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By
Suzanne

Interview with Laura Allen and Dylan Minnette of "Awake" on
NBC 3/13/12
NBC UNIVERSAL
Moderator: Tracy St. Pierre
March 13, 2012
1:00 pm CT
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to
NBC Universal’s Awake Laura Allen and Dylan Minnette Press and Media
conference call.
During the presentation all participants will be in a listen-only mode.
Afterwards we will conduct a question-and-answer session. If you have a
question, please press the 1 followed by the 4 on your telephone at any
time during the presentation.
If at any time during the conference you need to reach an operator,
please press star 0. As a reminder this conference is being recorded
Tuesday, March 13, 2012. I would now like to turn the conference over to
Ms. Tracy St. Pierre. Please go ahead, ma’am.
Tracy St. Pierre: Hi everyone. Thanks for joining the call today. I just
want to let you know if you have any other questions or follow-up
requests after this call, I can be reached at 818-777-2940. And remember
that Awake airs Thursdays on NBC at 10:00 pm. I’m now going to turn it
over for the first question. Thanks.
Operator: Thank you. And once again ladies and gentlemen to register for
a question, please press the 1 followed by the 4 on your telephone. You
will hear a three-tone prompt to acknowledge your request.
If your question has been answered and you’d like to withdraw your
registration, please press the 1 followed by the 3. If you’re using a
speakerphone, please lift your handset before entering your request. One
moment please for the first question.
And our first question comes from the line of Jamie Ruby from
syfyvision.com. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Jamie Ruby: Hello. Thanks so much for doing the call today.
Laura Allen: Good morning.
Dylan Minnette: Yes hey.
Jamie Ruby: Good morning, hey. So can you both just kind of talk about
how you started working on the show like if you auditioned or you were
asked to do it? Just kind of how that all happened?
Laura Allen: Dylan, you want to go ahead?
Dylan Minnette: Laura?
Laura Allen: You know what? It was actually about a year ago almost
exactly that I first read the script and was really taken by the premise
now that the public has seen the first episode as well. So all we had
was the pilot episode and I knew Kyle from Lonestar - just his name and
his blog. If you ever read it, it’s hilarious and then Howard Gordon
from 24. So I was excited to go in and in the audition process Jason was
very involved and so we all met about a year ago.
Dylan Minnette: Yes it was the same thing for me. At the time I was
auditioning, you know, for pilots and I got the breakdown for that on
this - for Awake and as soon as I read the synopsis for the pilot I
thought to myself if this show doesn’t get picked up I don’t what will
because it sounded so cool.
I read the script and I thought it was really, really cool and then when
I went to the audition just like Laura said, Jason was there and so was
Kyle and everyone was in there. And it actually was a pretty quick
process to get to the end result, but we all met about a year ago and
exactly of course that I had the same experience pretty much.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Diana
Daley with thedeadbolt.com. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Diana Daley: Thanks. Good morning. Congratulations on this interesting
series.
Laura Allen: Thank you.
Dylan Minnette: Good morning.
Diana Daley: That is very cool. Can you both talk a bit about how your
character and relationship with Britten evolved as his realities change?
Laura Allen: That’s a great question. I think if I could speak for
Hannah, he and I are really not adapting to the situation obviously at
the same rate. And the question that I’m constantly asking in portraying
Hannah is he on board with me, are we grieving together, are we moving
forward together, can we connect over this loss of Rex.
And in the grieving process there’s so many times things that Hannah
learns about herself, learns about Rex when he was alive that almost
keeps him alive for her. So in that sense, I think she and Michael
because Michael experiences him very much alive can connect over that.
But she evolves in a different way because she’s sort of bittersweet and
has the memory of Rex where he’s very actively involved in Rex’s life.
So we’re becoming very more divergent and still yet trying to move
forward together so it’s very interesting.
Dylan Minnette: Right. I think for Rex it’s a little different because
he’s in a different situation than Hannah where Michael is his dad and
he’s always telling him, you know, what to do and he’s adamant about
things. So I don’t think he really thinks about his dad missing his mom
as much as he does. But Rex really keeps it to himself because he
doesn’t want his dad to see what he really feels about it. And he opens
up to him sometimes, but it’s really hard for him to do that because he
was really close with his mom.
But Rex kind of evolves with Michael. You’ll see because Michael’s doing
his best to feel close to Rex, and you’ll see things throughout the
season where Rex gets closer to him or just farther away. And it’s a
cool little ride that you can follow with each character and the entire
cast. I think it’s really cool.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jamie
Steinberg from Starry Constellation Magazine. Your line is open. Please
go ahead.
Jamie Steinberg: Hi. It’s a pleasure to speak with you both. Dylan, good
to talk to you again.
