Q: Tell us about your character.
KB: I play Jill Gerard who is a fictional journalist and probably experienced what a lot of people in 1988 experienced… a lot of young journalists, especially the ones who were fighting their way up the ladder in that she heard about the story and felt that it could be her big break so she pitched it to her news station KABC in Los Angeles and volunteered to fly out there and was really excited about it until she got here and realized how bleak and expensive and cold and difficult it would be. And throughout the course of the film it turns out that her instincts were right and that it becomes such a huge news story that she is bumped off of the story, but she kind of refuses to accept that.
Q: How are you like and unlike her?
KB: I’m a fighter like she is. I don’t think I’m as much of a fighter as she is. I have a lot of qualities that Jill has, just not extremist Jill. I don’t know that I would volunteer to go to Barrow, Alaska, and I also don’t know what it’s like to try and be a female reporter in 1988. And I think she’s probably pushed up against the wall and bullied a lot and so she had to make a name for herself and do something extreme, but she’s a workaholic and I love to work, though I wouldn’t categorize myself as a workaholic. I don’t think I’m that much like Jill, now that I’m explaining it.
Q: How much comedy do you get to do with your character?
KB: A little bit, not a ton, not necessarily the type of comedy that I think I’ve done before. This is more like comedy that rears its head through funny situations, not necessarily by (drum noise) jokes. But you know there’s a certain level of comedy that you just get without doing anything when you put all of these human beings in the frigid weather and you dress them up like crazy snowmen and you have them stand out on the ice and their teeth are chattering. I mean that’s just kinda funny to watch, so there’s really nothing slapsticky about it. It’s more comedy that comes about when you’re up against all odds I guess.
Q: What kind of advice would you give to someone who is wanting to pursue something whether it’s acting or being a reporter or just going after a goal?
KB: A self-help book? No, I mean I’m definitely not probably qualified to give out that kind of advice, but for me personally just keeping your goal in mind every day and kind of having that be your mantra that you wake up to every morning is really important. I think that, I don’t know, if you want to be an actor you just need to be acting, you need to be experiencing, acting in some way or another at all times. You can’t just be experiencing everyone else’s acting. Like you can want to be an actor or you can want to be a movie buff. I think those are kind of two different things. I don’t know, I’d say if you want to be an actor get involved in community theater if that’s the only thing available to you because it’s a great sort of way to work your way up and I have no idea what to do if you want to be a reporter because I dropped my minor in journalism so I certainly did not do it right.
Q: Did you have your fill of Alaska here or do you think you’d want to come back if there was another production that you were offered?
KB: You know the cold is not the problem with me. I actually love the cold because I grew up in Detroit and I love bundling up and there’s a lot of cute stuff you can do with warm weather clothes, so it doesn’t get boring, but it’s the lack of sunlight that’s really getting to me and I may be turning into a vampire, for real. Like I’m having really dark thoughts, you know what I mean and I’m enjoying the night time. Last night, not a joke, I slept 12 hours. What human does that? Who needs to do that? Someone is not as familiar with sunlight would be doing that. I think for me personally because I’m spoiled and the fact that LA has such great weather and is so motivated by outdoor activities, it has been difficult adjusting here. It’s gone in weird phrases because the first couple weeks and, I’m sure you guys have met all the people in this movie and they rule and we have a really good, fun group and we’ve been having a blast off camera with each other, but then you hit kind of weird pockets where you’re like “oh I haven’t seen my family in a couple weeks” or “where is the sun” or “the food is unfamiliar,” so I think that for a short amount of time I would definitely come back to Alaska because it’s so beautiful and I don’t mind the cold, but staying here in the winter for an extended period of time without the sun, it takes a lot of Zen focus. As far as the beauty of Alaska, if you ever have a “ah-ha moment like oh my God I can’t believe I’m in Alaska” – I did, one of the first weeks I came up here I climbed Mount Alyeska which is like this big resort in Girdwood and it’s called Alyeska. It’s this hotel that has a tram that’s usually for skiing or the summer for mountain biking and it goes to the top and it was 30 degrees when you went to the top of the tram and when you hit the top of the mountain it was maybe 70-75, it was hot up there at the top of the mountain. It was a really foggy day so there were all of these crazy, beautiful mountains that you were on the summit of and then the pool beneath you was just full of clouds so we were taking all these funny pictures of us diving into the clouds like we were jumping off the mountain and when I was standing at the top of Alyeska I was thinking — this is real, this is why people move to Alaska cause some people need this around them all the time, you know? Which is totally understandable because it’s completely authentic and mesmerizing.
