Once Upon a Time: Interview to Cast & Crew

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    Fairy-tales come true for Ginnifer Goodwin, thanks to ‘Once Upon A Time’



    Danielle Turchiano, LA TV Insider Examiner

    “We haven’t redefined her; we’re just fleshing her out a lot,” Ginnifer Goodwin said, a twinkle in her eyes, when LA TV Insider Examiner sat down with her to discuss her iconic role as Snow White in ABC’s Once Upon A Time.

    Through the Disney fairy-tale we, and inevitably you, grew up with painted one very specific portrait of the princess, it was limited to space and time, and over the course of this television season, we will get to see her as a more fully formed woman. A woman who isn’t afraid to get her hands dirty and who knows what needs to be done to save the good of her land. She’s a little more active than we’ve seen her before, but perhaps more importantly, her relationships with her fellow fairy-tale characters are much more complex.

    “Once we got into things and started exploring what her backstory might be, it occurred to me as I was inspired by many of the things that I was reading that maybe Snow White was suffering from many of the flaws and inefficiencies that her stepmother suffers from. Maybe she really is vain; maybe she really is prideful; maybe she really was competing for the attention of her father, which could have been a little bit inappropriate. And those things are all justifiable in the story. And I started thinking about things, and she’s a princess, and there would be a sense of entitlement that comes with that and a lack of social experience,” Goodwin explained.

    Goodwin believes Snow White is not a “girl’s girl” in this telling of the tale, despite having Cinderella (Jessy Schram) has a friend. It makes sense; after all, we saw her bond with the Seven Dwarfs (all male), but never any other princesses. A great part of Once Upon A Time is the tension between the women of the land; they all have the potential and the power to rule, if they choose to tap into it, and that may put them at odds with each other, past "just" competing for someone’s affection. In the fairy-tale world of Once Upon A Time, Snow White and the Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla) are at odds as we always knew they would be, but so are their Storybrooke counterparts, Mary Margaret and Regina.

    “I think the dynamic between Regina and Mary Margaret-- it’s really fun and challenging and interesting to me from the outside because we created Mary Margaret based on an amalgamation of characterizations we thought the Evil Queen would want Mary Margaret to have, and so that relationship was really based on Mary Margaret’s fear of Regina,” Goodwin offered. “And you know, there are times because of this influence that Mary Margaret finds the urge to stand up to Regina, but she’s still not at a point where she can follow through. She’s just not strong enough.”

    Mary Margaret is the one who gives Henry (Jared Gilmore) the book that ultimately teaches him the truth about who everyone in town is, after all. Though Mary Margaret doesn’t do it on purpose-- Goodwin shared that she has had the book in her “implanted, cursed memories since childhood”-- the action is still enough to make her a target.

    Still, in Storybrooke, Mary Margaret appears a woman almost desperate to make a connection, almost not fully realizing the extent of her loneliness. Giving her young student the book is one way she attempts to make a connection, but also the entrance of Emma (Jennifer Morrison) will be another. Emma may become Mary Margaret’s first real female friend. But the loneliness will bleed through into other areas, abounding, even after she and Emma have begun to bond in close quarters and of their own accord.

    It is because she is missing her other half; Prince Charming has been stripped from her in this modern day “real” world. We all know they got married at the end of the Disney fairy-tale, and we see that milestone already in the pilot of Once Upon A Time, as well. But because the fairy-tale characters get cursed to be stuck in time in Storybrooke, Maine, we cannot move forward with them; their happily ever after was stricken down. They do not know each other at all in Storybrooke, though Goodwin promised we would not be completely romance-free for their story. Instead, we will travel back in time with their fairy-tale counterparts to learn about the origins of their stories, their relationships, and their love.

    “Some of my favorite scenes…for me to act in are the scenes between Snow White and Prince Charming because the relationship is so complicated, and we will find on the show, it is based in the beginning on real animosity and manipulation and selfishness. And I really love that that is our foundation-- that is our platform-- it gives us so far to go!” Goodwin teased.

    Once Upon A Time airs on ABC on Sunday nights at 8pm.

    http://www.examiner.com/tv-insider-in-los-...nce-upon-a-time
     
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    Once Upon A Charming Prince: Josh Dallas Talks Once Upon A Time



    Continuing our run of interviews from the Vancouver studio of Once Upon A Time (premiering Sunday 10/23 on ABC!), today we post parts of our group chat with Josh Dallas, who plays the, well, charming "Prince Charming" in the new series.

    The actor - who played Fandral in Thor and even has an episode of Doctor Who among his credits - will also be playing "John Doe" in Storybrooke - a man who has been comatose for years. When he wakes up, will he remember? And more importantly, what will he remember?

    You can read more about Once Upon A Time here. And of course, several more Once interviews will be posted here on KSiteTV as we head toward Sunday's series premiere! You can find links to previous interviews at the bottom of this page.

    read more on: http://www.ksitetv.com/9180/once-upon-a-ch...ce-upon-a-time/

    Please do not reproduce this interview onto other websites. Instead, just place a link to KSiteTV! Questions to Mr. Dallas are posted in bold; his answers are not.

    What is going on for "John Doe" in Storybrooke?

    In Storybrooke, he's in some peril, and in a coma. I will say that he's not in it for long, so we're going to learn a lot more about him. His story is yet to be discovered in Storybrooke.

    Will we be seeing some of the Snow White and Prince Charming courtship in flashbacks?

    We're going all the way back to the origins of Snow White and Prince Charming. We're going to find out how they met, where they met, what his real name is, how he got the name "Charming"... all of those things. So we're going to find out a lot of information and back story of when that epic true love first was kindled.

    Alan Dale will be playing your dad on the show. What is his relationship like with Prince Charming, and what can you tell us about his character?

    I don't know how much I'm allowed to say about King George, but I will say he is obviously King of the kingdom, and the kingdom is ailing. He needs some help. He goes to King Midas, and they make a deal, and King Midas says "well, if your son slays this dragon, I will take care of your kingdom. I will give you gold. I will give you riches. You will be taken care of." So he makes a deal with Midas for me to slay this dragon.

    Growing up, did you ever think you'd end up playing a fairy tale character?

    I guess not really a fairy tale character, but I always wanted to slay dragons, and I always wanted to use swords. It's a boy's dream, being able to play this kind of stuff. That's what's so great. As an actor, you get to do all this great, fantastical stuff in Fairy Tale land, and then you can go back to Storybrooke. Even though they're both based in a reality of their own kind, with Storybrooke you can go back and become more real, and more like what we're used to seeing and doing as actors. And then you can go to Fairy Tale land and just do these amazing things in the woods, with swords, and horses, and dragons, and ogres, and all kinds of stuff.

    What kind of interaction will your character have with Mary-Margaret (Snow White) in Storybrooke?

    There is this extraordinary kind of weird draw to Mary-Margaret that he doesn't quite understand, in Storybrooke. There's definitely a connection there with her, so he's trying to negotiate that and figure out what that is and where that's going to take him. There's a lot to discover about him in Storybrooke.

    Can you talk about how different Storybrooke is from Fairy Tale land?

    That's what's so great about this show, the two worlds - you have Fairy Tale land, which a place which is very different from Storybrooke in so many ways. It's different emotionally. Visually it's different. It's brighter. It's fantastical. It's a place where happy endings can come true, and Storybrooke is a place that's very dark. It's very gray. It's colder. It's a place where time is stopped, and we're all trapped there, and no one has any memories, and no one can get out. They're very different places. So for an actor to go back and forth between the two, is great fun.

