Debra Messing talks Steven Spielberg’s dream of ‘Smash’: ‘Real passion project’
File under Interview, Media, Smash posted on 9 February, 2012 by

Debra Messing along with Katharine McPhee are two of the big actresses slated to debut on NBC Monday night in Smash. The show, a project of Steven Spielberg, has singing and dancing within a storyline. While some may point to the show and suggest it follows Glee, don’t be too hasty to make that decision. On Monday morning Messing talked bluntly about the project originally slated for Showtime and how it was dreamed up years ago.

“He [Steven Spielberg] came up with the idea for the show 7 or more years ago. So, this has been in the making for a while. It has been a real passion project for him and he is pretty good at what he does,” said Debra Messing on the On Air With Ryan Seacrest Show.

The show is promising to capture America’s heart with a new type of television view with every episode having a big production number and characters that are varied and interesting. Commenting on the whole cast Messing pointed out “there is really something for everybody.”

While the fans are ready for the show as it has been hyped for weeks, Smash has a lot to live up to, but that doesn’t seem to bother Debra Messing as she knew it was going to be a big deal.

Take a listen to the audio clip of Debra Messing talking about Smash.

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Debra Messing talks ‘Smash’ premiere
File under Interview, Media, Smash posted on 9 February, 2012 by

Debra Messing is making her return to NBC and television in “Smash,” set to debut on February 6 and the actress says the show is something that she’s proud of.

“I think we’re all most excited for sharing it and having people see it finally,” Messing said in an interview provided by NBC at the show’s red carpet premiere in late January. “We’ve been working really hard and we’ve done 12 of 15 episodes already and so we feel like we have a TV show and it’s something that luckily we love and are proud of.”

Messing, 43, is known for her former role on the long-running comedy series “Will & Grace.” “Smash” stars “American Idol” season 3 finalist Katharine McPhee as a young actress from Iowa who hopes to land the part of Marilyn Monroe in a new Broadway musical about the life of the Hollywood sex icon.

Messing plays songwriter Julia Houston, who co-wrote the show’s lyrics, while Anjelica Huston portrays a producer named Eileen Rand. Will Chase portrays a character named Stephen who is “a man from Julia’s past.”

“Smash is a love letter to New York and it’s a love letter to the theater community and that has not been done before,” Messing added. “You see a lot of people from the theater community here [at the premiere] celebrating that.”

As for regular television viewers, Messing thinks there’s something in “Smash” to keep everyone entertained. “There’s no question that they’re going to love the behind the scenes making of the Marilyn Monroe musical and there’s these beautiful numbers and costumes and it’s fantastic,” Messing said.

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On The Set: The Curtain Rises for NBC’s Smash
File under Interview, News & Rumours, Smash posted on 5 February, 2012 by

Scene: A massive converted warehouse somewhere in Brooklyn, late 2011. The lights come up on the cast of an ambitious network drama about the making of a Broadway musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe as they screen the series’ pilot during a catered lunch break. Once the credits roll, so do the waves of applause…

As anyone who’s read the copious critical raves knows, Smash — the most faaabulous show that’s not on Bravo — is all that and an orchestra seat. Produced by Steven Spielberg, created by Emmy nominee Theresa Rebeck (NYPD Blue), loaded with tunes by Hairspray Tony winners Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman and boasting a cast so good you’d think it was on cable, this stage-door soap is either gonna be a knock-’em-dead blockbuster or one of TV’s splashiest misfits.

It’s risky for sure. There’s a reason you don’t see a lot of musical dramedies on the small screen, and unless Rachel Berry winds up in the Big Apple, Smash couldn’t be any less like Glee… something NBC chairman Bob Greenblatt is happy about. “Three years ago, everybody thought putting Glee on was crazy, including the network,” says Greenblatt, amid a swarm of hyped-up chorus types and crew members following the cast screening. Having first developed a “darker” version of the backstage serial while heading up Showtime, Greenblatt is grateful that Fox’s show-choir hit “laid the groundwork for music in a TV show,” even while distancing Smash from any comparisons. “Up until Glee, it had been a spotty record for musicals,” he says. “We take our hats off to them. We’re different shows that are going to be lumped together because we’re the only two musicals, but we are very different.”

