TV: Deadwood Wrap-Up Movie - It's Finally (Maybe) Happening

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Deadwood Wrap-Up Movie: It's Finally (Maybe) Happening

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For f–k’s sake, it better happen this time!

Deadwood, the Western drama that HBO cancelled in 2006, might soon get a satisfying conclusion: Sources confirm to TVLine that talks between the network and series creator David Milch have indeed resumed.

The project — which likely will take the form of a movie — had been rumored for some time; in 2014, star Kim Dickens told Michael Ausiello that a continuation was a “possibility.” (See video below.)

Following the show’s abrupt cancellation after three seasons, HBO announced plans to produce two two-hour wrap-up movies, but the project eventually died on the vine.

Garret Dillahunt, who played Francis Wolcott and Jack McCall on the beloved series, tweeted some encouraging news Wednesday evening:

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">So uh....I'm hearing credible rumors about a <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Deadwood?src=hash">#Deadwood</a> movie. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Everybodypray?src=hash">#Everybodypray</a></p>&mdash; Garret Dillahunt (@garretdillahunt) <a href="https://twitter.com/garretdillahunt/status/631629320339988480">August 13, 2015</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

When asked for comment, an HBO rep said, “In reference to Garret Dillahunt’s tweet regarding the rumored Deadwood movie, there have only been very preliminary conversations.”

 
In my top ten all time favorite shows. Flatout outstanding writing.

Giving the series another run since its on Blu ray.

Al Swearengen is one of the best characters ever created. Bullock was a good counter weight to the character. Shit was nice!
 
I am so fuckin glad them god damn cocksuckers @ HBO got their thumbs out of there goddamn asses and finally got around to making this fuckin' movie. What a bunch of limp dick bushwackers to take so fuckin long to get to it.

This is one of the best shows ever and those that doubt me, suck cock by choice.
 
In my top ten all time favorite shows. Flatout outstanding writing.

Giving the series another run since its on Blu ray.

Al Swearengen is one of the best characters ever created. Bullock was a good counter weight to the character. Shit was nice!

I'll cosign that...he held the series down

^^^^^

always regretted they couldn't fit Justified into his schedule
 
entourage...this...fuck it...do one for the wire

to do a wrap up movie damn near 10 years after the show was cancelled is ridiculous. I hate fucking TV. entourage flopped big time. that shit went Hollywood wood
 
did you just finish watching spartacus? :lol::lol::lol:


That was a quote from Deadwood -

So here are the 11 most memorable, most enduring snippets of dialogue from the show that featured the best dialogue in television history.

11. “Who would argue that the venue was the cause of these happy memories, nor the bill of fare? The bitter coffee, the rancid bacon, those stale biscuits that were tomb and grave to so many insects. No, gentlemen, it was the meandering conversation, the lingering with men of character – some of whom are walking with me now – that was such pleasure to experience, and such a joy now to recall.” – Merrick

10. “And startin’ tomorrow morning, I will offer a personal $50 bounty for every decapitated head of as many of these godless heathen cocksuckers as anyone can bring in. Tomorrow. With no upper limit! That’s all I say on that subject, ‘cept next round’s on the house. And God rest the souls of that poor family. And pussy’s half price, next 15 minutes.” – Al Swearengen

9. “Those that doubt me, suck cock by choice.” – Tom Nuttall

8. “Whiskey does not steady the hand. It just dulls the worry over the hand’s unsteadiness.” – Doc Cochran

7. “Okay, Giganto! Don’t tusk me to death with your tusks.” – Calamity Jane

6. “Day saw advances, Trixie. None miraculous.” – Al Swearengen

5. “The bald contempt of it. Why not come out five abreast, cavorting and taunting – ‘E.B. was left out. E.B. was left out.’ Cocksuckers. Cunt-lickers. I’ll make you filthy gestures. Public service was never my primary career.” – E.B. Farnum

4. “Among humans for grip, the Chinawoman’s snatch has no peer. Among nature, the python is its only rival, though few have lived to tell the tale.” – Cy Tolliver

3. “Wash your fucking mouth. You’ve got seven kinds of cock breath.” – Trixie

2. “Wants me to tell him something pretty.” – Al Swearengen

1. “Could you have been born, Richardson? And not egg-hatched as I’ve always assumed?… I’d like to use your ointment to suffocate you.” – E.B. Farnum
 
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been a minute since I seen deadwood :lol:

That was a quote from Deadwood -

So here are the 11 most memorable, most enduring snippets of dialogue from the show that featured the best dialogue in television history.

