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By
Suzanne

Interview with Martha Plimpton and Greg Garcia of "Raising
Hope"
on FOX 4/13/11.
I really enjoyed speaking with these two, although my
phone cut out in the middle of the second question (I'm waiting for a
replacement! Darn thing has given me lots of trouble since I got it).
They were very nice and enthusiastic.
FBC PUBLICITY:
The Raising Hope Call with Martha Plimpton & Greg Garcia
April 13, 2011/10:00 a.m. PDT
SPEAKERS
Tra-mi Callahan – FBC Publicity
Greg Garcia – Writer/Producer, Raising Hope
Martha Plimpton – Virginia Chance, Raising Hope
PRESENTATION
Moderator Welcome to the Raising Hope call with Greg Garcia and Martha
Plimpton. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode.
Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. As a reminder,
this conference call is being recorded.
I would now like to turn our conference over to our host, Ms. Callahan.
T. Callahan Hi, everyone. Thank you so much for joining for the call
this morning. Just a quick reminder that Raising Hope returns with all
new episodes on Tuesday 4/19 at 9/8 central on FOX. I'm going to go
ahead and get this call started. I'm going to turn it over to Greg and
Martha.
G. Garcia Turn it over to us?
T. Callahan Yes.
M. Plimpton Turn it over to us? What are we supposed to say?
G. Garcia We're going to answer questions from these fine people who
have questions for us.
M. Plimpton That's right.
G. Garcia We have no statement prepared.
M. Plimpton Okay. Well, this is great guys. Thanks a lot for calling in.
T. Callahan Jeanine, we can take the first question.
Moderator We have a question from Lauren Fleishman from
PopCultureMadness.com.
L. Fleishman Martha let me ask you, as an accomplished actress, what
excites you about playing a character like Virginia?
M. Plimpton Gosh, well I appreciate the compliment and first of all.
Second of all, I don’t know. I like to have fun and Virginia's really
fun. I mean, Greg's written some really characters. It's not something
I've ever done before. I've never done a television series where I was
like a regular before. I figured if I was going to do something like
that I'd want to do it with people I really liked who seem really smart
and kind and funny and sweet. So it kind of all worked out perfectly.
L. Fleishman Greg for you, how did you know that Martha would be a
perfect fit for the role?
G. Garcia Well, I've just always been a fan of Martha's. She's a great
actress and I just felt like she could definitely do this. I think that
one of the things that Virginia has as a character is some balls and the
things I watch Martha in, I just always feel that there's some balls
there.
M. Plimpton Oh, that's so sweet. Thanks Greg.
Moderator Our next question comes from Catriona Wightman with Digital
Spy.
C. Wightman So they say you never work with babies? Have you had any
mishaps while filming the show?
M. Plimpton I can't think of any mishaps really. I don't know Greg can
you think of mishaps?
G. Garcia No.
M. Plimpton I mean, we did shoot a scene where one of the twins was
pooping the whole time. That was pretty good.
G. Garcia Yes, you're going to have that with the twins or any other
various cast members … because of our catering, but no, it's been a
delight. That's what they say and usually that's a fair thing to say.
You tend to spend a lot of time waiting for the babies to be in the
right mood to just sit still. So far, we've been very lucky with that
that our babies have really grown attached to the cast. So there's no
separation anxiety there when they have to just leave their parents for
a little bit and be with our cast. I think that they kind of consider
the cast their family at this point, which is nice for everybody.
Hopefully as we go forward, we're now going to be quickly getting to the
terrible two stages of our babies showing in Season 2, so we'll just see
what happens. Hopefully, our luck continues.
C. Wightman Do you think you will be going on to the toddler stage and
watching Hope grow up as the seasons go on?
G. Garcia Yes, that's the plan. That's the plan right now is that we
would stick with the Hope that everybody has met and fallen in love with
and we'll stick with her and we'll watch our family raise her.