    Does Emma's arrival bring a physical change to the people of Storybrooke?

    I think [Emma's arrival] is when things start to begin. I think there's a shift in terms of the energy within the world. There's something happening now. I don't think there's anything physically that happens to people, but probably just in terms of energy-wise or spiritually, there's something in the air. Something is happening.

    http://www.ksitetv.com/9180/once-upon-a-ch...ce-upon-a-time/



    Once Upon An Evil Queen: Interview With Once Upon A Time’s Lana Parrilla



    Earlier this month, eleven television journalists made their way up to Vancouver, BC for a whirlwind press tour that began in a place called Storybrooke.

    More specifically, we ended up in production offices that were very close to where the magic happens in Storybrooke, as our first stop was to see the production and interview the talent behind ABC's upcoming new series, Once Upon A Time.

    You can read a description of the series here but in short, Once takes a look at what happens when fairy tale characters are relocated to the "real world" with no memories of their previous lives, thanks to a curse placed by an Evil Queen played by Lana Parrilla. The fantastic Parrilla is joined in the cast by actors like Jennifer Morrison (House), Josh Dallas (Thor), Ginnifer Goodwin (Big Love), and Robert Carlyle (Stargate Universe) and the show was conceived by two of the writers of LOST, Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz.

    As we move toward the show's premiere on Sunday, October 23, we'll be posting more interviews with the show's cast, but today the focus is on the Evil Queen herself, also the Mayor of Storybrooke, "Regina" -- Lana Parrilla, who is nowhere near evil in real life, nor is she actually a mayor named Regina. Enjoy!

    read more on: http://www.ksitetv.com/9066/once-upon-an-e...-lana-parrilla/

    Please do not reproduce this interview onto other websites. Instead, just place a link to KSiteTV! Questions to Ms. Parrilla are posted in bold; her answers are not.

    Do you think people are going to react differently to you in real life once they've seen you as the Evil Queen on the show?

    I know a lot of kids are going to be fearful of me. I'm excited to see my nephews watching this. I was talking to Kristen Bauer [the show's Maleficent] about this, and I said a lot of actors that play villains are actually really nice people.

    There has to be some good in Regina. After all, she did adopt Henry.

    I think a lot of people make decisions, and have children sometimes, for the wrong reasons. Maybe there's a void in their life that they're trying to fill. I think Regina is doing that with Henry.

    Does she know who Henry really is? (If you're wondering why this question is important, watch the show and you'll see there's a lot more to Henry than we know, that we will learn very quickly)

    I don't think she does. I don't think she knows who Henry is.

    Is Regina aware of the curse, and is she aware that she is a fairy tale character?

    I think she may have an inkling. You'll find out very soon.

    Do you think Henry brings out a more sympathetic side to Regina?

    I think you see a more sympathetic, more vulnerable side when it comes to Henry. Even though she's this Evil Queen, she has the ability to love, and even as the Evil Queen, there was a time she did love, deeply, and I think Regina has that for Henry. I think she really loves him. She's holding on so tight, and as one does when you hold on too tight, they slip right through your fingers. Henry's just slipping through her hands, and she's just trying to grab on and is very unsuccessful in doing so. But the love is present, and that will help the audience relate to her more on a human level.

    An early episode of the series has the Evil Queen interacting with another famous villain, Sleeping Beauty's Maleficent. Can you talk about how they react to one another?

    I think it's going to be great. We shot the scene, and she and I had an incredible time, and we got along really well. She's very talented. She's a very strong, powerful, beautiful woman, and we just go head to head. But there is a friendship between these two villains - well, they describe them as "frenemies" - and as actors, we really got along, so it helps. You'll see it. It's a really great scene. I had a blast working with her.

    Is it true we see a more vulnerable side to the Evil Queen in the series' second episode?

    You will see a vulnerable side to the Queen that I don't think anyone's ever seen on this level, with these iconic Disney characters. It is exciting for me to portray, and I think it's going to be really exciting to watch. I mean, she sheds tears, which is nice to see. You have a lot of compassion for her, I think, after that episode.

    Did you look back to any of the classic Disney cartoons for inspiration?

    I did. I actually watched Snow White and the Seven Dwarves again. I didn't realize I hadn't seen it in so many years. It's interesting; Snow White's eyes are always closed, and you're just like "Why?" For some reason her eyes are always closed! I found that kind of interesting. But the Evil Queen was quite lovely to watch. I also watched Glenn Close in 101 Dalmatians. Her performance was phenomenal. It's a little too theatrical for what we're doing, but I did watch it. I've watched a few other films that are not Disney related, but that have been inspiring as well. Like, Marlena Dietrich has been a huge inspiration for the Evil Queen.

    Do you think there will be things about Regina/The Evil Queen that viewers will identify with and root for?

    When you see where this hatred thrives from, what she's gone through, and what she's lot, that will help people relate to her more.

    And she's just fun. She's big. She's bold. She's so out there, and she's not afraid to say how she feels. And there's something quite refreshing about that, when someone can be that expressive, and not give a [crap]. I like that about her. I like playing her. It's a lot of fun, and the costumes are phenomenal.

    Does the Magic Mirror ever give her grief?

    The Magic Mirror, I find, is like her inner voice. It's almost like her subconscious. It's like the part of the brain that doesn't lie. I think I'd say she can't really do anything to him. He's so protected in that mirror, and if she breaks it, he'll just show up in another one. So he's pretty safe there. But she turns to him to see what's going on in the Enchanted Forest, to see what Snow White's doing and where she is, but also to seek answers and truth.

    Does Regina have any friends? Obviously she has to be in a place of power as Mayor of Storybrooke.

    That's a good question. I've asked that same question. I think of Regina as a quiet, lonely character. A lonely, lonely woman. And that's another thing that people will relate to - there's a loneliness in her, and you know what that loneliness can do to a person.

    She doesn't have many friends. She has maybe one, and we're not even quite sure if that's a real friend yet.

    She and the Sheriff seem to work together in the pilot. Are we reading too much into that?

    No, no. They definitely have a relationship. I think he is a very important character in her life, and also in Henry's life. She trusts him enough to be there with Henry, so that says something.

    Does Regina notice that the time on the town's clock has started to move again?

    Possibly.

    It's so hard to keep withholding. I'd love to tell you. It's amazing, because even when you're an actor on the show, you also become a fan. I'm friends with Jorge Garcia, who you know, I'm sure, and I worked on LOST, I did a season finale in the third year, and I would ask him questions, and he kept telling me nothing, and I was like "AHHH! WHY WON'T YOU TELL ME?" and he said "You've gotta watch!" But I get it. I understand the secrecy, and I respect that. But I wish I could tell you more.

    http://www.ksitetv.com/9066/once-upon-an-e...-lana-parrilla/
     
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    'Once Upon a Time' launches the latest Hollywood trend



    By David Martindale

    Special to DFW.com
    Posted 4:53pm on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011

    America is hurting for a happy ending. That's Lana Parrilla's theory regarding a renewed fondness for fairy tales in Hollywood.

    "There's just so much negativity in the world right now," the actress says. "Maybe we need these lovely stories as an escape from everything that's bringing us down."

    If she's right, we're about to be inundated with the remedy. Parrilla plays the Evil Queen in ABC's Once Upon a Time, an out-there drama that premieres at 7 p.m. Sunday. In this series, fairy-tale characters such as Snow White, Prince Charming and Jiminy Cricket have been cursed by the Queen to lead more humdrum existences.