Dylan Minnette: Hey yes. Good to talk to you too.
Jamie Steinberg: I was wondering what kind of reaction have you gotten
from people that come up to you - both of you - about the show and on
Twitter?
Laura Allen: I had a friend at lunch yesterday who was like okay now
that we’re alone can you tell me are you alive or are you dead. Of
course, I don’t know. And if I did know - no I’m glad not to know. Are
you Dylan?
Dylan Minnette: Yes I’m glad not to know.
Laura Allen: I’m glad not to know.
Dylan Minnette: I’m just as much of a fan as everybody is of watching
it. I like when I - I’m excited to get a new script and if I knew the
end result of the entire show I’d think...
Laura Allen: Right.
Dylan Minnette: ...I’d just be disappointed. It wouldn’t be a special.
Laura Allen: I agree.
Dylan Minnette: Yes. But I - nobody’s ever stopped me on the street yet
or anything and I think the funny thing that I see on Twitter is those
people that just kind of at first don’t understand what they’re watching
like they just tuned in for a few minutes or something. They’ll be like
wait, wait, wait. So I’m confused. Which one is supposed to be dead and
alive. And I just never answer. I just say, “I can’t.”
Laura Allen: And yet I feel like it’s the kind of show that you can
catch an episode and you don’t need to have seen the pilot, you don’t
need to have seen the second one. You can skip to four or eight and it’s
a self-contained story in itself. I mean once you get past the premise
which is very understandable. I think now that people are actually
watching it on television they do get it. They get that, you know, he
goes to sleep and he wakes up to somebody else and...
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: ...so each episode has its own crime solving and the
therapy I think is really narrative in helping describe what he’s going
through. And then he’s got us on both sides too. So yes people can catch
on even now.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Lena
Lamoray from lenalamoray.com. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Lena Lamoray: Hi Laura and Dylan.
Laura Allen: Hi. How are you?
Dylan Minnette: Hey.
Lena Lamoray: Good. Now happy early birthday Laura from...
Laura Allen: Oh thank you.
Lena Lamoray: ...(Katherine) and the rest of your fans.
Dylan Minnette: What?
Laura Allen: Thank you very much. No it’s not until - well let’s not
rush things - it’s not until next week.
Dylan Minnette: Well, I won’t waste time. Never mind, okay.
Laura Allen: Okay. Thank you Lena.
Lena Lamoray: You’re welcome. Now last week’s episode gave us some
insight regarding the accident and who was behind it. Can you both talk
about the accident and what it was like filming that brutal scene?
Laura Allen: Go ahead Dylan.
Dylan Minnette: Filming the car accident scene itself was fun. I mean we
don’t - Laura and I know just as much about behind the accident as
everyone does as though watching. But filming the car accident scene
itself was a lot of fun because we actually got to do it. It was like a
really cool thing we got to when the car spun upside down and it was a
lot of fun. It was really fast and exhilarating. Laura, you have any
other thoughts on that or...
Laura Allen: Yes. It’s called a gimbal and a lot of...
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: ...actors are familiar with it. But it’s a rotating device
so you’re in the body of a car and it spins on itself over and over and
over again, and there’s debris flying, and your hair is flying, and
you’re screaming and...
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: ...you know, there’s not a lot of acting because it really
is kind of off putting at first but...
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: ...nobody got sick. I think there was some bits of plastic
glass flying and stuff, but otherwise. Yes?
Dylan Minnette: I think we all had fun. I remember I was watching the
first time like you and Jason did it and Jason was just like (whoo)
let’s do it again, you know.
Laura Allen: Kind of like a ride. Yes if it weren’t’ for the blood, I
would have brought my son to work that day. I think he would...
Dylan Minnette: Yes, yes.
Laura Allen: ...have liked that.
Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen as a reminder to register
for a question, please press the 1 followed by the 4 on your telephone.
Our next question comes from the line of Tara Bennett from SFX Magazine.
Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Tara Bennett: Hi guys. Thanks so much for doing this.
Laura Allen: Hey.
Dylan Minnette: Hey.
Tara Bennett: Loving the show. And I have probably more of a nerdy
question for you guys. So last week I thought it was really fascinating
that we actually got to see your perspectives outside of Michael’s -
having your own moments. And just a little odd in terms of the format of
the show. So I was just wondering do we see more of that as the season
goes along? And then I guess how you guys kind of or how the producers
kind of told you that kind of works with the constraints of him being in
both universes.
Laura Allen: Right. I know when I first read those scenes - any scene
without Michael Britten, I thought does this validate the red world.