M. Plimpton Hence the title, of course.
G. Garcia Yes. There you go.
M. Plimpton There you go.
G. Garcia Kind of backed into that there.
Moderator Our next question comes from Laurel Brown from BuddyTV.
L. Brown On Raising Hope, there seems to be a certain disregard for
political correctness in the humor. I was wondering what are the lines
that you like to cross and what are those lines that you don't think
you'll ever be crossing with the show?
G. Garcia Gosh, it's a good question but it's a tough one to answer
because the lines are blurry and constantly moving. You just sit in that
writers room and you hear jokes and you decide kind of on the spot, is
that something we want to do? I mean, the general rule is if it makes
everybody laugh we do it. There's been very few occasions where the
network says we don't want you doing this joke, but they have their
certain buzzwords and certain topics that they always want to stay away
from, no matter what. So you kind of know what you can and can't put in
a joke. Like, you can say pecker but you can't say Jesus Christ. There
are all these rules, but I think the answer to that question is that you
just kind of have to go with your gut and see what makes you laugh.
Occasional you're going to offend some people, but hopefully, you're
making more people laugh than you're offending.
Moderator Our next question come from Suzanne Lanoue from TV MegaSite.
S. Lanoue Martha, I was going to ask you since your time on the show
from the beginning until now, what has been the most surprising thing
for you?
M. Plimpton Oh my gosh. That's a good one. A lot of things have been
surprising. I had never done a TV show where I was like on the show
every week like a regular. I think part of that was I was afraid that
I'd get bored, like I've never played the same character for a year
before, ever. I haven't ever one time been bored at all. I can't say I'm
surprised by this necessarily, because I knew what I was getting into
and I knew Greg. I was a fan of his and I know how good our writers are.
So I can't say it's necessarily a surprise. I guess it's more of a sort
of a happy relief. I don't know. I don't know how else to describe it.
Yes, I'm always happy to go to work every day. It's not really
surprising it's just sort of more a pleasant—
S. Lanoue Grateful?
M. Plimpton Yes, pleasant, grateful feeling, exactly.
S. Lanoue Greg if you could have—?
M. Plimpton Where did she go? Are you back?
G. Garcia No. I didn't hear that question. Can we get that question
back?
M. Plimpton Is there anybody there?
G. Garcia Is it just the two of us?
M. Plimpton I think we're alone now Greg.
Moderator Okay, we'll have her queue back up. Until then, we'll go the
next question and that is from Jenny Eden from Total TV Guide.
J. Eden You've been referred to as one of the hardest working actors in
the business. What keeps you working so hard and what is the appeal that
you've got that you think means the parts that keep coming at you?
M. Plimpton Well, thank you for the compliment. Why I keep working so
hard? Well there are a number of reasons for that. Number one, I really
like working. I really love it. It's what I do for a living and I've got
to make a living. I've got to keep at it. I like to try new things. I
like to go new places and I like to work with new people. That's sort of
the definition of my job. As an actor, you just go where the work is,
right.
I guess, maybe part of the reason why I'm fortunate enough to get to
keep working, I'm hoping, is because maybe people like working with me
because I like what I do for a living and I want to have a good time. I
want to have fun doing it and it's important to me. It's important to me
if I'm having a good time than I feel like the work is better. The
quality of it is better and my level of interest is higher. So maybe
that's why.
I feel like, obviously, it's a little bit of both. You have to really
keep at it and keep focused on moving forward as an actor and a
performer. You can't get stuck in ruts or allow other people to stick
you in ruts. You have to keep challenging yourself. Then, hopefully, the
pleasure that you take in that leads to other people going, “Hey, she
seems like fun to work with I want to work with that,” maybe.
J. Eden You said something that you think that you would really like to
try your hand at. You said that you haven't done a long running
character like this before. Is there anything kind of in the back of
your mind that you've never been given a chance to do that you'd like
to?