    Now they have bleak, workaday lives in the same world we inhabit, and they have no memory of their storybook pasts. Meanwhile, NBC launches a quasi-detective series next week called Grimm, as in Grimms' Fairy Tales.

    There also are two big-budget Snow White movies currently in the making, one starring Julia Roberts as the Evil Queen, the other with Charlize Theron as the villainess.

    "I'm not quite sure where this trend started," Parrilla says. "But I think it's about bringing us a sense of hope again, about allowing us to dream again." Her explanation makes as much sense as any.

    Once Upon a Time also stars Jennifer Morrison, Ginnifer Goodwin and Robert Carlyle. The show's very complicated setup introduces Emma Swan (Morrison's character, a jaded bail bondsperson) to the 10-year-old boy she gave up for adoption and to the town of Storybrooke, Maine, where the fantasy-land types have been banished.

    Emma, who is the daughter of Snow White and the Prince in an alternate fairy-tale world, ultimately will have to square off against the Evil Queen to set things right.

    The show doesn't make a whole lot of sense right away, but it's visually striking and it's peppered with fun, over-the-top performances from Parrilla and Carlyle (as Rumpelstiltskin).

    Parrilla is walking on air, sometimes literally, as the Evil Queen.

    "It's very liberating for me," she says. "This character is so bold and super-confident."

    Parrilla says she goes to work now, channels all of her anger and frustrations into her performance, then goes home and sleeps like a baby because there are no dark impulses still lurking in her psyche. But it wasn't easy at first to get a handle on the character.

    "When I played a paramedic on Boomtown, I stayed at a fire station for a few shifts so I could see how the actual paramedics did it," Parrilla recalls. "When I was a surgeon on Miami Medical, I spent time at a trauma center in Miami to see how it was done. But with this, I was like, 'Where do I go to research this? The Enchanted Forest doesn't exist!'"

    She eventually figured out what she needed to know by reading medical texts about sociopaths.

    "She's the kind of girl who will give you a poisoned apple if she doesn't like you," Parrilla says. "She has figured out that it feels good to be bad."
     
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    Ginnifer Goodwin's life takes a fairy-tale turn


    By Cindy Clark, USA TODAY

    Ginnifer Goodwin has gone from polygamist to princess.

    Snow White, to be exact. And it just so happens to be her favorite of the bunch.

    "It is, and ironically, I was Snow White two years ago for Halloween," she says, calling from a Burger King at Los Angeles International Airport. "I remember saying to my little sister when I explained my (costume) choice: 'You know, one of my biggest dreams in life is to play a Disney princess. Halloween is my favorite holiday, and I always go all-out with my costumes. I'd better go ahead and dress up like a Disney princess now, because if I ever land a princess role, I wouldn't be able to do that then."

    PHOTOS: A look back at Goodwin over the years

    It's a good thing she did when she had the chance, because the former star of HBO's Big Love can now be seen as Snow White on ABC's Once Upon a Time (Sundays, 8 p.m. ET/PT).

    But it almost wasn't to be. After her "perfect" experience as Margie on seven seasons of the polygamous family drama, Goodwin, 33, says she "wasn't planning on going back to television at all. … I wanted to take a break from the world of televion and explore a film career."

    She wanted the "luxury of time," something a television shooting schedule did not afford. But after reading "every film script I could get my hands on," the actress, who has starred in movies including He's Just Not That Into You and Mona Lisa Smile, was left more than a little dismayed.

    "Let's be honest: Those offers are going to Amy Adams and Anne Hathaway and Natalie Portman, Michelle Williams and Carey Mulligan," she says. "I do understand my place in this business. These are the girls getting offers on the scripts that I would want to be part of."

    Not wanting to compromise, Goodwin decided to give some TV pilot scripts a read — something she hadn't done since "2003, when I got involved in Big Love. I read three scripts in a matter of hours, and I thought, 'This is where all the great writers had gone.' When this one came along, there was no question that this was the one that I wanted to be a part of. This one was the one that would bring me back to television so quickly. I was blown away by the script."

    It helps, she explains, that Once Upon a Time has Lost writers on its side.

    "Lost was my crack," Goodwin says. "Not that I've ever smoked crack, but I imagine the experience is like watching Lost. I read the script and I cried at the end every time. … Ultimately it became a matter of playing something so risky and challenging and fulfilling my dream of playing a Disney princess. I knew it would be more fun than I would ever have. I'm for all the actor's struggle, the self-indulgent, painful journey, but I would rather have fun. I want to dress up like Snow-freaking-White, and at the same time get to play a character who's also very complex."

    This isn't your typical fairy tale. Set in a Narnia-like land, Snow White, her prince and a bevy of fairy-tale characters are banished to a modern-day world by an evil queen — but not before Snow White sends her newborn daughter off to safety. "We do use a Lost-ish format," Goodwin explains. "We tell the story out of order, and we present the audience with many a puzzle piece."

    In her modern-day life, Snow White has become Mary Margaret, an elementary school teacher in the town of Storybrooke. It's where all of the characters live and work normal jobs, unaware of their past lives. Her long-lost daughter, now a grown woman, is played by Jennifer Morrison, someone she calls a close friend in real life: "I think it's pretty unusal for actresses to get along so well."

    The pair also share a striking resemblance. "When we were both coming up in the business, we would get confused all the time. We have done interviews for each other and signed each other's photographs. It got too frustrating to try to explain to people that we were different actresses."

    It's important to have close friends, and right now Goodwin, who announced in May that her engagement to actor Joey Kern had ended, says she's "actually in a wonderful place."

    Even though a wedding date had been set, the end of the relationship "wasn't as dramatic as people made it out to be. … We were wonderful together but not meant to spend the rest of our lives together. It was a happy, positive end to a relationship. Which I know is unusual."

    Goodwin is, after all, a believer in happy endings, and happily ever after. "Absolutely. … I think most people know inherently that good wins," she says, starting to laugh. "Jen is sitting across from me at the Burger King table making a face!"

    The pair are about to fly off to the set in Vancouver, which Goodwin describes as "like being in summer camp. I have no doubt that I'll settle down and have a family and have children, but right now this is a blessing to have work and be with my friends."

    http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/story/...dwin/50843298/1
     
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    Interview: "Once Upon a Time" Co-Stars Ginnifer Goodwin, Josh Dallas & Lana Parrilla


    By Jim Halterman

    Fairy tales are something we usually think of as being suited for children but ABC and some of the creative forces from a little show called "Lost" are taking a much darker, adult spin on the classic stories and characters we all know so well in its ambitious new series, "Once Upon a Time," which bows this Sunday.

    In the series, classic characters like Snow White (played by Ginnifer Goodwin), Prince Charming (Josh Dallas), Rumplestiltskin (Robert Carlyle), Jiminy Cricket (Raphael Sbarge) and the Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla) have been cast under a spell wiping their memories of who they are and now they live as ordinary people in the town of Storybrooke, Maine, where time has stopped and nobody can leave. That is until Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison) shows up. Emma, unbeknownst to her, is the grown-up daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming, so once the son Emma gave up for adoption, Henry (Jared S. Gilmore), brings her to Storybrooke, things will never be the same. And, like "Lost," the show regularly bounces from fairy tale flashbacks to Storybrooke's contemporary drama and viewers will see just how closely parallel these worlds are.

    During a recent Warner Brothers-sponsored press trip to Vancouver, our Jim Halterman had the chance to sit down on the "Once" set with Goodwin, Dallas, Sbarge, Parrilla and Executive Producer Steve Pearlman to find out exactly how these fantasy and real worlds will work together in "Once Upon a Time."