11. “Who would argue that the venue was the cause of these happy memories, nor the bill of fare? The bitter coffee, the rancid bacon, those stale biscuits that were tomb and grave to so many insects. No, gentlemen, it was the meandering conversation, the lingering with men of character – some of whom are walking with me now – that was such pleasure to experience, and such a joy now to recall.” – Merrick

10. “And startin’ tomorrow morning, I will offer a personal $50 bounty for every decapitated head of as many of these godless heathen cocksuckers as anyone can bring in. Tomorrow. With no upper limit! That’s all I say on that subject, ‘cept next round’s on the house. And God rest the souls of that poor family. And pussy’s half price, next 15 minutes.” – Al Swearengen

9. “Those that doubt me, suck cock by choice.” – Tom Nuttall

8. “Whiskey does not steady the hand. It just dulls the worry over the hand’s unsteadiness.” – Doc Cochran

7. “Okay, Giganto! Don’t tusk me to death with your tusks.” – Calamity Jane

6. “Day saw advances, Trixie. None miraculous.” – Al Swearengen

5. “The bald contempt of it. Why not come out five abreast, cavorting and taunting – ‘E.B. was left out. E.B. was left out.’ Cocksuckers. Cunt-lickers. I’ll make you filthy gestures. Public service was never my primary career.” – E.B. Farnum

4. “Among humans for grip, the Chinawoman’s snatch has no peer. Among nature, the python is its only rival, though few have lived to tell the tale.” – Cy Tolliver

3. “Wash your fucking mouth. You’ve got seven kinds of cock breath.” – Trixie

2. “Wants me to tell him something pretty.” – Al Swearengen

1. “Could you have been born, Richardson? And not egg-hatched as I’ve always assumed?… I’d like to use your ointment to suffocate you.” – E.B. Farnum

Nah that was from S1 of Deadwood - I think Tom Nutall said it - long before Batty Artist and Spartacus
 
That was a quote from Deadwood -

So here are the 11 most memorable, most enduring snippets of dialogue from the show that featured the best dialogue in television history.

11. “Who would argue that the venue was the cause of these happy memories, nor the bill of fare? The bitter coffee, the rancid bacon, those stale biscuits that were tomb and grave to so many insects. No, gentlemen, it was the meandering conversation, the lingering with men of character – some of whom are walking with me now – that was such pleasure to experience, and such a joy now to recall.” – Merrick

10. “And startin’ tomorrow morning, I will offer a personal $50 bounty for every decapitated head of as many of these godless heathen cocksuckers as anyone can bring in. Tomorrow. With no upper limit! That’s all I say on that subject, ‘cept next round’s on the house. And God rest the souls of that poor family. And pussy’s half price, next 15 minutes.” – Al Swearengen

9. “Those that doubt me, suck cock by choice.” – Tom Nuttall

8. “Whiskey does not steady the hand. It just dulls the worry over the hand’s unsteadiness.” – Doc Cochran

7. “Okay, Giganto! Don’t tusk me to death with your tusks.” – Calamity Jane

6. “Day saw advances, Trixie. None miraculous.” – Al Swearengen

5. “The bald contempt of it. Why not come out five abreast, cavorting and taunting – ‘E.B. was left out. E.B. was left out.’ Cocksuckers. Cunt-lickers. I’ll make you filthy gestures. Public service was never my primary career.” – E.B. Farnum