M. Plimpton You know what's funny is I very rarely think about things
like that. I almost never have a plan for myself or think about some—I'm
not ambitious in that way. Like I don't see someone else do something
and go, “Man, I could really kill that. Man, I could do that way
better.” I've never actually had that thought. Things tend to come when
they are meant to come. I know that sounds kind of like spiritual and
cheesy, but I think things come when they're meant to come. If you try
to push it or you if you try to overly strategize as an actor I think
you stop having a good time and you start white knuckling life a little
more and I don't like to do that.
What the heck am I talking about?
G. Garcia I don't know. I made a sandwich. I thought it was your lack of
talent that had you working.
Moderator Our next question comes from Andrea Dahne from SpoilerTV.
A. Dahne Our viewers want to know how much of the show is ad lib verses
scripted?
M. Plimpton Almost none.
G. Garcia It's 99% ad lib, right?
M. Plimpton What? We've both given you simultaneous opposite answers.
G. Garcia And we ad libbed those answers.
M. Plimpton Yes. Almost none of it, right?
G. Garcia Yes. There's not a lot. I think it's a combination of the
cast, kind of trusting the writers, and the writers kind of spend a lot
of time trying to get the words right on paper. Also we have a lot to do
in a day. We usually shoot anywhere from 12, 14 hours in a day and we
have a lot to get done. So, I think as long as the actors are
comfortable with what's on the page we try to stick to it and get the
job done and move on. That doesn't mean there aren't discussions before
we shoot a scene. If something feels wrong coming out of their mouth or
it just doesn't feel like the character then we'll talk about it and
we'll make changes.
M. Plimpton I think we're all pretty confident that—maybe Cloris is the
one exception because she's been doing this so long and she's such a
pro, but I think the rest of us is pretty confident that we're not sure
we could come up with anything as funny as our writers come up with. I
think we're all pretty confident that they've got their eye on the ball
with it.
A. Dahne So you're spending 12 to 14 hours a day, do you shoot 6 days of
the week, then?
G. Garcia Five days.
Moderator Our next question comes from Melody Simpson from Hollywood the
Write Way.
M. Simpson I really enjoyed the episode, “Everybody Flirts...
Sometimes.” So I want to know Martha, do you agree with Virginia and
Burt's views and their understanding on cheating.
M. Plimpton On cheating?
M. Simpson Cheating and flirting.
M. Plimpton Right. I'm pretty sure they have an agreement on cheating
that it's probably not the best plan for a marriage, but hey, listen
when you been together as long as Burt and Virginia have you're
obviously doing something right. They've been together since they were
kids. They've grown up together. They have a whole long back-story that
we're still kind of mining and obviously, whatever they've got going is
working for them.
M. Simpson In the episode, “Cheaters,” Greg, the cast is ... and the
Charlie Sheen reference at the end were hilarious. So who else is on
your list to put on blast this season?
G. Garcia The Katherine Heigl thing—I think one of the writers put that
in there. I don't even know who Katherine Heigl is. So, I don't know if
I'd actually put her on blast. I mean somebody put her on there. I guess
she does movies that are kind of chick flicks or something, but I'm
really not sure. Yes, the Charlie Sheen thing—what was our Charlie Sheen
thing?
M. Plimpton I'm trying to remember.
M. Simpson It was the "Duh winning."
G. Garcia Oh, yes my kids says, "Duh winning," at the end of the episode
on the Amigo ... Garcia.
M. Plimpton That's actually the second time we, I think, would you say—
G. Garcia We did a thanksgiving thing. We said Charlie Sheen is thankful
for his whores and his dog. Yes, I recently spent three hours at Charlie
Sheen's house. It was an adventure. I don't know if anybody's on blast
with us. Whatever joke makes us laugh we just go with it and sometimes
using some pop culture references is a nice easy way to get a chuckle
out of people.
Moderator Our next question is from Lena Lamoray from LenaLamoray.com.
L. Lamoray Now what can you tell us about the upcoming episode and what
it was like working with Jerry Van Dyke?