    First up, while launching a new show is always a stressful time for all those involved, Pearlman is finding some relief in the fact that the series is starting later than the cluttered month of September. "I think airing outside of that glut is great," he admitted. "It creates a second wave of anticipation for an audience, too. I work in the business and I couldn't even tell you the names of a third of the new shows this season because we were bombarded with all the messaging. It also, from a production standpoint, gives us a little bit of a breather. Not much - you never have enough time or enough money. But it gives us a little bit of a breather. Certainly we're an effects-heavy show so it gives us enough time to get it right."

    Dallas, who is taking on the iconic Prince Charming role as well as John Doe in Storybrooke, expressed his happiness that the show's creators, "Lost" alums Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, are taking some dramatic license with these familiar characters. "They've taken all these iconic characters that we all know, but they've made them somehow realer. There's a real reality to them. Prince Charming just happens to be a name. He's still a man with the same emotions as any other man. He's a Prince, but he's a Prince of the people. He gets his hands dirty. He's got a kingdom to run. He has a family to protect. He has an epic, epic love for Snow White. He's like everybody else. He's human."

    Goodwin agreed and is very pleased that she's playing a version of Snow White that is full of spunk and spirit instead of being merely a waif looking to be saved. "It was very telling when in one of her first scenes," Goodwin remembered, "she grabs Prince Charming's sword and stands up to her stepmother. I feel that 'the boys' [as she said the cast calls Kitsis and Horowitz] have done a really excellent job of justifying what we know of Snow White from the interpretations and Walt Disney and the Brothers Grimm and a million other authors. But I feel that they've really fleshed her out in a way that I hope makes her far more relatable and interesting to watch. [She is] far more modern but not because we're reinventing her. Just because we're fleshing her out and showing her flaws."

    Taking on a role of an icon brought a sense of fear to Sbarge, who plays Jiminy Cricket and Henry's kindly teacher, Archie Hopper. "When the script arrived for the Jiminy Cricket episode, I read it and then I put it down and then I had a moment of panic, because you feel kind of like, 'Oh... ' You're treading into people's imaginations and stuff and that's powerful and potentially... I mean there's no place to hide. It's like, 'Here I am!'... [but] they cast me for a reason because there are some qualities in me that they obviously recognize for the story they want to tell."

    While most of the actors in the series have two roles to play in their fairy tale character and Storybrooke version of that same character, Jennifer Morrison is the one actor that only exists in the world of Storybrooke. Morrison's Emma may start out not truly believing the tale that Henry is spinning but how long will it take for her to figure out what's really going on in Storybrooke? "I help this kid who seems like he's a little bit emotionally dysfunctional," Morrison explained of Emma's relationship with Henry, "and he's using these stories to try to survive or try to overcome his emotional problems so for her there's really no question in her mind whether it's real or it's not. There's certainly moments of bizarre coincidences where she's like 'OK, that's a little bit crazy' but it never registers as, 'Well, gosh, I bet there's another universe where fairy tales exist.' It's that interesting thing of, like, she just lives in reality and there's no other realm that could possibly be. She just wants to be there for the kid." Morrison teased that Emma's lack of understanding about Storybrooke and its inhabitants will play out for some time.

    Since every fairy tale (and good drama) needs a villain, that job falls to Parrilla, who gets to chew the scenery as the treacherous Evil Queen and the potentially just-as-evil Regina, the Mayor of Storybrooke and adopted mother to Henry. In fact Regina will show her conniving side the moment Emma makes her presence known. "Emma Swan coming into Storybrooke is a huge, huge, huge threat," Parrilla offered. "There's always two stories being told when playing Regina. There's the threat of her knowing she's an evil queen and then there's just the pure simple fact that the biological mother has stepped into her world and the threat of losing her son is just enormous. That's a fear that I think any adopted mother would have. I think that's going to really help the audience relate to Regina in some level."

    Dallas became as giddy as a child as he talked about how much fun he's having playing Prince Charming and acting out the world of make believe. "I love all the fairy tale land stuff. It's always great fun. It's a boys dream to be able to do this kind of stuff. Get a sword and ride horses and fight trolls and dragons and all kinds of stuff." But like the dual characters most of the actors are portraying, there is a bright and dark side. "It's a challenge and a blessing for actors to be able to have these two characters, which are essentially the same person with the same core, but different experiences and different memories, which make them different people. And it's sad, the Storybrooke characters... they're always trying to get back to that fairy tale character, but they don't really know that. They don't remember that they were who they are. So they're always trying to find their way back, subconsciously, to who they were. So there's always a search going on within them."

    One point of amusement for Goodwin and Morrison is the fact that the longtime friends are actually playing mother and daughter on "Once Upon a Time." However, both actresses admitted to thinking about that relationship on a much deeper level. "It's crazy the things that you realize [and] the things you don't know about your parents," explained Morrison. "Yet these women are experiencing each other at the same age and not really knowing that they're mother and daughter, obviously, but there are these moments where Mary Margaret and Emma seem incredibly mother/daughter and sometimes where it seems like I'm her mother and she's the daughter and then some where it seems like we're total mutual friends so it's interesting to see the dynamic of that relationship."

    Goodwin said that she finds the whole concept ironic since she has often been mistaken for Morrison in public and vice versa. "In the beginning of our careers, we were confused for each other all the time to the point that I've done interviews as her on red carpets because I got so tired of trying to explain to people that I was really not Jennifer Morrison from House. I had long hair, she had dark hair... I have autographed pictures of her. I've just given up."

    Also for Goodwin, going from playing the wife of a polygamist on "Big Love" to Snow White was not one she necessarily had planned. "I was reading every movie that's being made in the next year and was uninspired to work at all and said I wanted to read the pilots. I haven't read pilots in seven or eight years because that's how long I've been owned by HBO and, really, that's where all the great writers have gone. I read genius pilot after pilot and most of the genius ones I thought 'This isn't something I want to do but I can't wait to see it' but then this came along and it was a no-brainer. I have to do this. It wasn't an 'I want' thing. I have to be a part of this." Ironically, Goodwin also said that she's been saying in interviews for years that she'd love to get the chance to play Snow White someday. Maybe dreams do come true on "Once Upon a Time."

    Speaking of dreams, Pearlman has a simple one - that an audience tunes in on Sunday to watch the premiere. "That's the part that's completely out of our control. We made the pilot in the spring and it was well received. ABC's doing a great job of promoting it just everywhere... but there's always that fear - we all have it - of throwing a party where nobody shows up. Even though it's a great party, it's just you and your dog. That's my biggest fear."

    "Once Upon a Time" premieres Sunday at 8:00/7:00c on ABC.

    www.thefutoncritic.com/interviews/2.../#ixzz1bSOvozUC
     
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    'Once Upon a Time' Set Visit: The Cast Explains How They're Breathing New Life Into Old Stories


    by Laura Prudom, posted Oct 21st 2011 1:15PM

    I'm not being hyperbolic when I say that ABC's 'Once Upon a Time' is unlike anything you've seen on television before. Its closest relative is probably a little-watched NBC miniseries called 'The 10th Kingdom' which aired in 2000, at least in the way it blends classic fairytales with the modern world to offer a whole new interpretation of pop culture's most familiar yarns.

    'Once' also shares a certain amount of DNA with 'Lost,' since it was created by Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, who wrote for the mystery series for the duration of its run (you can read Mo Ryan's recent interview with the duo here). But in its ideas, execution, and undeniable sense of whimsy, 'Once' is a unique creature, accessible to viewers from ages eight to 80.