Does this mean that it really is existing outside of his dreaming and
all that. But I think what Kyle our writer, creator, producer is saying
is that it’s what he calls disappearing narrative theory which I think
he can talk far more than I can about. But that we’re all part of -
Michael’s only dreaming - how do I say this. We dream more than we can
remember about dreaming and know that there are pieces, you know, that
we only remember the parts that we’re involved in or he’s only
remembering parts that he’s involved. But that we do exist in part of a
larger world if that makes sense. Dylan?
Dylan Minnette: Right and I felt the same way. Like after we did the
pilot and before we got the next script that actually got picked up and
everything, I thought to myself well every single one of my scenes is
going to be with Jason. So there’s no other way that they can do that.
And then I got the next script I just says like I was proven wrong. I
don’t know what’s going on here. But actually we found out about the
theory and I’ve learned more. And like you asked yes, you will see some
more of that this season and I guess it’s Kyle Killeen. He’s brilliant
so there’s always a reason behind something, you know. So that’s what I
(think).
Tara Bennett: Thanks guys.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jamie
Ruby from syfyvision.com. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Jamie Ruby: Hello again.
Laura Allen: Hi.
Jamie Ruby: So I was just curious. This is for Laura. I think it was in
the pilot, Hannah told Michael at one point she said something like to
tell Rex that I love him.
Laura Allen: Yes.
Jamie Ruby: But through most of the show she’s kind of against this and
doesn’t want to hear it because obviously it hurts her. Is there going
to be anymore mention of that or is Michael just kind of going to keep
it from her so he doesn’t upset her?
Laura Allen: I think it’s a really sensitive topic between the two of
them and, you know, earlier on also in the pilot we talked about his
dreaming and it’s really upsetting because he’s got these dreams going
that I feel are really preventing him from coping with the loss of Rex.
And so, you know, I’m glad he’s in therapy. He’s back at work. Really I
just want him to be with me, you know, to choose me. To be in my world
and not (unintelligible) but just be with...
Jamie Ruby: Yes.
Laura Allen: ...be actively grieving with me and yet he kind of is in
this delusion as I see it of living with Rex or knowing new information
about Rex. So it causes such a rift in our relationship that I think he
no longer opens up to me about it. And that brief moment where I say,
“Tell him I love him,” I think Hannah is really willing to momentarily
feel like all right if you do experience him in your dreams let him know
what I can’t tell him, you know.
But we kind of avoid it from this point forward. I mean I feel like the
other shoe will drop again, but from this point forward, you know, he
tries to keep - just like he’s doing at work. I mean he wants to appear
to be a sane person.
Dylan Minnette: And Rex has no idea about the dreams.
Laura Allen: Right.
Jamie Ruby: Well that’s interesting. I hadn’t thought about that.
Dylan Minnette: Yes Rex - I think Rex is so - I think Michael feels a
little comfortable with Hannah, a little closer to her and I think that
Rex he’s having - they’re not having issues, but they’re just having
some troubles of communicating with each other after the loss that they
- after losing Hannah, I think that him telling Rex about the dreams
would be the wrong thing to do. So that will probably get brought up in
the future too, but Rex just - he doesn’t know and I think Michael - he
thinks that that’s not the right thing to tell Rex just yet.
Jamie Ruby: Right. Okay well thank both of you.
Laura Allen: Thank you.
Dylan Minnette: All right. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of
Christine Montgomery from GlobalTV. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Christine Montgomery: Hi Laura. Hi Dylan.
Laura Allen: Hi.
Dylan Minnette: Hey.
Christine Montgomery: Hi. I was wondering just about the extra challenge
for you both as actors feeling like you’re supposed to feel something
that you see being contradicted in another reality and do you only read
the script for your own story on set or...
Dylan Minnette: Well the scenes in a script are labeled with a G or an R
for green or red so you know where you are at all times. But I should
have something that like, you know, there’s an awesome really like
what’s the word - what’s the word thinking - I can’t think of it, but
what a great serious actor would do, you know, just read their (world).
But I’m such a big fan of the show and the story that I wait by the door
for the next script to get there so there’s no way I’m not going to read
the whole thing. That’s just for me but...
Christine Montgomery: Right.
Dylan Minnette: ...but no, I read the whole thing so.
Laura Allen: When you say contradictory, you mean feel things that are
contradiction in other words grieving for Rex when Rex is actually alive
in his world?
Christine Montgomery: Yes.
Laura Allen: You know, it’s true I do kind of deny that reality in my
own acting. I mean I feel like I have to completely believe in what
Hannah believes in and so I don’t take into account that he’s in school,
and taking tennis lessons, and the whole bit. I really just play it like
he was upside down in that car and he’s dead, you know, and Michael and
I have to move forward from here.