M. Plimpton Oh my gosh.
G. Garcia Well I worked with Jerry Van Dyke before many times on Yes,
Dear and My Name is Earl. I'm a big Jerry Van Dyke fan and he's always a
pleasure to have. He always has great stories. He's an extremely funny
guy. So I was just pleased to have him there. I'd love to have him back
to more next season. In fact, on Friday I'm going to see him and Dick
Van Dyke doing The Sunshine Boys in Malibu.
M. Plimpton Oh, I'm so jealous.
G. Garcia So that's going to be fantastic.
M. Plimpton I'm so jealous.
G. Garcia Yes.
M. Plimpton Oh my gosh, please videotape it.
G. Garcia Yes. Maybe I can face time it. But no I love Jerry and he's
always an absolute delight. I believe this is Martha's first time
working with Jerry.
M. Plimpton It was my first time working with him and I could not have
been more excited and star struck. I mean, obviously I've been watching
him for years. I think he's one of the funniest people in the world. In
fact, Greg loaned my, which I still have to return to you, Greg, the DVD
of his movie ..., on the front porch, which this is a movie that Jerry
made about him trying to make a movie. I really think he's a genius. I
love that he came and did our show. He's such a pro. He was just dreamy.
I'm thrilled to know that Greg is going to have him back.
G. Garcia Yes, I definitely want to have him back. He's just one of
those guys it's great to have him on set. He's just a lot of fun.
L. Lamoray What can you tell us about the episode?
G. Garcia That episode with Jerry Van Dyke. Yes, there's a little bit of
a love story between him and Cloris Leachman and there's some
controversy going on because Cloris is not thinking all the way
correctly and believes that she is still married even though her husband
has passed away, so she thinks she's cheating. Martha's character has
some problems with that even though it's just in her mind. Meanwhile, in
that episode, Jimmy and Sabrina are going through some similar problems
where Sabrina feels that that, Wyatt, her boyfriend at college is
cheating on her. So they're going to investigate.
L. Lamoray Martha, I really love your relationship between Virginia and
Burt. How would you describe their relationship and what it's like
working with Garret?
M. Plimpton Oh my gosh, working with Garret is a dream, an absolute
dream. He’s wonderful. He's hilarious. He's incredibly smart. He's a
very, very smart actor. I love the relationship that Greg and his
writers have been developing the first season. I love that they grew up
together. I love that their childhood sweethearts, and they have that
history, and they're so familiar with each other that they're best
friends as well as husband and wife. I love very much that they're not
like the Bickersons. They're not like your typical sit-com couple and
that they're not always fighting about who's right or wrong about
something.
Obviously, this show has its conflicts. You have to because that's
comedy. But I like that they're in it together. I think that it gives us
way more room over the long haul just as characters to have fun and to
get to know these people, the fact that they're not always at each
other’s throats that I really like.
G. Garcia It's always better when we can have the two of them against
something else as a team, as a nice married team. They may not agree
about the way to go about whatever conflict they have, but it's nice to
see them working as a team.
Moderator We have a question again from Melody Simpson of Hollywood the
Write Way.
M. Simpson I'm thinking, if Jimmy wants a relationship with Sabrina,
he’s definitely going to have to run things by her before making huge
decisions like he did with the will. So will we have more opportunities
for him to show that quality and responsibility and really run anything
by her in the final episode of the season or are we going to explore
that more in Season 2?
G. Garcia I think that if you're looking for that it'd be more in Season
2. We actually end our season this year on actually a flash back episode
that happened five years in the past, which we have a lot of fun with. I
think for anybody, if you're just tuning in the show, you'll definitely
get a lot of laughs out of the episode. I think that if people have
watched the whole season there's a lot of little fun things in there
that call back from other episodes and questions about why people are
where they are in their lives and stuff like that.
