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She's
the bumbling yet adorable Susan Mayer in Desperate
Housewives, the series that's scheduled
to return for a second season on Star World
from this Sunday. Teri Hatcher talks about
how it's like to play Susan in the new season.
Now the second
season is coming up, is it a pleasure or
is it strange compared to the first season
when everything is new?
I think it is even better. I
remember Marc and I were talking about it
that it feels like something a little bit
more relaxed. And we have kicked into a
thing now that there is a doctor and an
ex-husband and a plumber and it is sort
of a lot of fun with emotions going all
around. And, there is great writing, great
things for me to play, every day is more
exploration and challenging. It absolutely
hasn't gotten any less.
You
have a book coming out; right?
Uh-huh, I do. It is called, Burnt
Toast and Other Philosophies of Life and
basically I have used the idea of burnt
toast as a metaphor....if you are going
to sit down at breakfast and you have a
plate of golden brown toast and then one
of the pieces stayed in the toaster too
long, then the husband and the children
would get the good toast and the mom would
probably take that burnt piece of toast!
It is just what we do. It's about my own
journey of life. So, you are supposed to
laugh through some of it and maybe cry through
some of it. It's not at all a tell-all,
it is more about me sharing my own successes
and failures, of trying to take better care
of myself as a woman and as a mother and
all of that.
Do you wish it
was the kind of thing that Susan would pick
up and read?
Oh, she should read it. I
should read it. I joke that I wrote it so
I can read it because I need to, and remind
myself how to actually behave.
Is it frustrating
to see some of the decisions Susan is making,
do you sit back and say "hmmm"?
Well, but that's what is funny.
It's like a horror movie when the actors
walk down the dark hallway and you think,
"Don't go into that room." And
we are all sitting there and they go in
anyway and of course, they get eaten by
the monster. That's part of the entertainment
of it and it makes Susan fun to play.
Do you think
the men on the show feel insecure about
their roles because their roles are not
as crucial as those of the housewives?
I don't know because I'm not
them. I know, even I will say, "So,
okay, Susan is going to the hospital, am
I out?" "Am I dead?" I mean,
people will say to me, "Oh, they can't
kill you, you're the housewives.
But I sort of think, "Well, I don't
know. There could be other housewives."
So I think we are all a little insecure
sometimes about it, but we all just love
each other so much. It is such a really
great group of people. Last year, when Steven
died, nobody wanted to see him go. It was
really, really hard because we are a tight
group, so I don't know the answer to that.
In the first season,
we sometimes thought, "Poor Teri Hatcher
has to play every humiliating scene on the
show."
Oh, no, I like it. It's funny.
I like it. It's all right with me.
Besides the book,
do you have any other projects?
Well, I'm the new Clairol, Nice
and Easy girl. My first beauty campaign
at 41 years old! And I have a production
company that I'm starting and we're hoping
to produce a couple of movies and television
shows in the next few years.
What's the name
of the company?
"Isbe," I-s-b-e. What
is and what can be. It's spiritual. And
I'm looking at movies, but to be honest,
as much as I love the creativity of films,
it's a very different thing than what we
get here on our show because you have much
more time and depth and examination and
a certain art from the character's piece.
We have a real limited hiatus, it is important
to me to travel with my daughter to spend
time with her, so it becomes a real struggle
of priority of what is more important.
Luckily for me, there are different things
that make me happy. I don't have to just
be in a movie. I can write; I can travel;
I can spend my time a lot of ways.
In your show you
are having a nice relationship with your
daughter and you are asking her for advice,
would you like to have that in your personal
life too?
No, I would never expect that.
She's eight, I should take care of her.
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Posted
on 2 March 2006 6:30 pm
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