Christine Montgomery: Great. And I was also wondering if you had the
opportunity to work on any scenes and if in the future we’re going to
see other flashback or maybe (unintelligible) world (unintelligible)
together?
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: What do we say Laura?
Laura Allen: I know. Well it was always throughout the shooting of these
first episodes like are they going to do it, are they going to do it
because you’re getting older and we can’t really flashback if you’re...
Dylan Minnette: I know.
Laura Allen: ...looking like you’re...
Dylan Minnette: If they flashback to the accident, they better do it in
season 1...
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: ...or else I’m going to be like 20 by the time the story
go back or something, you know.
Laura Allen: But I think we were pleasantly surprised by the end of the
season that we do get to work together a little bit.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: That’s all I can say.
Christine Montgomery: Okay great. Looking forward to it.
Dylan Minnette: All right, thanks.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question is a follow-up question from
the line of Lena Lamoray from lenalamoray.com. Please go ahead.
Lena Lamoray: Hi again. Now...
Laura Allen: Hi.
Lena Lamoray: ...Laura I loved you in Terriers.
Laura Allen: Oh thank you.
Lena Lamoray: So how would compare Hannah to Katie? You’re welcome.
Laura Allen: Well it’s a really different show, isn’t it?
Lena Lamoray: Yes.
Laura Allen: I mean Katie was a bit trying to get her boyfriend to grow
up, and get married, and move forward. And actually maybe that’s what
they have in common is like just wanting to get on board with this
relationship and be together, you know.
But Terriers, there’s a lightness and a humor to it and Awake I think
has so much resonance and, you know, I’m a mother of a teenager and I
suddenly had to grow up a little bit in a year. But I’m loving the dual
reality of Awake and working with Jason and we’ve got such an amazing
cast on the show. It’s also my first foray really into network
television so it’s exciting to be on NBC and, you know, reach a wider
audience.
Lena Lamoray: Now the first two episodes have been intense so what can
you both tell us about the upcoming episodes?
Dylan Minnette: They’re just as intense.
Laura Allen: This is Dylan’s episode. I’m real excited for it.
Dylan Minnette: (Oh), for the next one?
Laura Allen: Yes, Guilty.
Dylan Minnette: Yes, I've gotten a chance - did you see it, Laura? Have
you seen it?
Laura Allen: I have not. I have not seen it yet.
Dylan Minnette: It's actually really intense. It's very exciting. The
next episode "Guilty" where I guess I can sort of say now, because
they've shown it in the previews, you know, there's clips online and
stuff where a - an escaped convict from Michael's past kind of is trying
to get back at Michael to prove to him that he's innocent, and he finds
Rex and takes him, and Michael is on this race to find him in one
reality. And then he finds - goes to the other reality to try find
clues, and it's just really cool, exhilarating episode, the third one.
And I think that people continue to be like, "Wow, this show is not
losing momentum yet." Or it won't. It won't. But yet it was just - I
have no idea why I said that. But this show - you know, you know how
skeptical viewers are, you know, they watch and that's the way they
think. That's why I said that.
Laura Allen: Yes. Yes, it really is an action-packed episode, I think,
and (unintelligible) full, and we already, I think, are sympathetic to
Michael's schizophrenia, but this is - he could possibly be losing his
son twice now. And I think that any sense of guilt he has over the
accident is just compounded by, you know, perhaps losing him again,
devastating.
And Hannah in the meantime is dealing with - she has to speak in front
of a group at the memorial for Rex, and so she has to give a speech, and
I think that that's a bit uncomfortable for her, because really her
momentum, it has kicked in and she's repainting the house and wanting to
move forward and move on. And she slows down in this episode to take a
moment to remember Rex. And she doesn't usually take that time, and I
think it - a lot catches her by surprise.
Dylan Minnette: And I have to say, Laura, that theme with your speech
turned out great.
Laura Allen: Oh, thank you. It was like giving a - it really was like
giving a speech in front of a bunch of people, because I was.
Dylan Minnette: Wow.
(Lina): Such a fantastic show. Thank you both so much.
Laura Allen: Thanks, (Lina).
Dylan Minnette: Thank you.
(Lina): You're welcome.
Operator: Thank you, and once again, ladies and gentlemen, to register
for a question, please press the 1 followed by the 4 on your telephone.
Our next question comes from the line of Ernie Estrella from
BuzzFocus.com. Please go ahead.
Ernie Estrella: Hi guys, thanks for speaking.
Laura Allen: Hey.
Dylan Minnette: Hey.
Ernie Estrella: My first question is for Laura. I, you know, in Terra,
it was kind of ironic how you had this child that you were trying to
hide, and in this one - in the pilot we kind of see you almost asking
whether or not it's time to move on and maybe try for another child even
though - is that something that we're going to continue to explore?
