Final
Transcript
MEREDITH
CORPORATION: In Plain Sight – Paul Ben-Victor Q&A
May 9, 2008/2:00 p.m. EDT
SPEAKERS
Chrissy Fehskens
Paul Ben-Victor
PRESENTATION
Moderator Welcome to the In Plain Sight – Paul Ben-Victor Q&A Conference Call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Chrissy Fehskens. Please go ahead.
C. Fehskens Hi, everyone. This is Chrissy from New Media Strategies. I wanted to welcome you to the Paul Ben-Victor Q&A session and start things off by thanking Paul for being with us today.
As you all know, Paul will be playing the role of Stan McQueen, Chief Inspector for WITSECÕs Southwest Region on USAÕs new series In Plain Sight, which will premiere on Sunday, June 1st, at 10:00/9:00 central. In a moment weÕll open up our hour long question and answer session. As a reminder to all participants, weÕre asking that you please limit yourself to one question at a time and then re-enter the question queue to ask additional or follow-up questions.
Moderator The first question is from Sandy Sahakians. Please go ahead.
S. Sahakians Hello, Paul. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us today.
P. Ben-Victor Hello, Sandy.
S. Sahakians My first question is just a general question. Can you tell us just a little bit more about your character on In Plain Sight?
P. Ben-Victor ItÕs an interesting character because, in the first season, IÕm sort of sprinkled in around the show. IÕm not as present as I think IÕm going to be in the second season. But basically, itÕs a comedic character. ItÕs definitely geared toward the comedy of the show; thereÕs a lot of terrific banter between the two leads. IÕm sort of MaryÕs reluctant boss and I think I probably have some sort of fatherly kind of, parental caring for her. IÕm sort of like a dad figure and heÕs very caring and very careful for Mary, but she definitely wears the pants in the office and weÕre all sort of tip-toeing around waiting for her emotional levels to change. So, weÕre sort of following her lead.
S. Sahakians Great. ThatÕs perfect.
Moderator And the next question is from Kenn Gold. Please go ahead.
K. Gold The question I wanted to ask you first was about the show being filmed in Albuquerque compared to Los Angeles or New York. IÕm sure there were some differences and I wondered if you could just talk about that, what it was like going to Albuquerque and doing the show there, compared to the other places.
P. Ben-Victor Most of the work IÕve done over the years has been on the road. I enjoy being on the road. ItÕs a calming place to be. YouÕre away from home; you can really focus on your work. There are so many interruptions when IÕm at home with phone calls and meetings and stuff like that, so itÕs kind of a pleasant get away to be on the road and working on a show. And Albuquerque, as you may know, youÕre right near Santa Fe—beautiful country there and beautiful places to visit—so I enjoyed New Mexico quite a bit. Like I said, I just love being on the road. But the other great thing is that itÕs also just a hop, skip, and a jump back to LA. So, itÕs definitely a convenient place to be as opposed to shooting in Canada somewhere, or Europe, or god knows where you could be sent in this business. ItÕs definitely a wonderful place to shoot and IÕm looking forward to it again.
Moderator The next question we have is from Amrie Cunningham. Please go ahead.
A. Cunningham My question is: Why did you originally want to play this character, how did it come to be, and then, how different is this character from other things youÕve played?
P. Ben-Victor You know, for me, I just go to work. IÕve always enjoyed the Christopher Walken philosophy, which is you take what comes next. I am a big fan of his work ethic. So, this came next. A few years ago this meeting came around. It definitely had, youÕll see in the pilot, something I was able to sink my teeth into and bring something to. I definitely sensed the humor in the writing and I think they were looking for someone to really make that happen. So there was a nice marriage there.
Every characterÕs different and theyÕre also very similar in many ways. A while ago, I did a show called The Invisible Man on the Sci-Fi Channel, and a friend of mine said this now is like Bobby Hobbes older brother. ItÕs kind of like Bobby Hobbes has grown up a little bit, been given a raise, and now heÕs working at another out-of-the-way, off-the-wall, obscure office in the middle of nowhere. It relates to that character I think a little bit. And the writing is terrific. ItÕs definitely something that suits me, I think. IÕm looking forward to doing more of it.
