I guess it’s obsessive
behavior, and I’m sure it’s different for every person, just like any
addiction is. I have to give all of the credit to the writing because
the way her mind operates is not the way my mind operates. She is so
impulsive, she doesn’t think before she acts. She has this calculated
quality, but she’s someone who acts on exactly what is on the tip of her
brain. I think most of us sort of do one thing and then walk out of the
room and say, ‘I wish I would have said this or that.’ If she thinks it,
she says it. If she wants it, she goes after it. She’s so driven. Some
of the things she wants are not the healthiest things, but if she wants
them she doesn’t measure out the consequences. She’s very interesting to
me.
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Just as
the city of New York is a character in Sex and the City, Miami is a
character in Nip/Tuck. How would you describe the city and the
way it’s portrayed on the show? I’ve
actually never been to Miami. Everyone I know who has gone there has
come back with the most incredible stories. I think one of the fun
things from my vantage point is the strength of character Gina has. She
tells me that women down there are not only very stylish, but also very
self-possessed. And the clothes! The wardrobes are so brilliant on the
show. [Our stylist] has this way of putting us in warm climate clothes
that are very high fashion. It’s not like Los Angeles, where girls are
just walking around in flip-flops, Uggs and minis. It seems like we
always get to wear these fabulous shoes and amazing dresses that aren’t
just frilly and feminine, but high fashion and powerful.
Last season your
character told Dr. Troy she was pregnant with his baby, but the last
episode had a shocking surprise for the doctor. Tell us a little about
it. The
last episode I go into labor and [Troy] delivers the baby. Gina is a
nightmare in labor, and when the baby finally comes out, the baby is
black. It’s not his baby. So, in the second season he is obviously very
attached to the baby, as he has been nurturing it for nine months. The
second season is about how we deal with custody issues and things like
that.
With shows like
Nip/Tuck, The Swan, MTV’s I Want a Famous Face and Extreme Makeover
putting so much attention on plastic surgery, what’s your take on the
phenomenon? I think Nip/Tuck, at
the core of it, is critical of the practice. The people on the show have
more complex problems that they think they can fix with plastic surgery.
I think it’s more of a critical eye [on plastic surgery]. I watched The Swan the other night. It’s so disturbing to me. I thought these
girls were lovely. I mean they needed to wash their hair, but I don’t
think what’s standing between them and everything they need to
accomplish is a new set of teeth. I have always been wary on this
subject because my grandmother had three facelifts. She was the most
confident, grounded woman I’ve ever known in my life. She was a huge
inspiration to me, so I don’t want to make generalizations because I
supported her choice to do it. I guess if it feels right to you, I just
hope people don’t think it’s going to fix everything because there’s
never an easy solution. You have to do a lot inside. It’s really
complicated because you have friends who have it done and you want to be
compassionate and love your friends, but surgery is so radical to me. I
would be so terrified. It will be interesting to see what happens down
the line, like if the trend lasts or if we transition out of it and what
the next phase will be.
When Boston Public hit, you were called “The Next Big Thing.” How
did that effect your career? That
onslaught was a little intimidating, overwhelming. It doesn’t
necessarily last. I just felt like I was lucky. I got so much experience
from being on Boston Public. I became much more familiar with Los
Angeles and the industry. I felt like I grew so much as an actor. Nip/Tuck is such a good example. I was too young when I started
Boston Public for something like that. I didn’t have the maturity or
the experience the part required. I felt like when I got a part like
that, all those things I had been working for were from that role. And
you don’t know that’s happening. You just think you’re out there, and
there isn’t a next phase. I got really lucky. I found another phase.
On top of your role on
Nip/Tuck, you also play Detective Kelly Ronson on NYPD Blue.
How much time would you say you spend working? I’m
lucky now because I’m on hiatus, but there was a period where I had a
couple of 24-hour days. I would go and be a cop in the morning and
interrogate and arrest people, and then in the afternoon I would go to
Nip/Tuck and have sex with random partners. It was really the yin
and yang of life. It was hard, but I feel gracious about it because in
many ways I asked these two shows to accommodate me. It was sort of an
embarrassment of riches.
How did you get
involved in acting? I started very young, when I
was about 12. I really, really wanted to be an actor and my parents kept
saying, ‘Wait until you are 18, then you can do whatever you want.’ I
just wasn’t having it. I heard about an audition to do a voiceover and
my parents said, ‘If you can get there, you can go.’ So, I took the bus
and went to my first audition. It was such a minor thing. I had to sing
“Happy Birthday” and that was it. Then I went on to do a lot of
voiceovers and a lot of theatre in Montreal. It just sort of never
stopped. I always had the bug.
You studied at
Harvard University of American Repertory Theater and did tons of
theatre. How did you transition into television shows like The Practice
and your role as educator Lauren Davis on Boston Public? I was doing theatre in New
York for a few years and it was great. When you are an actor in New
York, I think it is pretty typical that you know Los Angeles is out
there and you know someday you should try it on, but it seems so
daunting. One year I said, ‘I am going to go out there and if I don’t
like it, I am going to go home and go back to New York.’ That’s how I
met these great women who were casting The Practice. From The
Practice, I started working with David E. Kelley [of Boston
Public].
I hear you are also a
painter. Tell me about your work.
Tom McCarthy, who made this film The
Station Agent, said he had this script and was interested in someday
making it and really wanted to put my paintings in the film. And I said,
‘Of course.’ You do anything for your friends. About three years later,
he called me and said he had the money and wanted me to send my
paintings. So, I had to find all of them, clean then up, make them
better and then I sent them off and they were in The Station Agent.
What type of style do you paint?
I
usually do portraits of women, mostly, and the theme is pretty moody,
pretty dark. They are colorful, but pretty somber.
What else can we expect to see you in this year?
I
did Chicks with Sticks, which is this female hockey movie with
Margot Kidder and Jason Priestley. We shot it up in Canada and it was
pretty cool. Then I did this Weitz brothers’ movie with Seth Meyers
called See This Movie. It’s a really funny mocumentery.
Do you have anything to say to your fans here in Miami?
I
hope we do them justice, and I would love to come down and visit
sometime. |