So that's how we're ending the season. But I think one of our main
things to think about in Season 2 is exactly where that relationship is
going with Jimmy and Sabrina and we have a lot of different ideas and we
haven't decided everything yet ourselves. So it's a whole process to
kind of getting in there and seeing where the stories go and what's the
best thing to do.
Moderator That would be from Catriona Wightman of Digital Spy.
C. Wightman You just mentioned the flashback, Martha how was it filming
that for you?
M. Plimpton It was great. It's a lot of fun that we get to do this—that
we get to play these people now, that we've seen them as teenagers. We
have these two wonderful actors who play us as ourselves, young, just
starting out. It's a lot of fun that we get to jump all over the place.
That's the beauty and luxury of being on a show like this. We can kind
of do whatever we want which is awesome.
G. Garcia Martha was lucky there's some characters who have braces.
There's characters who have gained 400 pounds or were much fatter back
then. There were characters who wear a lot of make-up. Martha, she
looked exactly the same.
M. Plimpton Yes, I just wear barrettes.
G. Garcia Yes, barrettes. That was the ... of the big change.
M. Plimpton I know. I was a little bummed about that. I kind of thought
maybe I should have shaved by head or something.
G. Garcia Well, when we do the six-year flashback.
M. Plimpton Yes that's a good idea.
C. Wightman Also, is there any guest stars we should be looking forward
to in the last couple of episodes?
G. Garcia Yes in the last couple of episodes we mentioned Jerry Van
Dyke, Ethan Suplee and Jamie Pressley from My Name is Earl, they play a
married couple in our second to last episode, so look for that. That's
about it. In our flashback episode, we have our finale. We try to cram a
bunch of people that have been in the show throughout the season. So
there will be a lot of familiar faces in that episode.
M. Plimpton And a couple of nice cameo's too I think, right?
G. Garcia Yes.
M. Plimpton People sort of come in and out of the frame really, really
fast and you go, "Oh, man, that's awesome. He's on this."
G. Garcia Yes. There's some fun stuff.
T. Callahan We have time for one more question.
Moderator That question comes from Jenny Eden from Total TV Guide.
J. Eden Although you obviously didn’t start acting as young as the
little ones on your show, you started when you were—was it—eight. What
are your earliest memories of acting and how did you think it helped to
starting off at that kind of age?
M. Plimpton I was actually having a conversation about this the other
night with some people that I was working with. I was remembering that
when I did the first play that I was in when I was eight years old, I
remember my mother—who is not your typical stage mother at all. She was
not thrilled about me doing this. She didn't necessarily think I would
keep doing it, which was something to do in my summers instead of going
to camp, which I hated—she watched the performance and then afterwards
she said, "Honey, you did great. I'm really proud of you. You really
were excellent. I just want you to remember one thing. Even when you're
not talking you're still in the play." I would say that that's probably
the most valuable advice I've ever received as far as acting is
concerned. It's certainly stuck with me the longest.
J. Eden Would you say you missed out on anything by starting working
when you were young?
M. Plimpton No. My goodness no. What could I possibly miss? I've gotten
to do all kinds of crazy things. I've gotten to learn how to drive
boats. In fact, I learned how to ride a bike because of my first big
movie job. I grew up in New York City and I hadn't learned to ride a
bike by the time I was 12 years old because it's hard to learn how to
ride a bike in Manhattan. It was because of a movie job that I got to
learn how to ride a bike; so not at all. I had a very, in most respects
it doesn't seem like it, but I've actually had and continue to have a
very normal banal life.
Moderator There are no further questions at this time.
T. Callahan Thank you everyone for joining the call. A reminder that
Raising Hope returns with all new episodes on Tuesday April 19th at 9/8
central on FOX.
M. Plimpton Greg, I want to hear all about Charlie Sheen.
G. Garcia Yes I'll tell you the story. It's a wild one.
M. Plimpton Great.
T. Callahan Thanks Martha. Thanks Greg.
M. Plimpton Bye guys.
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