Laura Allen: The desire for a child, I think, is something Hannah has
not let go of, and yet, Michael says, you know, "Let's hold off for a
minute. We - you know, let's make sure that we are dealing with all of
our issues first."
And so the pursuit of law school in Oregon and moving forward is really
Hannah's focus from - at this point, but losing a child I think - and
she's somewhat young enough still to, you know, really do it now, you
know, and trying to get him, you know, I think - I don't know. Losing a
child it just biologically probably kicks in to want to not replace it,
but, you know, continue on with your mothering instinct. So it's very
much alive in her, I'd say.
Ernie Estrella: Okay, and then for Dylan, are we - we saw like this
little acknowledgment that Laura's character made that - you know, that
her husband still sees you in his dreams, but are we going to see that
in reverse where kind of he acknowledges that his mother's on the other
side of his dad dreams.
Dylan Minnette: I'll have to say no. I think that Michael - it's - he
just - like I said earlier, I think that Michael just thinks that that's
not the right thing to tell Rex, especially when Rex is kind of
standoffish of him, because Rex was really close with his mom, and he's
actually deeply affected by the loss, whether he shows it or not. He
just doesn't show it to his dad.
Really he shows it to his tennis coach in Terra, but he - Michael knows
that they're having struggles with really feeling close to one another,
so I think that - that's just - Michael just feels like that's not the
right thing to tell Rex if he wants to become closer to him, because
that would just push Rex away even more.
Rex thinks his dad is crazy, and the fact that Michael - because Rex
opens up to Michael sometimes and Michael knows that he's really
grieving deep down over losing his mom, that that would just probably
mess up things more. But he doesn't know. I think it's a risk that he
could take in the future, but just not any time in the beginning, no.
Ernie Estrella: Okay, thank you.
((Crosstalk))
Laura Allen: ...feeling. It's a fascinating premise though, isn't it?
Because even though - I mean it - if you think about just anybody who
might actually be grieving the loss of a wife or a mother, and you
experience your son and he's growing up and you ask yourself, "Oh, man,
what would his mother say if she knew," you know?
And he has the benefit that he gets to go to sleep and wake up and kind
of indirectly ask her or, you know, and find out about the fabric
softener. And then borrow from that world and go back to Rex and then
wake up and make it right. You know, so it's kind of ideal in that way.
Dylan Minnette: Right. So there's like certain things in there that he
uses from you where you're still kind of taking care of me a little bit,
because he's just getting tips from you.
Laura Allen: Yes, exactly.
Dylan Minnette: I know.
Laura Allen: And he tries to be that bridge. He tries to, you know, I
think that's the best he can do.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Ernie Estrella: Thank you.
Laura Allen: Thanks.
Dylan Minnette: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you, and our next question comes from the line of Jamie
Ruby from scifivision.com. Once again, your line is open. Please go
ahead.
Jamie Ruby: Great. Hi again, this one's for Dylan. You've now played two
different roles of a son that we're not sure if he exists or not. Can
you kind of compare "Awake" with your role on "Lost" and kind of the
different challenges you've faced?
Dylan Minnette: Well, my role - okay, what's different for me was my
role on lost, I don't - with that show, I didn't get every episode of
the season because I was only in a few episodes. But on this, I know
everything that's going on. I know exactly what the - that there's one
world that's real, one world that's not, but in that one I - especially
when I did my first episode of "Lost," I hadn't watched it yet, and I
didn't know what was going on. I thought - I seriously was convinced
that this - that what I was doing was a flashback.
So as far as I knew, I was alive, and then once I - after I did my first
episode of that, I bought the first season while I was in Hawaii filming
it, and I - when I went back for the like later episode of that season,
I'd already watched three seasons, and started meeting everyone and I
was like dying on the inside when I met everyone.
But in the end, I didn't know that I didn't exist - once I started
watching the sixth season, I knew that I did or did not exist, but in
the finale, I didn't get that entire script, because it was so
secretive. So when I was watching it on TV, I was like, "Oh, I'm not
real. Wow." And then I didn't know till I watched it, and then - but
whereas with "Awake," I know that there's a possibility of me being dead
or alive. I mean obviously to have to play it like you're alive. And you
have to play it like you have no idea, but...
Jamie Ruby: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: ...that was the difference. With that I had idea, but
with this I knew that there was something fishy going on. So they're a
little different...
Laura Allen: How's it going to be -
Dylan Minnette: ...ways you can think about it while you're acting.
What?
Laura Allen: What's it going to be like for you or for me to find out
that all this time, we've been dead, and then - or for Cherry or for BD?