A. Cunningham Great. Thank you.
Moderator The next question we have is from Reg Seeton. Please go ahead.
R. Seeton Hello, Paul. How are you doing?
P. Ben-Victor Good. Where are you?
R. Seeton IÕm in Vancouver.
P. Ben-Victor Nice.
R. Seeton So, Bobby Hobbes older brother?
P. Ben-Victor So you all hear this stuff. Do you remember Bobby Hobbes?
R. Seeton Absolutely, that show was awesome.
P. Ben-Victor Alright. YouÕll have to see for yourself, but it rings true a little bit of Bobby Hobbes, a little bit of heÕs not completely grounded all the time. But heÕs definitely a good cop, heÕs a good marshal, heÕs a good boss.
R. Seeton Do you think a job like being a federal marshal for the Witness Protection Program can be done without bending the rules a little bit?
P. Ben-Victor No, you have to bend the rules. HeÕs definitely bending the rules and breaking them wherever he has to. HeÕs a straight up guy, but he has to take care of his people, and that comes first. Just to make it exciting I think you have to take some theatrical, poetic license and do what youÕve got to do.
R. Seeton One more quick thing, as you get older, how is your approach different to playing cops or law enforcement?
P. Ben-Victor Well, thatÕs interesting because that relates to your first question a little bit because they just flow through you as the years go by. People say, ÒWell how did you prepare for this character?Ó And I say, ÒWell, IÕve been preparing for it for 20 yearsÓ because I have done so many detectives and cops. Obviously itÕs make believe but, in some ways, I feel like a seasoned veteran cop because IÕve shot more guns I think than anybody, and IÕve handcuffed more people, and gotten in more fights, and been killed more than anybody else. So, you just show up and it begins to be another suit that you put on and you donÕt think about it as much. You just do your work and it just becomes easier over the years. ItÕs less work and more of just bringing your instincts to it more and more as the years go on, I think.
R. Seeton Excellent.
Moderator The question we have is from Bags Hooper.
B. Hooper How do you feel the role of playing, say your old character on The Wire as a crime boss, differs from your more cop-type roles and your more comedic roles?
P. Ben-Victor This one is definitely lighter fare. ThereÕs definitely some heavy moments that you have to play, thereÕs some life-threatening and life-saving moments in the show. Generally, I do gear toward comedic characters. Or, if theyÕre not, IÕll try to find the comedy in there because I just like making people laugh. ItÕs just something I need to do.
In The Wire, that just wasnÕt there. It just wasnÕt even hinted at obviously in the writing, so there was nothing funny about that character. And so, I just dive into the drama of it and try to make it as chilling and as scary as I possibly could with doing very little. So, that was my task in The Wire. I was trying to do as much as Michael Corleone, as simple acting as I could but keeping the weight and the power and the danger under it all somehow. Again, IÕm not sure how I do it. I just sort of feel it.
Moderator The next question comes from Kendra White. Please go ahead.
K. White In a previous Q&A with Paul Stupin and David Maples, they mentioned that their advisors with the Witness Protection Program there were a lot of things they just couldnÕt tell them when they were writing, so is it difficult to play a character when you canÕt always know everything about what they do and their background?
P. Ben-Victor No, I find I donÕt need to know that much. IÕve always felt itÕs for the viewer to sort of figure things out and to think about and to try and analyze. For me, as a performer, I do almost none of that. I just work pretty instinctively and work pretty much with the text. If thereÕs something I donÕt understand as an actor instinctively and my body as a performer, IÕll go research it. For instance, an accent or if thereÕs a certain way to physically handle someone, especially as a cop. There was one role I did a few years ago playing a cop in a pilot and there were some professionals on set that would give us advice and little tricks É how you would put your hand on somebodyÕs lower back to guide them and make them go where you want or sit them down the way you want them to. A little bit like Kito techniques.