    Earlier this month, AOL TV visited the Vancouver set of the fantasy drama, wandering through the enchanting streets of fictional Storybrooke and talking with the cast about how the show is evolving so far. Join us after the jump for a hint of what you can expect when the show premieres on Sunday (8PM ET, ABC), and come back next week for a deeper look. Mild spoilers ahead.

    Our story revolves around Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison), an emotionally repressed bail bondswoman who prefers to spend her birthdays chasing down bail jumpers instead of throwing herself a party. But when the son she gave up for adoption 10 years prior appears at her door, Emma finds herself dragged into a world of make-believe and magic -- or, at least, into a world made far more colorful by a lonely boy's imagination.

    Henry (Jared Gilmore) believes that his long-lost mom is secretly the child of Snow White (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Prince Charming (Josh Dallas) -- or, as they're known in the depressing town of Storybrooke, Maine, Sister Mary Margaret Blanchard and John Doe. Thanks to a book given to him by Mary Margaret, Henry believes that Emma is the only one who can break the curse that's keeping them trapped in our world, a place where "happily ever after" doesn't exist. And did we mention that he thinks that his adoptive mother, Regina (Lana Parrilla), is the Evil Queen who banished Snow White and the other fairytale folk to our world to live their days in misery?

    It might sound complicated, but considering that the show leaps between our reality and the land of fairytales with giddy abandon, the story is easy to follow. And while the names may seem familiar, as the series progresses, it will become clear that the show isn't interested in simply retelling Disney stories -- it wants to give these characters a depth that no 90-minute movie ever could.

    That's especially true of Snow White and Prince Charming -- two characters who are indelibly etched into our cultural consciousness, but whose story will be nothing like what you've seen before. Unlike the Disney version, this Snow is a little less passive and a little more ... kick-ass than we're used to, but she's also far from a pure, pristine princess.

    "Once we started exploring what her backstory might be, it occurred to me, as I was inspired by many of the things that I was reading, that maybe Snow White was suffering from the same flaws and inefficiencies that her stepmother suffers from; maybe she really is vain, maybe she really is prideful, maybe she really was competing for the attention of her father. Those things are justifiable in the story," Goodwin explained, fresh from the set and dressed in Mary Margaret's somewhat conservative attire: a high-collared blouse and knee-length skirt, her short, elfin haircut making her seem smaller and more fragile than her vibrant fairytale alter-ego.

    "In that, I started thinking about things," she continued. "She's a princess and there would be a sense of entitlement that comes with that and a lack of social experience. So I think that these things that I think of as flaws in a character do come across as strength in some ways. I think we can still justify the Disney version of Snow White, the Grimm's version of Snow White, with these elements. We haven't redefined her, we're just fleshing her out a lot."

    Likewise, the iconic romance between Snow and Charming is given some real exploration, according to the exceedingly charming Josh Dallas: "We're going all the way back to the origins of Snow White and Prince Charming. We're going to find out how they met, where they met, what his real name is, how he got the name Charming, all of those kinds of things. We're going to find out a lot of information about their backstory, when that epic true love first was kindled."



    www.megavideo.com/?v=CD6IOPJX

    "I think some of my favorite scenes are between Snow White and Prince Charming, just because their relationship is so complicated," Goodwin told us. "We will find out that it's based, in the beginning, on real animosity and manipulation, I would say, and selfishness. I really love that that is our foundation, that's our platform and it gives us so far to go."

    Each episode will be structured around a specific character and their backstory; the pilot establishes all the players, while the second episode centers around the Evil Queen, the third around Snow White and Charming -- you get the idea.

    Executive producer Steve Pearlman elaborated on their plans for the arc of the season: "Network television in particular has become a very tricky animal in that, on the one hand, you want episodes that can be self-contained, so if the audience missed last week or the last two weeks, they can still come in, watch this week, and feel like they haven't missed anything," he pointed out. "On the other hand, you want people to be watching every week. The idea of having a show that grasps people and just holds them by the hand and says, 'you must be here to watch every single week,' that's what we all want, right?"

    Lana Parrilla and Jennifer MorrisonTo explain their structure, Pearlman used the example of the fourth episode, which is about Cinderella (a friend of Snow White's, naturally). "We introduce Cinderella in the first act and we resolve the story in the final act. [But then there's an] Emma portion of that story that kind of continues," he said. "There are other twists and turns along the way that don't have anything to do with the specifics of the Cinderella story that are additive to our character development. Hopefully, what we're doing over the course of the season is continuing to build each week, give the audience something new about our main characters that keeps them coming back."

    If you're concerned that the concept sounds too campy or cheesy, Morrison reassured us that they want to keep the Storybrooke scenes grounded, to allow for the fairytale scenes to ham things up a little (and if you have a character whose name is literally "The Evil Queen," a little tongue-in-cheek scenery-chewing should be a prerequisite).

    "The approach for all of us has just been to treat it as if it's very real. There is no sense of, 'oh, we're in a fairytale' -- it's been really important for us to really keep its feet on the ground that way," she insisted. "And Emma is the one character that is grounded in reality and doesn't buy any of this fairytale stuff and thinks it's just this child who is trying to deal with his emotions by having this fantasy idea. From that perspective, it's just all about digging into these relationships and figuring out the root of all those things. Every time I've read through the script I'm so blown away by how specific and different those relationships are to each character in front of her."

    For more 'Once Upon a Time,' check out Maureen Ryan's interview with the creators about how the show is and isn't like 'Lost.'

    If you just can't wait until Sunday, US viewers can currently watch the pilot online at IMDB. For those that want the full, widescreen experience, the first episode airs Sunday at 8PM ET on ABC.

    Are you intrigued by the concept of 'Once Upon a Time'? Which of your favorite fairytale characters are you hoping to see on the show? Share your first impressions below.


    Below, check out a video of Ginnifer Goodwin talking to 'Live With Regis and Kelly' about getting injured on the 'Once Upon a Time' set:

    www.megavideo.com/?v=1A2CO5XQ



    www.aoltv.com/2011/10/21/once-upon-...ast-interviews/



    Ginnifer Goodwin - Once Upon a Time *Interview (Oct.21/11)


    http://youtu.be/tAMwLK6ODTI



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    STAGE TUBE: Cast of ABC's ONCE UPON A TIME Discuss Upcoming Drama




    The cast of ABC's ONCE UPON A TIME talks about the upcoming fantasy drama. ABC's ONCE UPON A TIME tells modern fairytales with thrilling twists and hints of darkness. It is brimming with wonder and filled with the magic of some of the most beloved stories. It will air Sundays, from 8:00 - 9:00 pm ET on the ABC Network.

    The story follows Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison, "House") who believes she knows how to take care of herself. She's a 28-year-old bail bondsperson who's been on her own ever since she was abandoned as a baby. But when Henry (JarEd Gilmore, "Mad Men") -- the son she gave up years ago -- finds her, everything changes. Henry is now 10 years old and in desperate need of Emma's help. He believes that Emma actually comes from an alternate world, and that she's Snow White (Ginnifer Goodwin, "Big Love") and Prince Charming's (Josh Dallas) missing daughter. According to his book of fairytales, they sent her away to protect her from the Evil Queen's (Lana Parrilla) curse, which trapped the characters of fairytale world forever, frozen in time, and brought them into our modern world.

