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By
Suzanne

Interview with Constance Marie of "Switched at Birth" on
ABC Family
7/13/11.
ABC Family’s Q&A Session with Constance Marie– Switched
At Birth
Moderator I know that you have been involved with the whole green
movement and everything behind that. How has that actually played in to
your life in terms of the new baby and everything like that?
CM Oh, my gosh, honey, can we talk? I mean, there are many, many things
that I realized when I was even trying to get pregnant that impact the
body, and impact body chemistry. So, when it came to dealing with my
baby, everything from using cloth diapers to soaps with no sodium lauryl
sulfate in them, which supposedly causes cancer, and trying to keep cut
down on the plastic as much as possible; all organic food. She hasn’t
had her vaccines yet. She is now two and a half; she is going to start
doing that. I mean, I’ve got like a wheelbarrow of alternative
information, if anybody wants to know any.
Moderator Let me ask you for the show itself, is there anything special
that you do green in that area?
CM Well, it’s a little bit crazy, and I think the transportation
department tells secrets about me behind my back; but, I do have my own
recycling bin set up inside my trailer. Where all my paper, and I’m very
proud of the production because they recycle all their paper that they
have. We have bins all over the place for plastic bottles and stuff. A
lot of it is plastic; a lot of this stuff is disposable, so I set up my
own bin in my room and I have my paper, my plastic, and I separate it
and I keep it in there and every once in a while the transportation
fairy empties it for me as a hint to get rid of it. Doing that, and one
of the things that we started in our makeup and hair room is we all
bring our own cup, so that way we don’t use so much paper and plastic
cups. We have our own coffee. I donated a coffee machine; so that way
everybody can have fresh coffee without having to necessarily go to
Starbuck’s. It’s a really good, good machine.
Moderator Well that’s fantastic.
CM Oh yeah. We wash them in the sink there; and you know try to cut down
on everything.
Moderator What do you think is the single most important thing that you
want everybody to get from the show?
CM Okay. I would have to say that the most important thing about this
show is, the most number one thing, is that it literally teaches America
and merges the hearing world with the deaf community. Since the deaf
community is fifteen million strong, the fact that it merges those two
seamlessly, I think it’s a huge gift to America. I really do; and that’s
one of the reasons I’m a part of it is because it’s never before have
there been like three major leads on a show. You know, in particular, my
character, Regina, bridges the hearing world and the deaf world just
seamlessly. Of course, behind the scenes I’m working my butt off
learning sign language. I would have to say that’s the single most
important thing, but then if you go into like the three other things
behind that is that it calls into question the nature versus nurture
question, the racial differences, cultural differences, socioeconomic
differences in families. How, no matter if you’re a single parent
family, a two-parent family, you have money, no money, you’re Puerto
Rican or you’re white, every body’s got issues. And how the conflict
comes from that. I mean, I think that’s amazing. It is just a melting
pot of drama. It’s fabulous.
Moderator How did you prepare for this role of working in the deaf
community?
CM Oh my gosh; sign language boot camp. I didn’t know anything about it.
I watched a tremendous amount of documentaries and I have a wonderful
master’s certified sign language teacher, an ALS instructor who came and
literally beat me into submission. I say that in a loving way, but
really, I had to hunker down and essentially learn a language that I had
no clue as to anything about it. It’s so funny because in my Mommy and
Me group with my young baby, all the moms, every single mom, taught
their child sign language, except for me and of course, I’m the one who
ends up having to do a TV series where I have to become fluent in sign
language in a matter of weeks. Ironic.
Moderator What do you hope people learn from the show?
CM What do I hope they learn? Well, I hope they learn, number one, that
deaf people are just like everybody else except they speak fabulously
with their hands. I hope not that they learn, but I hope they question
as to what a family really is and how it doesn’t necessarily have to be
like the perfect mom and dad and 2.5 children, how families are
completely different, but yet, the love underneath that is the most
important thing however you skin that family cat.
Moderator Regarding sign language, you said you went through sign
language boot camp, is there an interpreter on the set with you?
CM We have that same master’s certified sign language instructor. We
call him the signing police, but we love him. He actually has to monitor
all the sign language stuff. I’m taught directly through him, and then
we have Katie Leclerc, who is fluent. She plays Daphne. And then we have
Sean Berdy, who plays Emmett, and he’s fluent; and then we also have
Marlee Matlin, and she’s fluent; but everybody has different ways of
signing. So, it’s like if we were doing a show in Texas and we all had
to have the same dialect, that’s essentially what Anthony, his name’s
Anthony Natale, the sign language instructor, he monitors and makes sure
that we’re all speaking the same dialect so there is uniformity to all
of it. So we create this fabulous world in Kansas.
Moderator Sounds wonderful and as someone who has a sister who is a sign
language interpreter, I thank you for so positively representing this
community.
CM Oh, thank you so much, and you know what? Please tell her I’m doing
the best I can. I will become fluent one day; I’m just not there yet.
Moderator Yes, she knows. She appreciates it. She watches every week.
CM Does she do anything in particular? Because one of the things I don’t
think people realize is that it is a huge muscle to learn how to use
your arm like that. Does she do anything, as far as like, to maintain,
like putting it in ice or heat packs? Because I’ve heard that
interpreters, when you are learning really intensely, you get pain and
there are ways to alleviate that pain. Does she do anything in
particular, or has she been doing it forever?
Moderator She’s been doing it for so long now that it’s just second
nature to her right now. She was seventy percent deaf when she was a
little girl, and then she had surgery for her hearing, and then she just
was doing it and she just kept on doing it ever since, and now she is
actually in Disney World working as a sign language interpreter for the
internship.
CM That is so cool! There can’t be a better place to work!