So there are things you need to learn along the way, but I donÕt really need to know so much about the book, the textbook information, about these guys unless itÕs in the script. I pretty much use the script as a guide.
Moderator The next question we have is from Sandy Sahakians. Please go ahead.
S. Sahakians Hello again. IÕm going to switch back a little bit on In Plain Sight and IÕm going to ask you what your favorite episode is and why, either personally as an actor or just that you enjoyed watching maybe.
P. Ben-Victor I definitely liked the pilot. The pilot was a lot of fun because thereÕs a very funny, itÕs in the clip I think in the commercials that youÕve been seeing, where I think I say something about a shoe. I think they use that clip where IÕm saying ÒDo you think Mary will like this?Ó IÕm talking about a shoe. Very funny. The pilot is just juicy and wonderful and IÕm really looking forward to seeing it. I havenÕt seen it yet, but IÕve seen little clips of it.
What else was a fun one? The last two episodes for me were juicy and beefy. I had a lot to do. But I havenÕt seen them all yet, so I really couldnÕt tell you what my favorite is yet. But weÕll have to revisit that question after the first season, then we can talk about what our favorites were.
Moderator We do have a follow-up question from Kenn Gold. Please go ahead.
K. Gold Thanks again. Paul, just in looking at all the different things youÕve done, youÕve been in so many different shows and just done so many different things. I was wondering, what, from your career, what are the stand-out moments to you? Do you have one or two things that youÕve done that really meant a lot or that were kind of more important than the others?
P. Ben-Victor I get asked that a lot. There were little milestones along the way, like little steps, little building blocks along the way. The ones that I get asked about the most I guess are the ones that stand out. One of them is True Romance – a week doesnÕt go by where somebody doesnÕt mention that. And then there was Mo and The Three Stooges, which is sort of a stand-out time; and then this new character Entourage. The guy that I play in Entourage has definitely been one of the most recognizable characters that IÕve done, so thatÕs been an interesting role to play. I think those and then the NYPD Blue character gets a lot of attention. Bobby Hobbes on the Sci-Fi channel is also one of the biggies. And I hope this one joins the ranks of those characters. And also The Wire and the HBO shows stand out quite a bit as well. The Wire and then John in Cincinnati last year. I didnÕt go very far with that character as well. Those five or six are the ones that stand out.
Moderator Now we do have a follow-up question again from Kenn Gold. Please go ahead.
K. Gold Hello. Thanks a lot. The other thing IÕve noticed is youÕve done so many different types of work – the film, the T.V., and also the stage work. ItÕs really exciting to read about The Good Steno, the one that it sounds like you did everything on. Which aspect of the business do you like the best? Then, IÕd like to know if you could talk to us a little bit about The Good Steno and what thatÕs about and how that came into being?
P. Ben-Victor I enjoy film and television the best because itÕs calm. YouÕre in control of it, you can stop it, you can go to your trailer, and you can relax. The theatre is É I have sort of a love-hate relationship with it. I want to throw up every minute before I go on stage. I donÕt necessarily, but I want to. I get nerves like jumping off a cliff. Then, once IÕm on stage, itÕs euphoric in a lot of ways, because you go forget everything and youÕre in the moment and youÕve got this audience in the palm of your hand. ItÕs kind of like once youÕve jumped off the cliff youÕve got that rush of falling or going down a ski slope, itÕs really exciting. But if I had one to pick, I would just pick film or television, just being in front of the camera. You could mold and craft that performance and then be done with it and move on and thatÕs a good feeling.
The Good Steno. My MomÕs a playwright and she wrote many small, short pieces. SheÕs written some full length plays, but sheÕs written some one act plays about her days as a stenographer in the 1940Õs in the Garment District. I always loved those monologues and one-acts she had about this one character Morty, whoÕs her boss, whoÕs this horrible, horrible guy who would try to get the models in the swimsuit factory to go in the back room, if you would, with the buyers from out of town.