4. “Among humans for grip, the Chinawoman’s snatch has no peer. Among nature, the python is its only rival, though few have lived to tell the tale.” – Cy Tolliver

3. “Wash your fucking mouth. You’ve got seven kinds of cock breath.” – Trixie

2. “Wants me to tell him something pretty.” – Al Swearengen

1. “Could you have been born, Richardson? And not egg-hatched as I’ve always assumed?… I’d like to use your ointment to suffocate you.” – E.B. Farnum

:cool:
 



btw..... E.B. Farnum is the second best character on that damn show
 
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Ian McShane Says Good-bye to Deadwood
By Matt Zoller Seitz
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Photo: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Thirteen years after his character was last seen scrubbing a bloodstain from a hardwood floor, Ian McShane has finally returned to his most famous role: Al Swearengen, the saloon-keeper, gangster, pimp, and power broker of Deadwood. HBO will premiere a stand-alone film, Deadwood: The Movie, on May 31. Set a decade after the events in the final episode, it’s meant to provide a semblance of closure to fans who were left hanging back in 2006, when the series was abruptly canceled after three seasons. This Sunday night, New Yorkers can watch Deadwood: The Movie live on a big screen at the Split Screens TV Festival, followed by a discussion with McShane (appearing via Skype) and his co-star Robin Weigert (in person).

Ahead of the premiere of Deadwood: The Movie, Vulture talked to McShane about the series, the movie, and the importance of being Al.

Did you ever think this movie was actually going to happen?No.

That’s as definitive as it gets.
It was like a Zen feeling when it first finished.

You mean when Deadwood was canceled after season three?
Yeah. Things finish when they shouldn’t have, for all sorts of reasons, you know? Hubris, money, egos. Who the hell knows what went on with Deadwood, or if we’ll ever get to the bottom of it?

After about six months, I was like, “Why the hell did this show finish?” I got pissed off for a while. Then, more time passes and you just accept it, and say, “We were lucky to have the three years anyway.” And then, for a few years, there was all this talk about, “Oh, it’ll make a comeback as a couple of two-hour movies.” And you go, “That’s all very well and good, talking about it, but what do you have to do to make that happen?” As time went by, we all stayed in contact with each other, because as you can imagine, there was a camaraderie. It was the most creative and best three years of, I think, most people’s working lives, as they’ll all tell you. And when it came time to go back again, everybody came back.


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So it was the logistics of that big cast that made it hard?
That was a really big part of it. I guess they could have made a film in the intervening 13 years about me or Seth [Bullock]. Or both of us. You know, Seth and Al Ride the High Country, or whatever. But that would not have been Deadwood. Deadwood is the story of the town and everybody in it, which meant that we were always going to have the problem of getting everybody back together.

And, of course, this is a two-hour movie, which is a completely different beast from doing a series. There’s nothing after this. It’s a finite piece, and it tells a different kind of story than episodic television could.

What can you tell people about it?
It’s not just a repetition of how Deadwood was. It’s Deadwood ten years later. The town is no longer the same. There’s some buildings now made of brick. And all the people are older. Some have regressed, some are stagnant, some have moved forward, some have changed into completely different people, which is as it would be in life.

You mentioned that you’re telling the story differently here than you would if it were a fourth season. What specifically does that mean, in terms of how the story is being told?It’s mainly a matter of length, brevity, and directness. You have two hours and a lot of characters. You can’t do as much of that Deadwood thing where people talk around and around, because time is of the essence.

Also, structurally, a feature film is different from episodic TV — unless you’re doing something like the John Wick series, which I’m in, which has to end each movie on a kind of a cliffhanger, because they want to do John Wick 4, you know what I mean? But most movies aren’t like that. Most movies are either deliberately ending the story on an enigmatic note, where you have to decide what it meant and what to take away from it, or else they’re neatly wrapping things up so that all the questions are answered, and the piece is complete in and of itself.