    Of course Emma doesn't believe a word, but when she brings Henry back to Storybrooke, she finds herself drawn to this unusual boy and his strange New England town. Concerned for him, she decides to stay for a while, but she soon suspects that Storybrooke is more than it seems. It's a place where magic has been forgotten -- but is still powerfully close -- where fairytale characters are alive, even though they don't remember who they once were, and where the Evil Queen, known as Regina, is now Henry's foster mother.

    In order to understand where the fairytale world's former inhabitants came from, and what ultimately led to the Evil Queen's wrath, you'll need a glimpse into their previous lives to learn their origins. But it might just turn everything you've ever believed about these characters upside-down.

    Meanwhile, the epic battle for the future of all worlds is about to begin. For good to win, Emma will have to accept her destiny and fight like hell.

    "Once Upon a Time" stars Ginnifer Goodwin as Snow White/Mary Margaret, Jennifer Morrison as Emma Swan, Robert Carlyle ("The Full Monty," "Trainspotting," "SGU Stargate Universe") as Rumplestiltskin/Mr. Gold, Lana Parrilla as Evil Queen/Regina, JarEd Gilmore as Henry, Josh Dallas as Prince Charming/John Doe and Raphael Sbarge as Jiminy Cricket/Archie.

    To watch the cast discussing the upcoming drama, click below! http://bcove.me/2g6jlysh


    Read more: http://broadwayworld.com/article/STAGE-TUB...1#ixzz1bW5FxMyL


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    www.megavideo.com/?v=RT9S1J3Z




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    thanks for the vid Aleki !!
    great interview and she's so beautiful !! (love the scarf)
     
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    Once Upon a Time: The Story Begins


    We talk to cast members and producers from the new series about fairy tale characters.


    US, October 23, 2011


    Snow White. Prince Charming. Jiminy Cricket. Rumpelstiltskin. The Evil Queen. Some incredibly iconic fairy tale characters are at the center of ABC's Once Upon a Time. When I visited the set recently, Ginnifer Goodwin (Big Love), who plays Snow White, noted the oddity of taking on such a role, recalling a scene in the pilot involving one of the famous Seven Dwarves. As Goodwin put it, "Doc was birthing my baby! Like, Doc is my OBGYN. I never thought I'd be able to say that."

    From Lost writers Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, Once Upon a Time centers on what happens when the Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla) puts a curse on all of those living in the fairy tale land, sending them to our world, with no memories of their true identity. Into this town of Storybrooke comes Emma (Jennifer Morrison), who is brought there by the son, Henry (Jared Gilmore), she gave up for adoption. But Henry not only reveals the truth about the residents of Storybrooke to Emma, he tells her she is the daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming (Josh Dallas) – and the one person who can help set things right.

    Like Lost, flashbacks figure heavily into Once Upon a Time, as we move between the present in Storybrooke, and the past in the fairy tale world. Morrison, like the rest of the cast, was excited about the opportunity this gave them, noting, "You immediately have a familiarity of some sense of who Snow White is and some sense of who Prince Charming is and some sense of who Little Red Riding Hood is because it's so engrained into our culture to have a point of reference for these characters. So when you have that familiarity already, then we're providing the opportunity to tell backstories and fill things in and fill in the blanks that you never would've guessed or never would've thought of, and see how it all mixes together."

    As Dallas put it, "I think that's what's so great about Eddie Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, about what they've written, is they've taken all these iconic characters that we all know, but they've made them somehow realer. There's a reality to them. Prince Charming just happens to be a name. He's still a man with the same emotions as any other man. He's a prince, but he's a prince of the people. He gets his hands dirty. He's got a kingdom to run. He has a family to protect. He has an epic, epic love for Snow White. He's like everybody else. He's human."

    Look for plenty of additional fairy tale characters to show up, with executive producer Steve Pearlman noting, "In episode four, we introduce the character of Cinderella and we do a modern take on her. And in one of the next episodes coming up, we have an episode that involves Hansel and Gretel. We're really trying to go to a lot of different places and tie the stories back to our main characters."

    The main villain of the story is of course the Evil Queen, known as Regina, Storybrooke's mayor, in our world. Said Parrilla, "Emma Swan coming into Storybrook is a huge, huge, huge threat. There's always two stories being told when playing Regina. There's the threat of her knowing she's an evil queen and then there's just the pure simple fact that the biological mother has stepped into her world and the threat of losing her son is just enormous. That's a fear that I think any adopted mother would have. I think that's going to really help the audience relate to Regina in some level. " Parrilla noted, "You'll learn a lot about the Evil Queen and her history and why she's so evil – why she has so much anger and hatred. She really doesn't want anyone to be happy – Snow, Charming, anyone. She will destroy everyone's happiness, and you'll learn why very soon." She grinned, noting that while there is a vulnerability to Regina where Henry is concerned, we shouldn't forget, "she's a royal bitch."

    Because of the nature of the story, Morrison is one of the only cast members who doesn't appear in the fairy tale sequences. As to how she felt about that, she laughed, remarking, "Initially it was 'Oh, I'm actually fine with it.' I kind of like being the audience's proxy in that I get to have a genuine reaction to how ridiculous this all seems but then there is, as time goes on and I see these gorgeous images of everyone in the forest in their gowns and I'm like 'Well, maybe I'm a little bit jealous.'"

    Raphael Sbarge plays Jiminy Cricket/Archie, revealing the fifth episode tells the story of, "How Jiminy Cricket came to be Jiminy Cricket. And it gives us a different kind of storytelling. There's one about Rumpelstiltskin [played by Robert Carlyle], there's one about Prince Charming. Each character's sort of gotten their turn and then we get to sort of find how that interacts."

    Sbarge said he felt Once Upon a Time felt very different on the TV landscape and remarked, "Fresh and innovative and daring is dangerous in television, but these guys are really smart, as we know from Lost... So far I can say, categorically, they continue to sort of surprise me in terms of the writing. It continues to be thrilling with, 'How fun! I never would have thought that!' And it's no small trick. Obviously there's Grimm's fairy tales and other fairy tales, but to keep trying to breathe new life into this, they're a smart bunch folks sitting around a table like this, knocking out these stories."
    Discussing how she approached playing Mary Margaret, the small town school teacher Snow White is trapped as, Goodwin explained, "Mary Margaret, the way we created her was she's an amalgamation of all of the characteristics that the Evil Queen would want her to have, so we kind of created her in reverse. It wasn't that 'This is her life experience so this is how she would seem.' It's 'This is how the Evil Queen would want her to seem so this must be what her life experience was.' In some ways I feel like that she's almost a photographic negative of Snow White. Because the Evil Queen hates Snow White so very much, everything that is alive in Snow White is repressed to an unreachable extent in Mary Margaret."

    When it came to playing Prince Charming, Dallas (seen this summer as Fandral in Thor) said he was having a blast. "It's amazing. I love all the fairy tale land stuff. It's always great fun. It's a boys dream to be able to do this kind of stuff. Get a sword and ride horses and fight trolls and dragons and all kinds of stuff. Live in a castle and have a kingdom… It's a challenge and a blessing for actors to be able to have these two characters, which are essentially the same person with the same core, but different experiences and different memories, which make them different people. And it's sad, the Storybrook characters… They're always trying to get back to that fairy tale character, but they don't really know that. They don't remember that they were who they are. So they're always trying to find their way back, subconsciously, to who they were. So there's always a search going on within them."