So we developed this play, my Mom and I, and I directed it and co-wrote it with her and played this character Morty in this play at the Hayworth Theatre here in Los Angeles last year. And weÕre actually talking about doing it off-Broadway with the producers of this new play I just did called Sexy Laundry, also at the Hayworth Theatre. So, thatÕs where thatÕs at. ThatÕs an exciting piece because itÕs mine. I developed it, I wrote it, created it, directed it, designed the set, did some of the choreography, thereÕs some dance in it. ThatÕs definitely an exciting piece, a labor of love. IÕd like to shoot it one day actually, in film. Hopefully, youÕll be able to see it at some point down the road.
Moderator The next question we have, a follow-up, is from Kendra White.
K. White Hi. With the cast being a bit isolated from LA and New Mexico, have you found that you guys have gotten a chance to bond a little bit more, and spending more time together away from home?
P. Ben-Victor Definitely, we have a great time. ThatÕs the most important thing, if youÕre doing a series, that you chum up with your cast mates, because you are isolated, as you say, and youÕre tucked away. YouÕre not really with your family and your best friends who you hang out with every day, so you hope to have some chemistry with them. WeÕve had some great parties, some great nights out and some great dinners together. Mary is an incredible host, hostess, I donÕt know what the politically correct term is these days, but sheÕs great. And weÕve had some wonderful times in our house in New Mexico.
Fred and I laugh all day long and do Christopher Walken impressions É sort of dueling Chris WalkenÕs, thatÕs our little game.
Nicki and I have become good friends as well. Nichole Hiltz. SheÕs a blast. SheÕs definitely the life of any party. And weÕve remained friends and have been hanging out here in Los Angeles as well, along with everybody else. But definitely good friends with Nicki, Mary, and Fred; on the set, weÕre having a good time.
Moderator The next question we have is follow-up from Sandy Sahakians.
S. Sahakians Actually, IÕm going to go back to the beginning, and I was wondering what originally made you want to become an actor?
P. Ben-Victor Back to my roots. Well, I think I always wanted to do it, but I didnÕt know how I was going to do it. I remember wanting to be in school plays, but I ended up building the sets instead. So, I was actually doing set design and wanted to do that professionally.
I went to theatre school at Carnegie Melon for set design and then there I got asked to be in a play called Short Eyes because they needed a Puerto Rican guy and there werenÕt any Puerto Rican guys. Nobody was even remotely close and I was this New York Brooklyn kid that had wandered onto set. The director of the play asked me can I do that. I said yes. I grew up around everybody in New York. We had every ethnic group around, so I was able to pull it off. And IÕve ended up playing many Latino characters since, which is interesting. So, that was how I got in. I got lured in from the scene shop over to the stage at college.
After that, you know, you get that bug. Once itÕs in you, I knew thatÕs what I wanted to do. It was easier than drawing up light plots and hanging lights and running cables and building sets. I dropped a few lights off the catwalks. I was good at it, but also not very good. I was a little clumsy. I was much happier just being on the stage and performing. ThatÕs where I felt most comfortable and where I could screw up the least amount I think.
Moderator And the next question is a follow-up again from Kenn Gold.
K. Gold This may be one you may not know the answer to, but I was looking at your IMDb Profile and for In Plain Sight it lists your characterÕs name as John Wilkes Booth. How did that happen?
P. Ben-Victor We need to fix that. Could you fix that? John Wilkes Booth. I think that was in an early draft. I think it was a play on names or something like Marshall is Marshal. Marshall the character is also a marshal. I can only say that I think that was in an early draft and somehow that got submitted. ThatÕs odd that itÕs on the roster there with that character. WeÕve got to fix that. I donÕt know who John Wilkes Booth would be. Of course, we know he is, but I donÕt know why thatÕs in there. Hopefully, weÕll get that changed for you.
C. Fehskens IÕd like to wrap things up and thank Paul once again for being with us this afternoon. Transcripts of this afternoonÕs session will be available on Monday, which IÕll forward to all participants. Please remember to tune into the premier of In Plain Sight Sunday, June 1st at 10:00/9:00 Central on USA.