Which of those things did you do here?Personally, I think this is the end and the story is finished, because practically speaking, it has to be the end. Even if HBO got a hundred million new subscriptions as a result of this movie, I still think most people would be in agreement that the show had run its course in the best way possible.

What was it like, going back to the town of Deadwood? Putting on the suit and the long underwear? Walking into the Gem Saloon?
It was an extraordinary experience, because as soon as the actors set foot on set, it was in one sense as if those 13 years had flown away, and another sense had never been. You walked on the set and everybody was the same again, except they were older. And this time, when you finished a scene with them, you were actually saying good-bye. It was quite surreal in a marvelous way, because the work stayed the same. Everybody just turned up and brought their A game again.

Had you watched the show again since you were acting in it?
Oh, yes! You know, it was one of the few shows that I watched on Sunday night just like everybody else. Even though I was in it, you never knew what the final edit was going to be until you finally saw it on TV. And even now, if I’m on tour doing another movie or a show, say I’m in a hotel room somewhere, I’ll flick through the TV, and if Deadwood is on, I’ll think, “Oh! I’ll watch this for five minutes,” and I’m still there 35 minutes later.

You’ve been around a while, haven’t you? The first time you came to the set, weren’t you writing for that New Jersey paper?

The Newark Star-Ledger, yeah. The first time I met you in person was in 2004, at a hotel in Pasadena. The Television Critics Association gave you a special award for your performance in the first season of Deadwood.
I remember. We were in a bar full of reporters. You asked me about the monologues.

That’s right. Some of the Deadwood monologues were long even by Shakespeare’s standards, and I wanted to know how you were able to memorize them.
What did I say?

You said, and I think you were busting chops a little bit, “The thing you got to remember is with Mr. Milch” — and you called him Mr. Milch, which I found funny — “… is that you’re never just delivering a monologue. You’re also getting a blow job or addressing a severed head in a box. And sometimes the pages are still hot from the fucking printer.
Oh, yeah, that’s how we sometimes address each other. I’d say, “Well, Mr. Milch,” before I’d answer a question. We call each other Mr. Milch and Mr. McShane as a gesture of mutual respect.

As for that detail about the pages being hot from the printers, well, yes. There were times when David would come over and say, “Mr. McShane, I’m sorry to have to tell you this, but I’ve got to change all of this, because I just got a better idea.” And I’d say, “Fine, give me another 20 minutes. What’s another page to learn?”

A lot of actors hate last-minute rewrites.
Only if it’s shit! Good dialogue ain’t difficult to learn. It’s only the crap, the flavorless expository bullshit, that’s difficult to learn. This show didn’t do the shit that so many other shows do, the shit that makes actors hate the work. It didn’t do that thing where some character re-explains the entire plot for the fifth time to another character — or when it did, it was to clarify something that was hard to follow, and the clarification would be done in a funny, exciting way, so it was fun to listen to.

And as for the monologues accompanied by blow jobs and severed heads, yeah, that was great stuff, but the show didn’t do that kind of thing in every scene. Nor did Seth Bullock blow away somebody with his six-shooter every episode. The characters were much more maturely written, and they changed according to how David saw the town changing, the people around them changing, the physicality changing, the morality changing, society and politics changing.

Because of all that, the changes didn’t bother me. I found them exciting. It was a fabulously interesting show to do because you knew that whatever script you got wouldn’t stay the same. It would be organically changed as a result of seeing the rehearsals, or as a result of the scene being shot, or as a result of looking at the dailies. It would be as a result of other people paying attention to what you were doing and thinking about how they could help you make it even better. How can an actor not love that?

Also, and this is important, David took care of all the marginalized characters in the show — like Calamity Jane, like Samuel Fields, like Mr. Wu, like Jewel, like Doc. It wasn’t The Seth and Al Show. Remember how, the start of season two, they took Al out of the picture entirely by giving him kidney stones? I loved that, because you got to see how it affected the town, not having him Al healthy and active and making trouble. Even the characters who were only in one episode got good stories.