    If you're hoping for twists and turns, Pearlman thinks you'll be happy, saying, "Adam and Eddie have found a moment or multiple moments in every episode we've done. Every episode has had some kind of turn in it that either will be a twist on a fairytale or a twist that would be like a soap opera twist that's more character-based. I think both are really fun. Down the road, when we do the Hansel and Gretel story, when we see the gingerbread house, what is the Once Upon a Time version of the gingerbread house going to look like? And I can't tell you because I don't know yet. Those are the kind of things we spend a lot of time talking about."


    http://uk.tv.ign.com/articles/121/1210487p1.html
     
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    Ginnifer Goodwin and Jennifer Morrison: All About the Once Upon a Time Stars



    By Liz Raftery

    Monday October 24, 2011 05:00 PM EDT



    Ginnifer Goodwin and Jennifer Morrison are no strangers to television, having made names for themselves starring in HBO's Big Love and Fox's House, respectively. They've now paired up for ABC's new fantasy adventure series Once Upon a Time, a modern-day take on Snow White, which premiered Sunday.

    Set in the strange fairy tale town of Storybrooke, Maine, the show features Morrison as Emma Swan, who may be the long lost daughter of Snow White, played by Goodwin.

    Turns out the actresses have more in common than starring roles on a buzzed-about new show … Here are some fun facts (and surprising similarities) about the two stars.

    1. Jennifer x 2
    They both have the same name – at least on their birth certificates. Born Jennifer Goodwin in Memphis, Tenn., Goodwin later changed her name to "Ginnifer," both to distinguish it and so that people would adhere to its proper Southern pronunciation.

    2. They've Got Degrees to Prove It
    Gin and Jen's acting credentials extend beyond stage and screen roles. Morrison, 32, majored in Theatre and minored in English at Loyola University Chicago, graduating in 2000. Goodwin, 33, received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Acting from Boston University in 2001. And as a child model, Morrison starred in television commercials and appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated for Kids in 1992, alongside Michael Jordan, while Goodwin appeared in a Gap campaign in 2008.

    3. Tweet Tweet!
    Both are avid Twitter users. Fans can keep up with Morrison and Goodwin on their Twitter pages, where they post updates about Once Upon a Time and often respond to questions and comments.

    4. They Love Animals – For Different Reasons
    An animal activist, Goodwin once adopted an entire flock of turkeys and was a spokesperson for the animal protection organization Farm Sanctuary's Adopt-a-Turkey program in 2009. Though she was at one time a vegan, the actress eventually had to abandon the diet due to health issues.

    But something tells us they wouldn't be ordering the same thing off a menu. Morrison once told PEOPLE, "I love In-N-Out Burgers!" and she's Tweeted her affection for Thanksgiving turkey as well.

    Guess Gin and Jen can't have everything in common.

    www.people.com/people/article/0,,20539610,00.html
     
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    Once Upon a Time! TV Guide Magazine!



    http://youtu.be/RI8Q7qF0L5M

     
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    Ginnifer Goodwin: A fairy-tale role as Snow White



    NEW YORK — Once upon a time, a beautiful actress won the role of fairy-tale heroine Snow White in an enchanting new series.

    Not only that, but the actress scored a parallel role. She would also play schoolteacher Mary Margaret Blanchard, a present-day transformation of Snow White who, thanks to a curse by the Evil Queen, is trapped in the village of Storybrooke, Maine, with fellow fairy-tale folk — all of whom have forgotten their pasts as storybook characters and, now stranded in the artifice of real life, been denied every fairy-tale character’s birthright: the promise of a happy ending.

    The actress, of course, is Ginnifer Goodwin, whose series, “Once Upon a Time,” has emerged as one of the fall season’s biggest hits. It airs its second episode Sunday at 8 p.m. Eastern on ABC. Also starring on the show are Josh Dallas, Lana Parrilla, Robert Carlyle, Jared Gilmore and Jennifer Morrison as Emma Swan, a Boston bail bondswoman who is drawn into the mystery of Storybrooke (and who turns out to be Snow White’s long-lost daughter).

    “Once” has arrived alongside NBC’s “Grimm,” which, inspired by Grimm’s classic fairy tales, pits a homicide detective against mythological creatures living among humans in his Portland, Ore., hometown. It premieres Friday at 9 p.m. Eastern.

    “It seems strange to me that there have been a lot of joint reviews of the two shows,” says Goodwin. “The only thing I see we have in common is that we both draw from a certain expansive genre of literature.”

    She makes a good point. The whimsical abandon of “Once” is its own thing, recalling, if anything, other sui generis shows such as “Pushing Daisies” and “Ugly Betty” and, befitting its creators, Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz, the myth-entangled “Lost,” on which they both were producers.

    “I was addicted to ‘Lost’! I’m an eekie-geekie fan of theirs!” says Goodwin, by way of explaining why she scarcely paused before joining their new project when she got the invitation.

    The 33-year-old Goodwin is best known as the youngest of three sister wives to Bill Paxton on the HBO polygamy drama “Big Love,” which concluded its run earlier this year. Her films include “Mona Lisa Smile” and “Walk the Line.”

    Now she has the dual challenges of playing one role that was created from scratch, Mary Margaret, and one role that everyone has known from infancy: Snow White.

    “I thought there might be pressure to live up to such an iconic character as Snow White,” she says, but adds emphatically, “There’s not. The parts of the story that we’re addressing are always things that could have happened off-page. I’m not re-enacting any part of the Snow White story you’ve read before, or seen in a movie, nor is anybody else re-enacting parts of their stories you’re familiar with.

    “Besides, we throw all the fairy-tale characters together. Why couldn’t Snow White and Cinderella have been friends?

    The series opens with Prince Charming awakening the poisoned Snow White with a kiss. That was on last week’s premiere (which drew a fantastic 13 million viewers, even up against Fox’s World Series and NBC’s “Sunday Night Football”). The story goes on from there.

    Much to Goodwin’s surprise, Mary Margaret (whose pixie haircut is the style Goodwin has sported for years beneath the wigs other characters obliged her to wear) has proved to be far more demanding than Snow White to play.

    “I’m used to building a character based on that character’s life experiences,” she says. But Mary Margaret’s life as Snow White is stripped from her memory, replaced by the curse of the Evil Queen, who, in effect, has reimagined her.

    “What would the Evil Queen WANT Snow White to become? If she is vivacious and confident and optimistic in her Snow White form, then, in Mary Margaret form, the Evil Queen would want her to be subservient and insecure and lonely.

    “Is she depressed? She is, but it isn’t that simple. The Evil Queen wouldn’t want her to be able to be self-indulgent in her depression. She would want her to be ALMOST happy, but always have things fall through — to get a taste of love but have it ripped away, to want to have children but, after teaching other people’s children, go home every day to face none of her own.”

    On a future episode, Mary Margaret confides that she wants marriage, kids and true love, but she sighs, “If true love was easy, we’d all have it.” Adventure and romance seem always beyond reach.

    “She’s always on the verge, but nothing works out.”

    If it seems Goodwin has subjected this character to exhaustive analysis, so be it, she says, beaming: “That’s what makes it fun!”

    Now filming her 10th episode, “Once Upon a Time” has been loads of fun for Goodwin, including the action scenes she plays as Snow White — a first for her.

    “My favorite day thus far was the day I ended up in the emergency room getting stitches in my face,” she reports. That was during production of the third episode, which airs next week. “I’m still wearing a splint on my finger, months later,” she adds, exhibiting it proudly.

    The scene in question was part of a suspenseful rescue sequence in a forest near Vancouver, British Columbia (where the series is filmed), complete with swordplay and horses.