Moderator Now that you are a mom how is that relationship similar to the
relationship you have each of the young adults who play your children in
Switched at Birth?
CM Oh my gosh. I think I’m a little more Type A and a little more bossy
and a little more controlling and way more mothering. I was always that
way and people used to always say to me, “God, Constance, you’ll make a
great mother some day,” and I had no idea what they were talking about.
But it was that they just wanted me to back off from telling them not to
smoke and take a sweater and make sure that they eat properly; but now I
have a baby, you know and some of our actors are young, I just do. It’s
so funny. I just did a yoga with Sean Berdy the other day. I invited him
to my yoga class.
Moderator He’s fantastic. We’re big fans.
CM He is so sweet and it was funny because I felt so protective and so
mothering of him and I took him for ice cream. It was awesome.
Moderator How does the the role of Regina is different from, or similar
to, the role of Marcella and Selena?
CM Marcella, well first of all she was a real person, and she was based
upon Marcella Quintanilla, Selena’s mom. Marcella was much more docile,
and she worked everything kind of behind the scenes, and she was much
more laid back overtly, but then kind of controlled things underneath.
Marcella had Abraham Quintanilla, the father, to be the bad cop and so
she could be good cop. Regina needs to be both; so she has to be a lot
more up front, a lot more in your face, and she also is a recovering
alcoholic, so she has that sort of disability, I guess it would be. She
has to do everything; it’s all on her shoulders. So she’s a lot more in
your face and if I were to like, I don’t know, do a celebrity boxing
match or celebrity death match, I’d put my money on Regina.
Moderator I would love to see you break dance on the show. Is there any
chance that you are going to get an opportunity to share with us your
awesome dance skills?
CM Oh my gosh. You know what, the thing about break dancing is - it is
for the young - and my break dancing is broke, okay. I’m 45 years old
and we don’t age very well, but a little bit of salsa might not hurt me.
I might be able to bring a little, because I was also in that movie
Salsa. I might be able to bring a little bit of salsa.
Moderator Do you have a guilty pleasure TV show and would you tell us
why you like it?
CM Guilty pleasure? Well, True Blood is the first thing that comes to
me. Is that a guilty pleasure? You know, it’s so crazy is because if
that, and Dexter, if those scripts had been given to me, I would have
probably thought, “You know what, this world is a little too dark for
me,” you know like all those crime shows and stuff. They’re really hard
for me because you pay a price living in that world all the time, but to
visit it and watch it and watch Sookie Stackhouse and Bill get it on,
you know, in vampire lust is pretty awesome.
Moderator What sort of preparation is the cast given about deaf culture?
Like did you guys learn about how name signs are given? And how deaf
people use phones in advance, or do you kind of learn those things as
they come up in the show?
CM You know, it’s interesting because I really was blessed to be able to
work with my sign language coach well before, like about three weeks
before we started production. His first phone call to me was on the, I
guess it is the video phone? So I got exposed to that early on and I
also got exposed to the name sign thing early on. I kept trying to pick
my name sign and nobody would let me. Darn it. I want Regina’s name sign
to be the same sign for beautiful but nobody would buy it. So I lost and
I learned that a deaf person had to give you an actual name sign so mine
is a dancing C, because I was a dancer back in the day. What else did I
learn? I also learned that deaf people, at least this is what Anthony
and what I’ve seen, are very straightforward; like they don’t mince
words, and I love that, and it’s also very, very consistent with my
Regina character.
Moderator Fun, well as you learn ASL, do you have a favorite sign?
CM I think my favorite sign is “beautiful” because it’s just done with
such flair across your face, like a dance move. It’s like when I watch
Marlee Matlin sign, they’re all my favorite because she is just a sexy
signer; the sexiest signer I’ve ever seen is Marlee Matlin. She does
this full body sign. It’s beautiful to watch; and I’m like, “What did
you say,” and she says, “I had to go to the bathroom!” It’s not even
anything like really exotic that she’s saying, it just looks gorgeous.
Moderator Do you have a favorite or memorable scene coming up that you
can tell us a little bit about?
CM Oh, let me see. I just have to say that the episodes that we have
coming up, Regina gets busy. I guess that’s my heavy handed way of
saying she gets to go out on dates and things.
Moderator Well great. I’ll look forward to that.
CM She also has big secrets to be revealed. Oh my gosh, there’s so much
stuff coming down the pike, it’s unbelievable. If I look back on it, I
just think, oh my god, these shows are just getting better and better,
and more complex, and I think everybody is going to, we won’t leave
anybody unfulfilled, that’s for sure.
Moderator We actually have a couple of questions sent in from your fans
today. The first one is, what has it been like working with Marlee
Matlin? I know you mentioned her earlier, and did you know her prior to
Switched at Birth?
CM I had no idea. I had never met her before. I mean, I was a big fan
from what I did know and, in doing part of my research I watched
Children of Lesser God, and I just thought, oh my god, she’s absolutely
amazing and she is going to play my BFF! Oh my gosh, I’m not worthy.
That was the first thought that went through my head, and then when I
met her, she could not have been more warm and sweeter and smarter and
funnier and we both this rat nasty same sense of humor. She was just
incredibly, incredibly supportive of me and I just never felt judged by
her; you know, like I was less than as far as my signing is concerned.
She was just awesome. She is just like the best pretend BFF to have and
we’re also twitter junkies. We talk via twitter all the time.
Moderator Which character do you see more of yourself in, Bay or Daphne?
CM Oh, I think I’m a hybrid. I think I was young and rebellious and
artistic and feisty, but I also had that wanting to work really hard and
do well in school, even though I was kind of average; but considering my
circumstances growing up, I was the good kid in my household. I never
wanted to get in trouble, so I did both of them.
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