Can you speculate on what the show would’ve become if it had gone on for more seasons?Deadwood was the story of America, basically. America in the 1880s in the aftermath of the Civil War. I’m sure we would have got into the aftershocks of Reconstruction, particularly racism. We already did a fair amount of that, and I’m confident we would’ve done more.

Do you remember that extraordinary scene when the blacksmith Hostetler got sick of constantly being called racial slurs and getting verbally abused by the white racist, and finally just snapped and killed himself? The depth of rage and sorrow in that moment was unlike anything I’ve seen on television. That was a historical reality, and still is a reality, one that we don’t want to acknowledge. What other TV series would have even thought to show something like that? That was great drama. It shook you up. It made you check your preconceptions.

What was it like setting foot on that set for the first time?
Well, the first scene I remember was me and that wonderful actor whose character got shot, um …

That doesn’t narrow it down, you know!Ellsworth. Jimmy! Jimmy Beaver!

Jim Beaver?
Yeah, Jimmy! The first scene I shot was Jimmy Beaver and I talking, when we hear the noise as Trixie shoots a trick. We had some talk about the English aristocracy, which Mr. Milch put in there as a kind of insurance. He said, “We’ll give him a little English in his background. just in case anybody wants to moan about your accent.” Which was the funniest thing!

When you were filming your very first scene, did you ever imagine Deadwood was going to get picked up as a series?
I remember reading the pilot script and thinking, “Wow, yeah, this is going to be a great show.” And it was great.

So, no doubt.
I never had any doubt that it was going to be a series, and a great one, because of that pilot script. Anyone who knows how to read would have said, “If we don’t do this, we’re crazy.” We shot the pilot in October of 2002, then we started filming the rest of the first season in August 2003, and the rest of the episodes [in season one] took six months.

Wow, so it’s been almost 20 years now. Holy cow.
Yeah, holy cow! But we all look back on it fondly because it was such a great time for everybody concerned. I don’t think there was ever an ego that was misplaced during the shooting, and I say that in the most loving sense, because you have to have fucking ego to act and do that kinda shit.

But let me tell you, it helps tremendously to keep all that stuff in check when you’ve got somebody in the room who’s clearly smarter than everybody else — for the sake of argument, let’s say that on this production, that person’s name is David Milch — to serve as a common reference point.

What did you learn from Deadwood that you didn’t already know?
No disrespect to everything else, but it was my favorite job of anything I’ve done. It made me work. I mean really work. There was never three years of work like it. And I can tell you that every bit of it improved everyone in that cast as actors, absolutely. Deadwood taught you about your craft, and taught you about working with other people, and about respect for dialogue, and how to roll with the punches when things changed, as they so often did.

The best part of it is the talking. On Deadwood, you get to talk about what you’re aiming to do in the scene, and what your role in it is, and how you can expand the character. The talking is how we all came to respect each other, all the actors and the directors and the production designer and the cinematographer, everyone that came into the show, and of course the writers. I don’t think enough people realize how freeing it is to be able to just talk about your work with the other people you’re working with, and see those discussions reflected in the end result. You know what that feels like?

Yeah. It’s great.
Mr. Milch let us be active participants in the creative process, in ways that few TV series allow. The production itself made that possible. It was all happening in one location, from the writing to the shooting. It was a formidable place to be. It was like a workshop, a play, a television show, and a movie, all rolled into one. Every day, the nature of the production meant you had to check your ego outside the door and just go in there.

Do people talk to you about Deadwood out in the world?
Oh yeah, all the time. I usually don’t mind it, though it does get a bit strange when complete strangers ask me to call them a cocksucker.

How does it feel being associated so strongly with one character?I’m fine with it. All of us have a limited time on this earth, and at the end of it, we all go down. And when that day finally comes, I’ll be happy to go down as Ian “Al” McShane.

You know, you’re sitting here talking to me not long after I’ve finished watching the final cut of the movie for the very first time.