I mean how do they justify -
Dylan Minnette: It's going to be so cool.
Laura Allen: It's going to be bizarre, isn't it?
Dylan Minnette: I like it - really cool. I've been through it once like
with "Lost," when I found out I was just like dead. I was just - I was
like that's actually really cool. You know. So whenever we find out the
result, I don't know, I think I'll just be like, "Wow, that's so
awesome."
Jamie Ruby: Well, it speaks to Michael Britten's vivid imagination,
doesn't it, that he could keep this going...
Dylan Minnette: I know.
Jamie Ruby: ...for maybe a six-year season- six seasons.
Dylan Minnette: I know. It'll be cool.
Laura Allen: Or we hope so.
Jamie Ruby: Yes, we hope.
Dylan Minnette: So...
Jamie Ruby: Thank you.
Laura Allen: Thank you.
Dylan Minnette: Thanks.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Ernie
Estrella from BuzzFocus.com. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Ernie Estrella: Hi, my call is that what do you guys feel - take away as
far as both of you carrying some of the emotional part of the show? So
much of it is the two cases that he works on, but (unintelligible) your
two characters are really kind of the emotional pulse?
Laura Allen: Mm hmm. Oh, it's my favorite. It's my - I feel so
privileged to get to tell this story. I mean I feel like it's the kind
of - that's the kind of television I like to watch, I mean, is the
emotional part. So to - it's a big responsibility and yet, it - I feel
connected to mothers and people who've suffered any kind of loss in this
role. And so it's an honor, I feel. Although there are days I wish I
could be the police precinct just shuffling paperwork.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: But you don't.
Dylan Minnette: I - and I've, you know what's funny? I literally have
the exact same answer, so if I were to answer, I'd just be wasting
time...
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: ...and end up saying the same thing as you. So I'd say
the same thing.
Laura Allen: You know, and what is also so interesting too about grief
is that there are really light moments and beautiful like life-affirming
moments in acknowledging suffering and sharing it with other people. I
mean I've experienced that this season playing Hannah, and so, yes, like
I said, it's just - it's an honor as an artist to get to tell that
story.
Dylan Minnette: Definitely, definitely. That's exactly -
Ernie Estrella: It - do we ever get to see either of your characters
meeting the respected psychologists?
Laura Allen: Oh.
Dylan Minnette: Meet the psychologists?
Laura Allen: Do you? Yes, do you meet BD or Cherry? No, obviously.
Dylan Minnette: I don't like - I don't want to give it away by saying
yes or no, but...
Laura Allen: We might have to pass on that question.
Dylan Minnette: I don't know. I guess I'll just have to pass.
Ernie Estrella: Fair enough. Thank you guys.
Dylan Minnette: All right, thanks.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question once again is a follow-up
question from the line of Jamie Ruby from scifivision.com. Please go
ahead.
Jamie Ruby: Hi, what - something that hasn't happened yet in the show,
is there anything that the both of you would really like to see your
character experience on the show, like if you could write it?
Dylan Minnette: I'd like to see what - how Rex would react to finding
out about the dreams. That - that's just for me, that's what I can think
of off the top of my head. I don't know about Laura, but...
Laura Allen: I look forward to - because I hope that there's a day that
we have - that he has full disclosure with me about his dreams, like
full, you know, and so I - but I like that they kind of tease us with
it, you know, and don't. We've got a ways still to go with this story.
Dylan Minnette: Yes. For now - I mean throughout the long run, I'm going
to end up coming up with - as other things are brought up, I'll think of
a lot more things of, "Man, I'd like to see this happen." And I do have
a lot of those, but the - most of the things that I could say are things
that would give stuff away, because I - when I spark up things that I'd
like to see happen, it's after other twists are brought up.
Jamie Ruby: Right.
Dylan Minnette: So...
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: ...right now all I can really say is what I'd like to
see is for Rex to find out about the dreams.
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: That's all I can say.
Laura Allen: I will say I hope there's more tennis. I took all these
tennis lessons. Did you, Dylan? Did you take tennis lessons?
Dylan Minnette: I took like eight tennis lessons before the pilot.
Laura Allen: Okay. I've taken a bunch.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: Come on guys.
((Cross talk))
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Jamie Ruby: Are there any specific guest stars you'd like to see on the
show?
Laura Allen: Oh, I can't wait. I hope we get a bunch of...
Dylan Minnette: I mean, Laura Innes is really cool. She's great and she
also directed an episode and she was awesome to direct an episode with
her, have her direct one of the episodes I was in.
Laura Allen: Yes towards the end.
Dylan Minnette: But there was - I think Laura that's really cool that
she was on the show especially when I found out about it. That was
really, really cool.
