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[Sarah Gadon on Castle Rockâs intimate, upsetting âLaughing Placeâ](
Nov 06, 2019 12:00 AM
Lizzy Caplan, Sarah GadonPhoto: Dana Starbard, Steve Wilkie (Hulu)
Hereâs whatâs happening in the world of television for Wednesday, November 6. All times are Eastern.Â
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Top pick
[Castle Rock]( (Hulu, 3:01 a.m.):Â Castle Rockâs continued commitment to including actors with existing ties to Stephen Kingâs works has a couple of significant upsides. First, it adds to the showâs kaleidoscope-like approach to the King canon, the result of [Easter eggs]( blended stories and mythology, and recurring motifs that, at the showâs best, makes it both a terrific yarn and a funhouse of sorts. But no less significantly, and far more straightforwardly, lots of terrific actors have been in King adaptations, so itâs a very deep, very appealing bench. Next up: the great Sarah Gadon, a standout in Huluâs adaptation of [11.22.63](.
Gadon turns up in an episode thatâs essentially an origin story for Annie (played as an adult by the excellent Lizzy Caplan and as a teen by promising newcomer Ruby Cruz), introducing us to her parents, her home life, and her relationship with one particular teacher, Rita (Gadon). We spoke with Gadon about returning to the King ka-tet, the scariest household implements, and what itâs like to stare down a young Annie Wilkes.
This interview contains some light plot details for this weekâs episode, as well as a frank discussion of a major event in the season premiere.
The A.V. Club: How would you characterize Ritaâs initial connection with Annie?
Sarah Gadon: Ritaâs a teacher. She loves to make connections with people, especially her students. And I think she initially sees Annieâher difficulties reading, and this overbearing environmentâas being this girl who just needs someone to show her the right kind of attention, to help her learn.
AVC: One of their most interesting scenes together concerns the nature of goodness and badness, and whether or not thereâs any gray area in between. What can that tell us about this story?
SG: Her reaction to it, seeing the world as so black and white and having this really kind of intense, almost fanatical binary view of the world kind of sheds light on the older version of her, and why sheâs so intense. You see where that intensity has come from.
AVC: Youâre one of several actors on this show with an existing connection to Stephen Kingâs body of work. Itâs kind of like a school reunion, only you all went to different schools. Has that connection made your experience on this show any different than your usual acting experience?
SG: Well, it was one of the reasons why I really wanted to do the show. I had such a positive experience on [11.22.63](. I just think as a writer, the kinds of characters that [King] creates are so complex. And of course, they also have this through-line of darkness, which as an actor, is really fun to play. It was one of those things where, arriving on set, I thought, âOh yeah, this is great, this is such a great character.â And then people spend a week soaked in blood, and youâre like, âOh yeah, this is a Stephen King story for sure.â
AVC: What was your relationship to his work prior to joining 11.22.63? Were you a fan?
SG: For sure. I love his writing. I also really love a bunch of the movie adaptations of his writing. When I was in my early 20s, I started working with David Cronenberg, who famously directed [The Dead Zone](. I feel like many people feel this way, that his work has touched them. For me specifically, there are a lot of connections.
AVC: Do you have a favorite?
SG: I mean, I love The Dead Zone. Definitely. And then of course, Iâd have to say [The Shining]( but then also I really love [Carrie]( too. Itâs tough to decide.
AVC: What is it like, as an actor, to be on the receiving end when someone else is playing a psychopath, to have that malevolence coming at you?
SG: This episode was so much fun to be a part of because the director, Anne Sewitsky, is truly incredible. Sheâs a real truth seeker. Sheâs watching her actors like a hawk, charting all of the emotional beats and really trying to find the honesty in them. Often when youâre playing characters that are so extreme, or characters like who have a serious mental disorder, itâs so easy to play the cliché version of them. Anne really helped Ruby [Cruz], who plays young Annie, whoâs also such an incredible actressâand this was one of her first major jobs. I thought that Anne really guided Ruby to find a place that was, yes, very intense and yes, very classical in terms of all of the traits of a psychopath, but also finding real truth and humanity in her. And thatâs what makes Annie and Ritaâs relationship so compelling. Anne was just right there with us, and really just championed going above and beyond.
AVC: Is there a frightening moment from a movie or a TV show thatâs always stuck with you from a young age? People often say the flying monkeys from The Wizard Of Oz. Iâve always been really hung up on those white tunnels in E.T.
SG: Itâs definitely [when Linda Blair is crawling backwards down the stairs]( in [The Exorcist](. It scared the crap out of me when. I saw its rerelease [in theaters] when I was the teenager. That will forever haunt me. Flying monkeys? They have nothing on that.
AVC: The first episode of this season of Castle Rock includes a very violent death by ice cream scooper. If we totally remove knives from the equation, what kitchen utensil would be the worst way to die?
SG: Ooh, vegetable peeler. It would be a slow, painful death. Layer by layer being ripped off your body. Is that gross enough?
Regular coverage
[Riverdale]( (The CW, 8 p.m.)
[Modern Family]( (ABC, 9 p.m.)
[Itâs Always Sunny In Philadelphia]( (FXX, 10 p.m.)
[American Horror Story: 1984Â]( 10 p.m.)
[South Park]( (Comedy Central, 10 p.m.)
Wild card
Two flipping hours of The Masked Singer (Fox, 8 p.m.): If the only thing holding you back from watching The Masked Singer is that thereâs simply not enough of it, youâre in luck.
In all seriousness, there are worse nights to start watching this show, if youâre among the curious. The fact that itâs two hours long means that all the remaining Masked Singers will don their masks and sing, and two of them will be unmasked. This way you can just make all your guesses now and then Google all the speculation immediately afterward, rather than waiting another week to see the second crop of Masked Singers and/or trawling through YouTube on the hunt for clips of the Masked Singers. And since the second hour includes an appearance by guest panelist Anthony Anderson, weâre guessing that means there will be slightly less Jenny McCarthy than usual.
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