And?I must say, I was not half bad in it, between you and me, Mr. Seitz.
 
Why Paula Malcomson Came Back to Deadwood
By Matt Zoller Seitz
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Photo: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP/REX/Shutterstock

Paula Malcomson has been all over TV since the cancellation of David Milch’s Western series Deadwood: most recently on Ray Donovan, playing the hero’s wife, Abby, as well as on Fringe, Sons of Anarchy, and the Battlestar Galacticaspinoff Caprica. This past week, the Northern Irish actress is back in Deadwood reprising the role of Trixie, the onetime frontier prostitute turned sweetheart of John Hawkes’s entrepreneur, Sol Star, for Deadwood: The Movie, a long-delayed end to the story. (Spoilers follow this paragraph, so don’t read the interview until after you’ve watched the film!)

Malcomson was interviewed during a visit to the Deadwood set at Melody Ranch outside Los Angeles in December 2018 on the second-to-last day of shooting. She answered questions while reposing in a 19th-century love seat atop a sawdust-covered stage in the Gem Saloon, still clad in the wedding dress Trixie wears through the second half of the movie. She had just finished filming the final scene, in which Trixie’s ailing, exhausted ex-boss and former lover, Al Swearengen (Ian McShane), is helped to bed by his employee and ward, Jewel (Geri Jewell), who rubs his feet and tries to sing “Waltzing Matilda” to him, mangling the lyrics the whole time.

Though essentially comedic, it’s a powerful scene because it’s about the mortality of all the characters, particularly Al’s, and the way the end of a TV show can become a metaphor for the ways that rich and productive lives are interrupted or ended. Filming it put Malcomson in a reflective mood, as her answers here indicate. Milch’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis, which was common knowledge among cast and crew but hadn’t yet been publicly revealed, was also on her mind, though it wasn’t up for discussion.


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How does it feel being back?
At this moment, sitting here, I don’t know how I feel about it. It’ll become clear afterwards, in the sort of “Jesus Christ, that happened!” moment.

A lot changed for Trixie between season three and this movie, eh?
Well, she’s become a business owner. Really a co-owner of a hotel. She and Sol are living in it and working in it together. And she gets to have a baby! I got to have a baby on my very first day of shooting!

Did they put some kind of prosthetic on you?
Yeah! We modeled the scene on historical pictures we’d looked at showing the old ways of giving birth. We had two chairs set up, and my legs are up on one of the chairs. When I showed the picture of that setup to the director, Dan Minahan, he said, “I fucking love it,” so we went ahead and did it that way.

It’s great to have that kind of input on a scene.
It’s really cool. And the result was a great shot with Aunt Lou and Doc and Sol Star all in the room together.

It’s always amazing to me how the most refined, advanced medicine from another time can be stuff like “Poke a hole in the back of his skull, that’ll let the headache out.”
Exactly! There wasn’t any such thing as anesthesia, at least not the kind they have now, where it’s localized. They just knocked them out to have a kid and used forceps to deliver the baby. A lot of women would die in childbirth, of course. I think that’s Trixie’s big fear, that the baby’s going to die or she’s going to.

How does Deadwood feel different now, as opposed to last time?
Our typical speed is the slow telling of the tale, you know? We’ve got a lot of plot and a lot of things to pack into two hours. We have to develop a bit of a different muscle, tell the story in a different way. We all want to take a long time to tell it, and that’s our instinct because that’s how Dave writes.

When I came back here and watched all the characters and background [actors] gathered in the thoroughfare, I realized not one of them would have minded if somebody had said, “You know, we changed our mind. We want to do more of this.” This movie will be a nice way to end it, but perhaps we are left with a little bit of ambiguity there at the end of David’s script.

What, you’re saying you don’t think Al is dead and this is the end of Deadwood?
I don’t know.

Making more Deadwood would be difficult now even without David’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis, because everybody’s doing their own thing. I would imagine scheduling was a major difficulty for this movie.
I believe so, although people jumped through hoops to be able to do it.