Woman: All right great. Well thank you both of you.
Operator: Thank you. And once again our next question is a follow-up
question from the line of (Bernie Estrala) from Buzz Focus.com. Please
go ahead.
Ernie Estrella: Hi so as fans of the show since you are both kind of
watching it as it airs, what's your takes on the individual
psychologists and their different methods in terms of as it respects to
your characters and how Michael will be able to I guess get through
this?
Dylan Minnette: I feel like with Dr. Lee in Hannah's world he is very
adamant and he knows that Hannah's alive and that there's no chance of
living in another world and Rex being alive. And Dr. Evans who's in the
reality that I'm alive in I think that she also feels the same way. Like
deep down she knows -- no deep down -- she obviously knows that reality
is real and that Hannah's not alive but she's more open to the idea of
what Michael is experiencing. So that's the two different things about
them that how adamant Dr. Lee is and how Dr. Evans is just more open to
the idea. That's my take on them.
Laura Allen: I feel like even though their approaches are so different
they are equally convincing and I love seeing brief moments where they
affect him and they persuade him and he goes into his world a bit more
panicky at thinking he really has lost Rex or he really has lost Hannah.
And so whether it's Dr. Lee being logical and forceful or if it's Dr.
Evans who's being nurturing and encouraging, I think they're both
threatening too.
Dylan Minnette: Yes and I think honestly one of my favorite themes in
the pilot was when Dr. Lee made a good point about why reality is real
and Dr. Evans had him read a page from the Constitution, why would you
do that? He's so scared to go to bed and wake up thinking up you're
going to be gone. And then he wakes up without the rubber band and he
freaks out. That was one of - every time I watch that I just like get
the chills because I think that's so cool how much a little thing one of
them says will affect him.
Laura Allen: Yes and Dr. Lee - in the original script Dr. Lee had a
retort to that also. He said, "Look there is so much that your mind can
contain that you don't even realize that you might have the whole
Constitution memorized but you don't know it, it's all in your
subconscious. So how do you know that you don't have it word for word
verbatim?" I love that.
Dylan Minnette: Right if they can just throw things back at each other
that makes one seem real the other - it's just like this giant game that
they play.
Ernie Estrella: And then my final question is between the two of you
just as pure actors and friends on the set, are either of you kind of
rooting for one or the other as far as being the one that's alive?
Dylan Minnette: I'm not. I just kind of go - because I think the purpose
of the show it's not for Michael to find out who's alive, who's dead,
it's Michael like struggling and trying his best to keep both of them
alive because he is so scared to lose one that I think throughout the
show the viewers and as the actors ourselves are just going along for
the ride with Michael and that's the purpose of the show is to go along
for the ride and hope that both are alive. And I think I'm not...
I like the two alternate realities and I know that in the end we'll have
the end result and I know we'll get there and I'm just going to kind of
- I just kind of like not knowing, it's going along and I'm not rooting
for one or the other really. I don't know about you Laura but I'm not.
Laura Allen: Yes no, I think it's like the anti rooting, you know, it's
like we are on Michael's journey and if anything we're rooting against
the therapists who are disproving one reality over the other. I mean, I
think he's just trying to keep it together and be good at his job and
have a fulfilling meaningful relationship with both his wife and his
son.
Dylan Minnette: Thank you so much.
Laura?
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: I just realized there are so many things coming that
nobody expects.
Laura Allen: I know. There's stuff that I'm almost saying and I'm kind
of like oops, don’t talk about that.
Dylan Minnette: Yes I know.
Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen once again to register for
a question, please press the 1 followed by the 4.
Our next question is a follow-up question from the line of (Jamie Ruby)
from Sci-Fi Vision.com. Please go ahead.
Jamie Ruby: Hi. Can you just talk a bit about acting alongside Jason
Isaacs on the show?
Dylan Minnette: Jason is he's amazing. He's an incredible actor and
especially as a young guy, right, I'm a male, just learning from such a
great older male actor like that every day is really amazing and Jason
can give me some great tips and I learned so much from him.
And also he's just a really fun and funny guy. And no matter where he is
he always has his iPod dock with him and he's always wearing his iPod
and every day at work he can get the whole crew to just sing along to
some 80s tunes and he just keeps the whole - there's like stressful days
where people are scrambling to get things done, Jason always knows how
to set the mood right. He's just really fun to have around.
Laura Allen: He is and he's tireless. I mean, he goes from I don't know
5 am to at least 11 o'clock at night and he's rewriting with us along
the way. I mean, he never gets stuck in, he never phones it in ever and
he's got the full range. I mean, with me he has to do some really
sensitive and with you I'm sure too and he's father and so there's a lot
that I think he just taps into naturally. But then he's got all this
stunt work that I never get to see but I'm sure he's like crashing over
walls and driving the car, and then he gets to sit in the therapist's
office and use existential conversations.