Q: What initially drew you to the part when you first read the script?
KB: Well when I first read it I was initially already excited because Ken was directing it and he’s a really good director and he has an unbelievable reputation for being the nicest man alive. And he knows how to make movies. He knows how to make funny movies, but he also knows how to real movies and I identified with Jill I guess in this way in that in my imagination I would have been Jill because my father was a news director and so I grew up kind of playing with teleprompters and running around his set and commenting on how I didn’t like that anchorman’s tie and then he wouldn’t be allowed to wear it on air again. You know, silly stuff like that. I was always at my dad’s station so I was very familiar with – and that’s why I started a minor in journalism when I was in college, so I think I was just kind of taken with the well, “what if I never wanted to act and what if I’d just stayed on that path?” I also really liked the situation that Jill was in, in that she had no choice but to be a fighter because there weren’t a lot of – it’s like Veronica Corningstone, there were just no female anchors. It’s a very interesting scenario as opposed to something very general which is like oh I want to move up in my station. She really has to prove herself if she’s going to move up in 1988 because they weren’t that keen to promote females I guess.
Q: Do you have any funny stories from being on set with everyone?
KB: I mean, I’ve been hearing rumors of a lot of sprinting today and yesterday but I don’t know if I have any funny anecdotes other than freezing.
Q: National Guard stories?
KB: We visited the base here where apparently – we had gotten all the actors together and just thought that this was something we should be responsible for and we can spread a little love and say thank you with the troops here. And it turned out, it was kind of a bummer because it turned out to be a drill day and there were like 15 people there. There were like 15 of us and 15 of them so we literally just socialized for like an hour, so it was kind of one-on-one contact, but it was wonderful and I think that visiting the base was important. Is that what you meant? But it was cool, it was really cool. And I know that a lot of the army guys had sort of been teaching Dermot the real skills of what you need to have, so it was a way to go say thank you and see their base. They were appreciative even though they couldn’t draw in big numbers.
Q: The seals?
KB: Oh that was fun. And that was so long ago. You know what happens when you go on location is like the first 2 weeks you are so excited and everything is new. You’re like I’m definitely going to do that, I’m going to summit everything, I’m going to see everything. And then the more you get here, the sort of quaintness tends to wear off and wear on you, so when we first got here though we got to go to the Aquatic Life Center. And so we got a backstage tour of the sea lions and stuff and it was really cool and they let you sort of interact with them which was really fun. It’s not really funny, but I liked it.
Q: What do you think the overall message of the story is?
KB: That’s not an easily answerable question because there are a lot of different points of view that fall into this story. It seems as though it’s about a whale rescue, so you feel like “oh it’s a heart-warming animal activist story.” The actuality of it is that it’s based on a book called “Freeing the Whales: How the Media Created the World’s Greatest Non-Event” which – might be the elephant in the room, but we all know it’s happened. Some things are sensationalized that are not actually a story. I think the reason this script is so interesting is because there are a lot of different points of view – one being what the book was about, which is this particular scenario of whales being trapped. It happens every year and it’s kind of survival of the fittest since the ones that aren’t smart enough don’t make it out into the ocean. So the fact that someone caught it on camera and that everyone around the world flipped out and said we have to see them, we have to see them. The new kids up here were like “wait, what?” It has nothing to do with – culturally there, they have been surviving on the whales up here forever and we may disagree with it, but it’s their culture, you know what I mean? And from an anthropological point of view you have no right to tell them that that’s wrong. As crazy as it may be to us because I think we sense such an intelligence from them, I think the title kind of reigns it in because I don’t know anyone who hates whales, but it’s just kind of an interesting cross-fire to know that the Inupiats were like “we should be harvesting them.” This is what happens every year, you guys just don’t come here and then we’re fighting like – no, this is the year we have to save them because we witness it. It’s just there’s a lot of different themes to the movie and I don’t even know that, until I see it I’ll know exactly which one Ken is focusing in on or maybe there’s not one. I think the reason that I liked the script so much is because there is so many different things to take away from it. If you are an animal activist you will read it and see that this is about a whale rescue. If you are a journalist you could read this and see how – wow, this is a big story to break. If you’re another type of journalist or a critic you could read it and say – that was completely sensationalized, it never should have been a story, it was ridiculous and it’s like more comment on the human behavior around it. I think there is so many different opinions inside this script and that is one of the reasons I liked it.
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