What would you say is the biggest difference in what’s onscreen now compared with the last time you were here?
There are a lot more women in the town because Deadwood has become a slightly more hospitable place. In some ways, the movie is a little bit of a feminist manifesto. In the scene you just saw us shoot, Trixie walks from Al’s room out onto the balcony of the Gem, and I just so happen to put his coat on as I go out. That’s symbolic. It’s a passing of the baton. Al wants to pass the place on to Trixie. Al believes in her. He thinks Trixie is smart enough and tough enough to tell the men what to do.

I noticed the town looks a little different from what I remember of previous visits in 2005 and 2006. There are some new buildings.
Right, and a little bit of brick.

I was going to say “new materials.” Is that part of the idea here, that we’re creeping up on the 20th century?
Yeah. There’s telegraph poles and a telephone. We really emphasize the idea that there’s money in Deadwood, that it’s come from this — I don’t know if “global economy” is the right word for that time, but you can see that the town is a big player in the whole system. There’s money to be made here, everyone knows it, and the place communicates that idea. Even in the Gem, the girls are swankier.

How about the change in clothes?
Our costume designer, Janie Bryant, is obviously pretty much the best. We worked really hard on every single costume, and we did it together in a lot of ways. The big question was: How do we stay with the same kind of feeling as the original show but also get across the idea that now some of these characters have more money? It’s a different world once you’ve found that balance.

[Gestures to herself] This is Trixie’s wedding dress.

It’s lovely.
It is! And I love that I get to propose to him. I mean, not really propose — Sol’s been asking Trixie to marry him for years and she always tells him no, but then they get to the point where she thinks Al is feeling poorly. That, plus the fact that there’s a baby, makes her decide that this is the right time.

Was there a moment during the production when you felt you were really back in the headspace of the show?
Yeah.

When?
First day.

Wow.
Had to. Had to survive. Like I was saying, John Hawkes and I had as our first scene on our first day the part where Trixie actually goes into labor. But before that, we were just talking to each other in the scene, and about four takes in, I thought, Oh, there we are. We’re good. We weren’t sure about it until then.

When people ask you about Deadwood, what do they want to talk about?
They want to hear anything and everything. They want to hear David Milch stories. There are so many stories in this experience because, the way we attack the material, really, truly anything can happen. We always lived in this world that’s open to impulse, and as a result we have tons of stories about how a scene could have gone but then it took a strange turn and went another way.

I felt that with this scene because I heard the direction Dan Minahan gave you: “There’s something funny about this.” But your reaction in the takes after that didn’t make it seem like Trixie thought it was funny!
That’s probably because I don’t listen to my directors!

It might sound odd, but as I watched you doing the reactions to what was happening with Al and Jewel, I felt you were reacting on behalf of the viewer. That’s why there was sadness and love in your face, rather than amusement.
Yes, I wanted that. That’s actually what I was trying to convey.

Well, you succeeded, because it made me emotional.
I wanted that scene to have even more of that feeling than it had. I said to them, “I almost want it to have her actual point of view in the scene, like actually go ahead and have the camera be Trixie’s point of view.” Trixie has historically been the emotion of the town. She feels it all very hard. You see that a lot with the whores as well. At the child’s funeral in season two, the Bullock boy, it’s the whores who are weeping.

What will you tell people that you took away from Deadwood?
I got to learn at the foot of a master. David used to do something no one else can do: He’d prepare your soul before a scene, you know? I learned how to work with the material being a living, breathing thing, a thing that anything could change at any time. That meant you had to always be on your toes because David had made you the co-creator of the character.

So he set me up to be a real actor.

That’s quite a statement.
It is. And we’re all very much indebted.
 
jus got done watching it...

not sure how i feel ...

jus Ok i guess...

felt rushed...

needed more action ...
 
As you can tell from earlier in this thread - I love Deadwood but i have not watched it yet because I am gearing my self up to let it go and I am not interested in being disappointed - though I doubt it.
 
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