No, I delight in him and I too am learning a lot just watching him and
his humor is so wonderful for all of us on set and the crew adores him
too.
Dylan Minnette: Yes. There's nothing wrong with - like there's something
about Jason, it's just like he's the full package when it comes to
acting and just working with him. It's great, it's really great.
Laura Allen: And he's a friend, he's a good friend to all of us.
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Jamie Ruby: Great. I just did want to ask really quick, you guys
mentioned obviously that there's a lot coming up you can't talk about
it. Is there like anything that you're waiting for the fans to see that
you can talk about without giving away specifically what it is but just
kind of in a general manner?
Laura Allen: Yes.
Dylan Minnette: You'll word it better than I do without - I'll give
something away.
Laura Allen: I'm excited for the penguin episode because...Yes you too?
Dylan Minnette: Yes.
Laura Allen: It's an episode called That's not my Penguin. I can't
remember is it next week or two weeks from now?
Dylan Minnette: I think it will be episode six now.
Laura Allen: Episode six yes. Because it introduces a whole new color to
his dreaming. I don't mean literally red or green, I just mean there's a
new dimension to what this man can dream about.
Jamie Ruby: Okay now you've got me really intrigued.
Dylan Minnette: Yes that episode is one I'm really particularly excited
for. There's multiple episodes that I'm really particularly excited for
everybody to see but that's the first one that I'm like, "Oh my God, I
just want people to see this one now." But that one's really cool.
And then towards the end of the season there's just things that get
brought up left and right that just I can't wait for everyone to see. I
wish they could do a marathon where they just aired it all now.
Laura Allen: I know.
Jamie Ruby: All right. Well I just want to say I really do love the
series. I think it's the best new show on TV and I'm really excited to
see more so thank you guys so much for doing this today.
Laura Allen: Thank you. Thanks a lot.
Dylan Minnette: Thank you. My voice cracked.
Laura Allen: That's expected.
Operator: Thank you. And our final question comes from the line of
(Elizabeth Lavulo) from the What It do.com. Please go ahead.
Elizabeth Lavulo: Hi you too, how are you?
Laura Allen: Hi we're doing good. How are you?
Dylan Minnette: Good.
Elizabeth Lavulo: Good. So I've been listening to your whole interview
and just trying to figure out what to ask that I could share with our
demographic of South Pacific Islanders and Islanders. And what are three
- I guess what it do features, and it's an urban term for hot or not,
what are three what it do features that you can both think of why we
need to tune in right away to Awake?
Laura Allen: Do you understand the question? I don't really understand
the question.
Elizabeth Lavulo: Okay. So the question -- sorry about that Laura --
so basically the three points of why we should tune into Awake with the
competitiveness of like all the different shows going on. So like three
hot reasons why...Okay?
Laura Allen: Okay. I got two; let me think of a third. It will come to
me. First of all I think it's a stellar cast, led by Jason Isaacs but
the ensemble is phenomenal. I mean, to have Cherry Jones and BD Wong and
Steve Harris and Wilmer and Dylan in this cast, it's a dream for someone
like me. There are elements that are really going to satisfy most any
audience. I mean there's a family drama at the core but then there's a
police procedural that's self-contained in each episode. I mean he's
solving two cases not just one.
And the writing. I mean I think as we go further into the season it just
gets more and more daring. I mean that's all I can tease. But with such
an unusual premise it doesn't stop there.
Elizabeth Lavulo: Awesome.
Dylan Minnette: Right. I also think that one point is that it sounds -
it is a family drama at the core about the loss of a family member but
it also is you can tune in and it's like Laura said it's a police
procedural and then it's also an action show. It really gets really
action-packed at times. You're just like, "Oh my God." You can always
tune in and be excited or intrigued. You're never going to be missing
something or there's always something intriguing going on, something
emotional going on, something happy going on or something action-packed
going on. You're never going to be bored I feel like. I feel like it's
just a show where you're never, ever bored. That's what I think.
Elizabeth Lavulo: That's awesome. That's what it is and that's what it
do. Thank you very much.
Laura Allen: Thank you.
Dylan Minnette: All right thank you. That's what it do.
Laura Allen: That's what it do.
Operator: And it appears we have no further questions at this time.
Laura Allen: Okay.
Dylan Minnette: All right.
Woman: Thank you everyone for joining the call today.
Dylan Minnette: All right thank you.
Laura Allen: Thanks guys.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen that does conclude the conference call
for today. We thank you for you participation and ask that you please
disconnect your lines.
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