So different, in fact, that Smash might be too “inside baseball” for the average viewer, which is why the producers have packed it with something for everyone. “If you love theater, you’ll love the show,” says executive producer Neil Meron (a producer of Oscar winner Chicago). “If you have no interest in theater… well, their lives are like everybody else’s, so we’ll be dealing with their parents, boyfriends, girlfriends, their families.” Adds Rebeck, “It’s more character-driven” with “great soap elements” aplenty. “It’s a very complicated world in terms of the class structure,” she says. “It’s very much like Upstairs/Downstairs, except there’s not a mansion; it’s a [theater].”

(more…)

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Eco-conscious ‘Smash’
File under Interview, Smash posted on 5 February, 2012 by

On the set of NBC’s new musical drama “Smash,” “We’re doing a lot” to be green. “All the paper products are biodegradable. NBC is very concerned about that,” says writer/executive producer Theresa Rebeck. “We always recycle on the set,” adds Anjelica Huston. Debra Messing reads her scripts and rewrites electronically, using an app called Rehearsal 2. “It’s saving so much paper,” she notes. Megan Hilty does the same, and also drives a Ford Escape hybrid, and lives in an eco-friendly building in New York, where the show originates. “It has solar panels on the roof, and they recycle all the energy in the building. It lowered my energy bills,” she says.

Debuting Feb. 6, the buzzy (with good reason) backstage drama about the making of a Broadway musical about Marilyn Monroe has a riveting who’ll-get-the-part? plot, great musical numbers, and lots of name talent on camera and behind the scenes. The show is the brainchild of Steven Spielberg, who assembled a team including musical theater vets Neil Meron and Craig Zadan and composer-lyricists Marc Shaiman and Scott Whitman. Besides Huston, Messing, and Hilty, the cast includes Brian D’Arcy James, Jack Davenport and “American Idol” alumna Katharine McPhee as Hilty’s rival for the musical’s lead role.

“When I got the script I couldn’t put it down. I knew immediately that it was a once in a lifetime thing. I had to play this character,” says Messing, whose vow never to do an hour-long drama, not to mention one that meant relocating to New York, went out the window. She was drawn to both the career and home life aspects of songwriter Julia Houston, “who is very passionate about her creative life and also a proud mother and wants that balance. I love that nothing is simple.”

Hilty was similarly enthralled with the role of Ivy Lynn, and the idea of playing the iconic Monroe. “Her story is one of tragedy, heartbreak, glamour, love, and all things that make for great drama, all things that people want to watch and are intrigued by, which is why we’re still talking about her today,” she says, opining that “Smash” “sets the stage for high drama, because the adrenaline’s going and the stakes are so high. This show definitely taps into all of those things.”

Huston wasn’t looking to do a series when the offer came her way, but she couldn’t turn down the role of producer Eileen Rand. “She’s real woman working in a man’s world. It’s not just a black and white character. There’s a lot of grey area with her. Is she a b*tch? Yeah, she’s a b*tch,” laughs the Oscar winner, who was eager to work “with the best of the best. I’d be a fool not to participate.”

Huston, a dedicated PETA supporter, has spoken out against the commercial use of great apes in the entertainment industry. “They really don’t like acting,” she says, and made a video for PETA explaining that. “Chimpanzees and orangutans belong in rain forests, where they can build nests, forage for natural foods, make and use tools, groom each other, and raise families,” she says in the PSA. “Using great apes in TV, movies, and advertising … causes a lifetime of suffering.”

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Debra Messing to guest ‘Live with Kelly’ on February 6th
File under Interview, News & Rumours, Smash posted on 28 January, 2012 by

Debra Messing is guesting ‘Live with Kelly‘ on February 6th, make sure to tune in!

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