    “But I collided with a horse,” Goodwin says, “and I was on foot. I found out what it’s like to fly. I fought to hold my hand up to cover my face, and thank God, because otherwise I think I would have lost an eye. I injured my hand protecting it.

    “The first thing that went through my head when I landed was, ‘Oh, they’re not going to let me play Snow White anymore,’ because I thought I had broken my face. Then I thought, ‘Is this the moment my career ends? I’ve broken my face!’”

    Later, after being treated at a hospital, she listened to phone messages from alarmed network and studio executives a thousand miles away in Los Angeles. She smiles.

    “I told them, ‘I only got like three stitches and I’m headed back to work, and I’m stopping by Starbucks on the way.’”

    As real life goes, that’s a storybook ending.

    http://www.silive.com/entertainment/tvfilm...fairy-tale.html
     
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  13. Aleki77
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    Once Upon a Time Visitor Kristin Bauer: 'Evil-Bitch Typecasting Is an Awesome Thing!'



    Once Upon a Time will cast its spell again this Sunday (8/7c, ABC), and helping deliver the magic is one of our favorite TV scene-stealers, Kristin Bauer van Straten.

    The True Blood actress is bringing to life the iconic fairy tale villainess Maleficent in the series’ Enchanted Forest, and while some actresses might voice concerns over one-too-many similar roles, Bauer van Straten does not. In fact, she tells TVLine she loved the part because of its similarities to her Bon Temps badass, Pam De Beaufort.

    Here, find out what else Bauer van Straten loved about the character, whether or not she’ll return for another showdown with the Evil Queen, and more.

    TVLINE | Talk a little about going from playing the outlandish Pam on True Blood to the evil sorceress Maleficent on Once Upon a Time.
    It was really fun! True Blood fans and Once Upon a Time fans are similar because they’re similar types of shows; it’s a fantastical world that we can escape to. Can I just say that my evil-bitch typecasting is the most awesome thing and I hope it lasts forever. [Laughs] I also had so much fun with Lana Parrilla, who plays the Evil Queen. You never know when you go on a new show who you’re going to get along with, but with her it was just game on! We had a blast. I also got to do green screen work to a huge extent (see the photo above) and I can’t wait to see it put together.


    TVLINE | Lana Parrilla is so good, especially in the Enchanted Forest scenes where we’ll see the two of you together. There’s got to be tons of fun, bitchy back-and-forth.
    Totally! What’s fun about characters like this is playing the different levels and colors of it. With Pam on True Blood — and maybe I’m just losing my mind — I’ve started to see that she’s the only one telling the truth. She has more integrity than most people in Bon Temps. You really start seeing the other side of the coin, which makes it fun to play. But yes, Maleficent and the Evil Queen are frenemies. This is a very longstanding relationship; they both have something that the other one wants and they have to be very crafty and clever in trying to get that thing. It’s a real chess game.

    TVLINE | This role was actually offered to you at the last minute. How, if at all, did that time crunch impact your prep in taking on such an iconic character?
    It was actually similar to what happened with my True Blood casting, which was also short notice. For me, it’s almost better if I don’t have too much time to think about it; that way I feel like I go with my first instinct. I enjoy playing things a little bit under — I try to find the person behind the evilness. I usually give myself a whole backstory that may or may not be true. [Laughs] But it doesn’t really make a difference because you’re doing something more than playing “evil.” Also, I had a really good helper there with Lana. She’s been doing this for awhile and she knew that world really well… Look, if you play tennis with Roger Federer, you’re just a better tennis player. [Laughs]

    TVLINE | What can you tease about what Maleficent has that the Evil Queen so desperately wants?
    It’s kinda cute. I think of it like a clothing swap with little girls: One wants the silly pink sweater and one wants the red slippers, but you can’t just come out and say that. [Laughs] Each one of these women has made a scientific discovery that can help them get what they want, and now the other one has to try and figure out how to get it — under the guise of “having tea.” It’s just really good writing. When you get really good writing, you don’t have to play the most obvious thing; you get to play around a bit.


    TVLINE | The show’s producers have said that the story is certainly left open for Maleficent to return in the future. If she makes it to Storybrooke next time around, what do you think she would be like?
    You know, I was trying to figure that out…. I kept thinking she’d be the town librarian because I want something that’s totally opposite of who she is. I don’t know why we always think the librarian has some sort of opposite personality, because I don’t think they ever do in real life — but there’s actually a librarian who runs one of the True Blood fan sites, so maybe there is some evidence there. [Laughs] Either way, it would need to be something really innocuous.

    TVLINE | So, you’re definitely open to reprising this role if your schedule allows?
    Yes, it would be so fun!

    http://www.tvline.com/2011/10/once-upon-a-...bauer-season-1/
     
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  14. Aleki77
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    Jamie Dornan Says He Has Some 'Fun Stuff' In Next 'Once Upon A Time' Ep



    Posted 1 hr ago by Jocelyn Vena in TV News

    We're a couple days away from the second episode of "Once Upon A Time," and its star Jamie Dornan, whom you may also know as this week's Hump Day Hottie, recently let Hollywood Crush in on what to expect as the totally fun TV show progresses.

    "Episode two there's a lot happening with Regina, because like 'Lost' [the two series share writers], they like to do in the early stages that everyone has their own episode pretty much," he said. "And you get a better taste of their background and what's brought them to this point. The second episode concentrates on Regina and the Evil Queen, so it's exciting. I have some fun stuff. We'll see the mayor start to crumble a little bit.

    "It's so layered and clever beyond belief. It's meticulous in how it's thought up," he continued. "Every single thing that happens, there's a reason for it, and it corresponds to something that happened in fairytale land. And it's pretty complex stuff, but it's fun."

    Oh, yeah, we're also going to get to know more about Jamie's character, Graham. He plays the town sheriff in the real world and calls playing his fairytale character a "trip," adding, "I can't reveal too much about mine. Essentially they're the same person at their core… It's a pretty big challenge… But that's the fun of it. One day you're just being normal, and then the next, you're in fairytale land. It's crazy. It's cool."

    Although "Once" may be just starting, it'll gain competition tonight in the form of another fairytale series. "Grimm" joins "Once," as well as two versions big-screen adaptations of "Snow White," in the new craze. And Jamie has this message for all those other guys: "I don’t think anything matters except for 'Once'… I don't think anyone needs to watch any of the films that come out or 'Grimm' or any of that. Just concentrate on our show," he joked. "No, watch everything!"

    But why so many fairytales lately? "There hasn't been stuff like this on mainstream television in a while in this form and I think people want it," Jamie said. "People want to see those classic stories."

    Are you watching "Once Upon a Time"?

    http://hollywoodcrush.mtv.com/2011/10/28/j...ime/#more-72062
     
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    Interview to Once Upon A Time Cast



    Once Upon A Time - Prologue: Happily Ever After? - Featurette #01



    http://youtu.be/pooFtn45I58









    Once Upon A Time - Chapter One: The Clock Ticks - Featurette #02



    http://youtu.be/3CKKUgith-k






    Once Upon A Time - Jennifer Morrison - Interview #01



    http://youtu.be/ZDZtrBX2rqc





    Once Upon A Time - Jared Gilmore - Interview #01



    http://youtu.be/8JoRzhqPPF0





    Once Upon A Time - Ginnifer Goodwin - Interview #01



    http://youtu.be/ODP1UblQdTo






    Once Upon A Time - Lana Parrilla - Interview #01



    http://youtu.be/1zRNtJ22tx0



    thanks to http://repimg.tumblr.com/
     
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137 replies since 18/10/2011, 20:57   6830 views
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